Airline loyalty programs’ dirty little secret? They’re not really that loyal to you

Songquan Deng / Shutterstock.com
Songquan Deng / Shutterstock.com

Laura Noell recently discovered a dirty little secret about her airline loyalty program: the “loyalty” only goes one way.

For years, she and her husband, both faithful United Airlines Mileage Plus members, flew United whenever they could. In return, the airline offered them a guaranteed upgrade to United’s “Economy Plus” section, she says, which gave them about the same amount of legroom as they had in coach class before airline deregulation.

The Noells, who live in Bethesda, Md., and often fly to California, believed it was a fair trade: They stuck to United, whether or not another carrier like Virgin America offered a less expensive flight. They put all their purchases on an affinity card that helped them collect miles and maintain their good standing with Mileage Plus.

The Noells thought they were the perfect customers.

But they were wrong.

From one day to the next, United changed the offer that allowed them to upgrade to Economy Plus. Poof! No more comfortable seats.

“There is now a significant fee for each seat on each flight,” says Laura Noell. “And there is no incentive to fly United exclusively.”

Old program was “too generous”

I recently spoke with a United executive, who explained these program tweaks. After merging with Continental Airlines, the now number-one airline in the United States took a hard look at Mileage Plus and decided to make some difficult downgrades. Simply put, the existing loyalty program was too generous.

These changes aren’t special to United. Not a week seems to go by that another travel company makes an unpopular revision to its loyalty program, requiring more points for a redemption or more miles flown for a special perk. The slighted customers then complain to me through my consumer advocacy site.

But the Economy Plus change is particularly cruel. Passengers who just want a somewhat comfortable seat, by 1970s standards, now have to give United their loyalty and pay a fee, according to Noell. Every passenger used to get those seats a generation ago, regardless of their fare. Back then airlines like United had minimum standards, when it came to seat comfort.

Making up the rules as they go along

You may not realize it, but these program changes are perfectly legal. Few people understand that if they’re participating in a loyalty program, they’ve agreed to let their airline do whatever it wants, when it comes to the rules.

It’s right there, in black and white, when you open your Mileage Plus terms and conditions. It’s the first item.

Membership and benefits, including the Premier Program, are offered at the discretion of United Airlines and its affiliates, it says.

“United has the right to terminate the Program and/or the Premier Program or to change the Program Rules, regulations, benefits, conditions of participation or mileage levels, in whole or in part, at any time, with or without notice, even though changes may affect the value of the mileage or certificates already accumulated,” it adds.

Almost no one bothers to read the fine print in their program. I’m willing to bet the Noells didn’t. If they did, maybe they’d have second thoughts about giving any airline their loyalty. (Again, United isn’t alone with its “we-can-change-the-rules-anytime” rule — all of the major carriers do it.)

Trimming an upgrade offer is a relatively minor issue, in the overall scheme of things. Airlines do far worse, from arbitrarily confiscating miles to ending programs and partnerships that their customers have come to rely on.

But you can’t blame Noell for feeling betrayed.

“I am extremely disappointed in United,” she says. “I have just canceled my [affinity] credit card. I will probably be flying United less often in the future.”

Meanwhile, United has benefitted from Noell’s business for years. It’s a fine way to say “thank you,” isn’t it?

Its hard to think of any other business that can dilute its product like this and still keep its customers. The only frequent fliers who seem to win at this share the airlines’ belief that rules are meant to be bent, if not broken. They game the system, engaging in ethically troublesome activities like “churning” their credit cards to maximize their loyalty program benefits.

The Noells are not the last passengers who will be disappointed by their airline loyalty program. But maybe this is a good time to take a look at your airline’s rules and ask yourself: Am I next?

Who benefits more from loyalty programs?

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  • Steve Rabin

    Yes, UA recently changed the game for Premier silver members (the lowest Premier level)–it used to be you could pick a seat in E+ upon booking–now it’s at check in (or, at booking for a fee, of course!). All other MP Premier levels still can get extra legroom at booking.
    It’s obvious the frequent flyer programs benefit the airlines–people continue to book with them thinking they’ll get a free flight–which most people don’t claim since there are literally billions of unused miles out there.

  • TonyA_says

    I wish they quit calling it loyalty because it ain’t. Maybe Ponzi [Scheme] program is better,

  • Alex

    She may feel slighted; but, she will probably be happier now. I fly enough to make earn that lowest frequent flyer level. For years, I was loyal to Northwest Airlines. When Delta arrived, I quickly discovered my loyalty was no longer valued. While it makes sense to be loyal if you’re flying every week (because of the first-class upgrades), there are very few benefits for those of us in that “silver” level.

