What the market calls the person who continuously tweaks pricing, runs experiments, and uses data to win in competitive environments — from airline seats to insurance aggregators to fintech subscriptions.
The role exists in every competitive market. The title changes, the work doesn't. Every industry invented its own name for the same function: someone who sits between data, product, and commercial — and moves the price lever continuously.
Same core skillset — experimentation, data fluency, competitive awareness, revenue optimization — but the job title, team structure, and tools differ sharply by industry.
Active or recently posted roles — click through to see the actual job descriptions, requirements, and how each company frames the work.
Regardless of whether it's called "yield management" or "monetization PM" — the same six capabilities show up in every job description.
Based on patterns across 30+ job descriptions — the signals that separate someone who can actually move the needle from a generic analyst.
| Signal | What it means |
|---|---|
| Aggregator / marketplace experience | They've operated where competition is transparent and price is the primary lever. Insurance aggregators, flight metasearch, or marketplace platforms. This is the hardest pricing environment — if they've done it here, they can do it anywhere. |
| Experimentation track record | Not just "I ran A/B tests" but can articulate: sample sizing, statistical significance, interaction effects between concurrent experiments, and how they handled rollout decisions. LinkedIn's JD specifically asks for Van Westendorp, Gabor Granger, Conjoint. |
| Revenue attribution | Can they point to specific revenue impact? Ryanair's Yield Analyst JD says "maximising revenue performance on a portfolio of routes." American Airlines wants "evaluating impact of fare and inventory changes on market performance." The best candidates speak in numbers. |
| Cross-functional operating | Pricing never lives in isolation. Uber's role spans ops, data science, product, and engineering. Admiral's sits between actuarial and commercial. The person needs to be persuasive across functions, not just good with a spreadsheet. |
| Tooling depth | SQL + Python are table stakes. Look for experience with pricing optimization platforms, demand forecasting systems, or having built internal pricing tools. Bonus: ML/econometrics for elasticity modelling. |
| Competitive response speed | In aggregator environments, prices need to move fast. Ask how they've handled real-time competitive pressure — how quickly could they implement a price change, and what guardrails did they put in place? |
If the environment is aggregator-like (comparison-driven, price-transparent, high competition) — look for candidates from insurance pricing or airline revenue management. They've been doing this for decades and the patterns are battle-tested.
If the environment is more product-led (subscription tiers, freemium conversion, feature gating) — look for fintech PMs or tech platform pricing strategists who think in experiments and funnels.
The best hire might call themselves a "Pricing Analyst," a "Revenue Management Analyst," or a "Product Manager." The title matters less than whether they've shipped pricing changes that moved a metric in a competitive market.