A Ski Resort Embraces a New E-Commerce Platform
Ragged Mountain, a 49-year-old ski resort in New Hampshire that sees roughly 90,000 visitors per year, was in the heat of the season two years ago when problems with its new electronic ticketing system started to piss off customers.
âThe concept was slick,â says Stacy Lopes, Raggedâs marketing manager. âCustomers could renew a ski pass or buy a lift ticket online, and it would automatically activate once they passed through a [chairlift] gate. Unfortunately, the vendor didnât have all the kinks worked out, and we ran into a lot of problems both online and with fulfillment.â
The Fix
A chance meeting with Liftopia, an online marketplace for discounted lift tickets to more than 250 resorts around North America, led to a turnkey solution. Ragged Mountain was able to embed Cloud Store, Liftopiaâs cloud-based SaaS pricing platform, onto its site, giving Lopesâ team the power to change and tweak pricing in real time, taking advantage of weather changes or quickly offering special deals, such as a $14 Valentineâs Day ticket, to generate buzz and sales.
âLiftopia pitched us on Thursday; by Friday afternoon all of our productsâlift tickets, rentals, lessons, etc.âwere loaded onto Cloud Store, and we were selling tickets online on Saturday morning,â Lopes says.
In return for access to Cloud Store, tech support and Lopesâ favorite featureâa robust analytics dashboardâSan Francisco-based Liftopia takes a single-digit percentage of each Ragged sale.

The Results
Two weeks after implementing the Cloud Store platform, Ragged Mountain sold more lift tickets online than it had for the whole season up to that point. Throughout the rest of the winter, the ski area experimented with pricing to learn how to maximize revenue.
âRight before one norâeaster, we had sold out of our lowest price inventory of lift tickets and were selling well at the next-highest discount rate,â Lopes says. âWe knew the storm was going to be big, so we kept increasing the price by a couple of dollars each day, and the tickets kept sellingâit was a great study in user demand and pricing.â
By springtime, the resort discovered that 45 percent of its lift tickets for the season had sold online. This year, the hope is to sell 60 to 70 percent of lift tickets that way and to use the sales data to better manage and allocate resort staff, right down to knowing how many parking attendants will be needed on a given day.
A Second Opinion
The dynamic pricing enabled by Liftopia is new to the ski industry, notes Dave Belin, director of consulting services for Boulder, Colo.-based RRC Associates, a tourism research firm that specializes in ski resorts and communities. Such services may face resistance from traditionalists and those who canât stomach giving up a cut of sales.
Industrywide, ticket sales account for less than half of a resortâs revenue but âare the gateway to getting people in the door to spend money elsewhere at the ski area,â he says. âSo the key for Ragged Mountain is to raise overall revenue per skier visit, while not creating a customer base that expects steep discounts every time.â
Ragged Mountain, a 49-year-old ski resort in New Hampshire that sees roughly 90,000 visitors per year, was in the heat of the season two years ago when problems with its new electronic ticketing system started to piss off customers.
âThe concept was slick,â says Stacy Lopes, Raggedâs marketing manager. âCustomers could renew a ski pass or buy a lift ticket online, and it would automatically activate once they passed through a [chairlift] gate. Unfortunately, the vendor didnât have all the kinks worked out, and we ran into a lot of problems both online and with fulfillment.â
The Fix
A chance meeting with Liftopia, an online marketplace for discounted lift tickets to more than 250 resorts around North America, led to a turnkey solution. Ragged Mountain was able to embed Cloud Store, Liftopiaâs cloud-based SaaS pricing platform, onto its site, giving Lopesâ team the power to change and tweak pricing in real time, taking advantage of weather changes or quickly offering special deals, such as a $14 Valentineâs Day ticket, to generate buzz and sales.