    Without the constraints of a single airline, I now choose the best price, times, and routing for me. I can’t believe how long I wasted connecting through Atlanta after Delta stopped their non-stop LAX-FLL flight. (That’s a route I fly almost monthly.) Now, I have so many more options.

  • LeeAnneClark

    Here’s my view on airline “loyalty” programs: the only way to use them beneficially (for you, that is, not the airline), is to sign up for all of them and then buy your plane tickets based on your actual need (price, itinerary, airports), rather than based on an airline. That way you will just accumulate miles on whatever airline happened to work best for your trip. Fly enough, and eventually you’ll get to use your miles on at least one airline to get something for free. This works particularly well if you happen to fly a route frequently that is mostly served by one airline. You would be making those flights anyway…so any miles that you get, and anything that you can get for those miles, is truly a bonus.

    Paying more for a ticket just to get on a particular airline so you can build up miles is self-defeating. You end up losing out on any financial benefit of being in the mileage program to begin with!

    If you’re spending more in order to get miles, you’re doing it wrong, and throwing good money at bad. On the other hand, if you are just flying, and happen to accumulate enough miles to get a free upgrade or even a free ticket, then…great! You flew the flights you were going to fly anyway, and now you are actually getting something for free. And if the airlines change their programs, you didn’t lose anything, except for opportunity.

    I find it hard to believe people can’t see this. Why on earth would they spend MORE for their flights, just to build up miles? In the end, they will likely shell out more money in higher fares, then they will ever get back in benefits. I’ve thought this way about FF programs for years, and the current trend of airlines reducing what you get for your miles just shows that that I was right.

    My poll response was that the FF programs benefit the passengers…but my caveat is: only if you use them as I’ve described. They have certainly benefited me! I’ve never chosen a flight based on the airline. And yet I’ve been able to use miles to purchase several domestic tickets, and get upgraded to business class a few times…all for FREE! And it my case, it truly was free. Works for me!

  • LeeAnneClark

    What they should call it is what it is: “mileage program”. You fly, you get miles. Get enough miles, you can turn them in for something of value. Seems pretty simple to me.

    But this practice of paying MORE for flights, in order to accumulate enough miles to get something for free, seems utterly boneheaded to me. It would be like paying $100 for a coupon that gets you 10% off…on something that costs $900. The math doesn’t quite work, does it?

  • tony views
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  • Traveling Millie

    Chris – As I write this, my husband and I are on the last leg of a 26-day, around-the-world trip on United and Star Alliance airlines (Thai – the very best!) and Singapore (excellent!)…..all business class. It cost us 260,000 miles each, and would have cost $12,000 if we’d bought the ticket (I asked the United arouind-the-world reservations person, and she checked our destinations to figure it out). I was faithful to Continental, and barely made silver elite (25,000 miles) for years….if there was a vast difference in price, for example with Southwest, I’d take Southwest or another airline, but if it was minimal or Continental included an extra stop instead of being nonstop, we’d go with Continental.

    We also cashed in 105,000 miles several years ago to fly business class to Australia and New Zealand. I have the credit card, but don’t use it too much.

    Before Continental started charging so much in both mileage and cash supplements, I used most of my miles to upgrade when flying internationally. I never used mileage for domestic or short flights, but I frequently was upgraded to first class domestically, even at silver level. One year I made the bottom elite level on both Continental and Delta (probably about 25,100 miles!), but when I booked a $199 round-trip from New Orleans to Ontario, CA on a Saturday night, with about 12 people on the plane, and Delta wouldn’t upgrade me because my ticket was too cheap, I never flew Delta again unless it was the only route. Continental didn’t care what you paid.

    So to me, the program has been fantastic! We played the game, yes, but not to our detriment When TWA was around, and the frequent flier programs first began, you could buy a coupon for $25 in store catalogs and use it for upgrades or discounts; triple mileage was rampant. We ended up with eight free first class tickets to Europe and eight upgrades (and this was before my travel job), so many the airline collapsed before we could use them all.

    But I do agree that everything has changed with the Continental/United merger; 2012 is the first year I didn’t even try to make elite level. Other posters are right; you can buy early boarding or upgrades…..But while it lasted, it was fantastic to me, and worth the effort. I’d say the same thing about hotel plans: we’ve had free weeks in Vienna, Kauai and other destinations by usually staying at Marriott, which is a fine chain.

    While I don’t agree with you on this issue, I’m a big fan and supporter of your work and admire all you do for us!

  • http://elliott.org Christopher Elliott

    Millie, thanks for taking the time to share your perspective on this. You are one of my earliest and most important supporters, and I’ll always be grateful to you for helping launch my syndicated column.

  • Traveling Millie

    Chris – Unless you’re in Hawaii, you’re either up too late or up too early!! Take care…..hope we meet in person again sometime!
    If you are at all interested, I can send you copies of a few off-the-cuff comments I sent friends along the way……i miss having a regular outlet!

    Millie

  • http://elliott.org Christopher Elliott

    I’m in Orlando. My cats won’t let me sleep.

  • TonyA_says

    Well if you shop around for the best fare you will likely end up with different carriers and spread the earned miles all over the place (just like me). The problem is that most miles expire (other than the utterly useless SkyPesos). So, unless you travel a lot, it is hard to earn enough to claim a reward or some kind of elite status.

    I think that is why the OP stuck it out and gave her loyalty with United. By concetrating her travel with UA she was able to get some status. But her beef is about the ever changing rules or targets in a plan. That meant she had to earn a higher elite status just to get the upgrade she was accustomed to getting. That will be harder to achieve without flying UA more or others less.
    I think Scott McCartney of the Wall Sreet Journal explains it all in this video
    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323277504578189370245154226.html?mod=WSJ_hps_MIDDLENexttoWhatsNewsFifth
    The bottom line is that there is a huge difference just trying to earn a free ticket with no status compared to getting those elusive perks because one has status. Status is one that most flyertalk folks are going for. You are going to get free trips anyway since you will have a lot of miles just to maintain status.

  • TonyA_says

    The dirty secret is that they just increased the price of “loyalty”.
    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390444900304577577270459692532.html
    The bottom tier elites are not as elite anymore :-)
    So unless you can fly at least 50k EQM or 60 segments then you are no longer that elite.
    Boy, what a way to buy some loyalty.

  • TonyA_says

    If you get a lot more miles then you get STATUS. That is the key.

  • http://twitter.com/johntbaker John Baker

    Let me start with this for Full Disclosure… I am, or was after Feb 1, a UA 1K and a DL Silver elite. Both of which I obtained without purchasing a single flight (Airline CC are a wonderful thing).

    I didn’t vote in the poll because my answer could be neither or both depending on the situation. Having now dealt with two different FF programs in the past year, I’ve started to see FF programs more like the comp programs at local casinos. Those programs throw a bone to low level players but what they really want are the Whales… Those people that bet tens of thousands of dollars a year (or for FF programs fly tens of thousands of miles a year). To a certain extent it makes sense that the lower levels would become devalued, net revenue per passenger per mile is down for most of the airlines. They now make their money on the “extras” that along with FF programs is Chris’s other favorite airline topic. If the airline gives away all of those extras to their least often travelers, they have revenue problems. Like a casino, the airline has to get you to put more on the table so they have a chance to make their money. They quite simply can’t make enough anymore if you only fly 10 times a year on discounted tickets.

    Sadly, I had someone at UA slip and tell me that UA made more money off my CC purchases selling the elite miles than they probably would have if I had flown the miles on discounted tickets. That my friends is an upside down business model.

    On the flip side…. Someone that would choose to pay appreciably more for a ticket simply to earn FF miles is doing exactly what the airlines want you to.

    Ultimately here’s the new reality. You can get low level elite benefits now by either spending a medium amount of time on an airplane or by paying $50 a year, or more depending on additional benefits, for an airline credit card.

    I chose door #2

  • Raven_Altosk

    I still maintain that cattle being shipped to slaughter have more space requirements than humans in coach class these days. I generally don’t want the government up in my business, but I think some regulations are required. Next thing we know, they’ll make us sit cross-legged on the floor to squeeze a few more butts onboard.

  • http://twitter.com/johntbaker John Baker

    Just make sure that you call it “cris cross applesauce” instead of “Indian Style”…

  • TonyA_says

    So you can maintain UA 1K WITHOUT flying with just a UA credit card?
    Amazing. Maybe I can buy a Nobel Peace Prize :-)

  • http://twitter.com/johntbaker John Baker

    Unfortunately, not any more… back to platinum this year… But yep, when you spend a boat load of money on their credit card (corp purchasing card), you can maintain platinum without buying a seat.

  • http://www.facebook.com/akardoff Alan D Kardoff

    What a con. And it an airline reduces flights to a given terminal or location, the passenger again is out of luck. In reducing at one, it may be increasing at another. The passenger finds traveling to different airports, often a distance away, much harder than a carrier switching terminals. This is a big con & disappointment. I also feel raped.

  • MarkKelling

    Status comes only from FLYING, not your credit card miles bonus or other miles given to you. You can rack up a million miles through the special offers and never fly once. This might get you a free flight eventually, but you are not a “frequent” flyer to the airline and they couldn’t care less about you.

  • http://www.facebook.com/akardoff Alan D Kardoff

    Melbourne seems to have lost a few flights while MCO gained. So,, I have to leave earlier and my cat is upset.

  • TonyA_says

    Agree although this is a tough issue. The OP essentially tried to keep her elite status just to get a decent coach seat (econ plus) and avoid the standard 31″ pitch seats. It looks like every cabin design out there for new airplanes have a 31″ pitch making any future legislation extremely expensive for the industry. I am afraid we will have to vote with our wallets (and buy economy premium or something like that).

  • Len

    I love cats. Particularly fried.

  • TonyA_says

    That’s what I thought, but did you read John Baker’s post above on how he got/maintained UA 1K? Amazing.

  • http://twitter.com/travelwinechick Elizabeth Smith

    I found it hard to vote as well. I’ve been an elite frequent flyer for 16 years and so far, being elite has worked in my favor with regard to dedicated telephone customer support, free checked bags, seat selection, occasional domestic upgrades to first class, standby priority, and mileage award ticket redemptions. However, I’ll never pay a much higher fare to remain loyal. Fare is still a factor for me. I also realize the rules can change at any time, so if I don’t like the changes, then I am not obligated to remain loyal to any one airline.

  • MarkKelling

    No, sitting takes up too much room. They will stand us all up and fasten us to sheets of plywood with our seat belts and then just stack us in like luggage. ;-)

  • MarkKelling

    This must be a corporate card only benefit that is a secret because it is not even noted in the benefits list on the credit card site. The consumer cards for United do not offer any such guaranteed Elite level and never have.

    You get lots of miles and some of the benefits of tier status (free checked bags, earlier boarding group, a airport club pass, and so on depending on the specific card), but you are not given tier status. Having the benefits and having the tier status are different things and should not be confused.

  • http://twitter.com/johntbaker John Baker

    @MarkKelling… Google “united presidential plus card.” They closed it to new applications after the merger but I’ve held it for two years. You earn Flex elite miles (1000 for every $5000 in purchases) and normal miles on purchases. Flex elite miles can then be transferred, up to 75k per year, toward status and are good for 36 months (I think).

    Would you like a scan of my 1K card to prove it?

  • mytimetotravel

    I have done very well from AA’s FF program, having flown round the world (with one large overland segment) three times in biz class which would have been far too expensive if I had to pay. I mostly fly JetBlue domestically but I have an AA affinity card. I stay with AA because they fly RDU-LHR but I’m only “loyal” because of the OneWorld program.

  • MeanMeosh

    I know how you feel. My wife and I finally gave in and rescued a cat from the shelter yesterday. He wouldn’t let us sleep, either :)

  • AirlineEmployee

    Did you actually FLY to get these miles or were they gained by purchasing consumer products ?

  • MeanMeosh

    AA also does on a limited basis. My platinum status was going to lapse a couple of years ago, and they sent me a letter offering to let me buy my way back in for $749 or something like that. Apparently once you’re in “the club”, they’ll let you stay, even if you don’t fly much.

  • AirlineEmployee

    Though there are valid complaints here, what did passengers expect? I know, the airlines started this business about using credit cards to purchase items to gain miles and now they’re going back to the original concept of PAY HIGH AIRFARES and ACTUALLY FLY THE AIRLINE to get the miles. Why should passengers sit in F-class because they bought a refrigerator in Sears? Airline currency is so prolific that it’s been watered down to 25-30,000 miles to be called “Premier”. Laughable. They should even dump that category and start with 100,00 miles a year minimum and leave the categories starting with Gold/Platinum levels and above. This would weed out the whiners, complainers and over-entitled gamers.

  • Cybrsk8r

    This is why I don’t belong to any of these programs. The only way you get anything is if you’re a business traveler and fly 20 times a year. It would take me 10 years to accumulate enough miles to get anything. Does anyone believe airline miles earned this year, will survive for 10 years without being yanked away on some technicality.

  • http://twitter.com/johntbaker John Baker

    @MarkKelling:disqus My DL status came from an AMEX card. Pay high annual fees and spend lots of money and DL will make you a Silver (but nothing higher).

  • MeanMeosh

    Well, DUH – of course loyalty programs are designed to benefit the airlines. They reward YOUR loyalty to the AIRLINE, not the other way around. Full disclosure, I belong to, and have benefited from, loyalty programs on several of the major airlines, but at the end of the day, they are designed to illicit dumb behavior like mileage runs, paying 2x more for a ticket on Airline A instead of Airline B despite a worse schedule, etc. You do that, and the airline wins, pure and simple, though it’s amusing listening to how some FFs justify throwing away money on a mileage run just to keep status (though if you fly a lot, especially with family, and usually check bags, the savings from not having to pay does start adding up).

    I do, however, have to get one thing off my chest, because it’s been bothering me for a while now, and that’s the almost class warfare rhetoric going on in your diatribes about how uncomfortable the coach class flying experience is. I get it that flying in the back of the bus isn’t fun (try doing it all the way to India and back if you want some yuks). But the bottom line is, you’re expecting Economy Plus seating, a free checked bag, free seat assignments together for you and your family at the front of the plane, free food, and whatever else is on your laundry list, but you’re only willing to pay Economy Minus pricing. I can all but guarantee that if the airlines do all that, and then raise one-way fares by $75, guys like you and Charlie Leocha will be all over the internet blasting the airlines for their “unconscionable profiteering” by raising prices. You might remember that AA tried to make the coach experience less miserable about 15 years ago (“More Room Throughout Coach”), but had to give up because people weren’t willing to pay the higher fares necessary to break even on a lesser number of seats. So no offense, but unless you’re willing to pay for the improved experience you desire, you really need to stop complaining.

  • TonyA_says

    LOL Ryanair almost tried this.

  • http://twitter.com/DonNadeau Don Nadeau

    At least for now, Delta uses a fairer system.

    For example, in the western Hemisphere, Delta top-tier SkyMiles members continue to receive Comfort Economy for free, while Silver Medallion members, who have earned less mileage, either pay 50% less or receive a free upgrade when they check in, if seats are still available.

    In this way, the bulk of SkyMiles participants, whom I assume are Silver Medallion, do not feel left out.

  • emanon256

    I defiantly agree that the airlines benefit more. But I have been flying United since they introduced economy plus, and they have never, ever, guaranteed economy plus to frequent flyers. It has always been on a space available bases.

    Back in the hay day, they would let all elites book E+ at the time of booking (or any time), and E+ was not available for sale at all to non-elites until check-in. They also blocked any seat next to an elite and would not let any one book that seat unless the flight was oversold or the person choosing it was another elite. Back then flights were not usually full and there were always empty middle seats.

    Back in 2009 or so, they started letting non-elites buy E+ at the time of purchase, or check-in, but not in between. It became slightly harder then to get E+, especially if booking within a few weeks of flying. That’s fine, it was never guaranteed. Then when the merger happened, but before the systems were integrated, suddenly any one could buy E+ at any time regardless of elite status, and a lot of people did so. So it became very hard to get an E+ seat as an elite in certain markets unless you book over a month out.

    After this I constantly saw people at the gate yelling, and arguing that they are guaranteed E+ and acting like the annoying entitled Elites that CE hates so much. Then when they announced the official system integration new combined program policy, they said that the lowest level elites, Silver (Formerly Premier) can no longer get E+ until they check in. Its still free, but they only get whats left at check-in. If its a non-elite heavy route, there are often still plenty of seats left then, if it is or there are a lot of people who decided to pay for it, there may not be any left. Also, with the Continental systems dynamic pricing algorithm (Find out more about this one for us Chris), it offers general members prices to upgrade to E+ based on what it thinks they would be willing to pay. So passenger X may get an offer for $29 while passenger Y gets an offer for $129 on the same route and same fare class, also, if they are in a middle seat, they may pay more than someone in a window seat. With this algorithm, they sell a lot more seats and there are even less free seats for elites and almost none for Slivers.

    That being said, that how it works. It’s a numbers game for United and they really could care less about the OP who flys 25,000 miles a year on discounted tickets. They could also care less about me who flys 125,000 miles a year on discounted tickets. I’ve flown in a back middle many times, even as a 1K, I don’t complain barbecue I know its not guaranteed. On the flights I fly for work, with these changes, its sometimes hard to get an Economy Plus seat even when booking in advance. My uncle who is a silver, said he has never once had trouble getting an economy plus seat at check in since the change. Thems the brakes. And never assume the loyalty goes both ways, or you will just get disappointed.

  • JohnKeahey

    I have been a silver medallion flyer with Delta for several years and get all the things Elizabeth Smith points out above. And Delta has gone out of its way twice to help me change/add flights, without fee or making me pay higher fares, when there was a serious illness in my family and then a death a few years later. It is easy to stay with Delta because it is the main airline here and goes everywhere I want to go. All this said, I know their “loyalty” to me as a medallion customer can end in the wink of an eye to serve the corporate good. My motto in this and other business dealings has always been: “Never fall in love with a corporation; it won’t love you back!”

  • JohnKeahey

    I have been a silver medallion flyer with Delta for several years and get all the things allowed by that status. And Delta has gone out of its way twice to help me change/add flights, without fee or making me pay higher fares, when there was a serious illness in my family and then a death a few years later. It is easy to stay with Delta because it is the main airline here and goes everywhere I want to go. All this said, I know their “loyalty” to me as a medallion customer can end in the wink of an eye to serve the corporate good. My motto in this and other business dealings has always been: “Never fall in love with a corporation; it won’t love you back!”

  • y_p_w

    I was thinking more like a stand-up roller coaster.

    On the other hand, a large commercial jet has a round fuselage, and the layout is well suited for the overheard bins on the sides and the aisle(s) in the middle. So maybe they’ll reconfigure to passengers in the middle and two narrow crawl spaces on the side to exit.

  • Miami510

    I can see the directors of all the airline milage programs smirking: Heads we win…tails they loose.

    It’s a topsy-turvey world when the best customers get the
    shabbiest treatment. To add insult to
    injury, airline programs have increased the mileage requirement for free
    flights, limited the choice of flights to those that leave at very early or
    late times, have blackout periods, limit the number of “mileage seats” on
    flights, and rarely offer no-stop flights when one or two stops fly the same
    route. Now I’ve heard that there are upcharges
    for special seats on some flights.

    Unless one’s account is very close to qualifying for a free
    flight, the choice of airlines should be based upon other considerations.

  • Roger Miller

    Correct.

    From http://www.united.com/web/en-US/content/mileageplus/premier/qualify.aspx
    “Also, beginning January 1, 2012, to qualify for any Premier level,
    members must fly at least four paid flights operated by United or Copa
    during a calendar year.*
    *Members who hold a Chase-issued Presidential Plus Credit Card or
    United MileagePlus Club Card are exempt from the minimum flight
    criteria as long as their card account is in good standing at the time
    of qualification.”

  • SoBeSparky

    The market place speaks with their dollars, and they demand the lowest possible fares. The Bureau of Transportation Statistics, also cited by Christopher back on July 23, 2008, reports that 2012 (thru 2Q) air fares are 13.8% lower than 1995 when compared in 1995 dollars.

    Airplane purchase prices, landing fees, fuel, and labor costs have not gone down relative to 17 years ago. Something has to give.

    If these people want all of the 1995 benefits, then they would have to pay for it plus inflation. And they refuse to. So something, or many things, have to go. No more meals in coach, full planes, more fees and rules. among other things are the norm. Non-loyalty program members get middle seats unless they pay.

    Regulated capitalism is great. The winner is the most efficient meeting the needs of the market place.

    As for who benefits from the loyalty programs, both airlines and flyers do. Just because an airline makes money (enjoys a profit) from loyalty programs does not make them evil. If you know the rules and use them to your advantage, then the consumer wins too.

  • TonyA_says

    Do you think United should move to rewarding miles as a percentage of the fare paid (like Southwest)? I wonder what this would accomplish?

  • http://twitter.com/DonNadeau Don Nadeau

    For you benefit, you need to examine these programs more carefully. You need not fly in order to earn frequent flyer miles.

    As with Laura Noell mentioned the post, you can receive miles by using an airline-affliliated credit card such as American Express. You need to ask 1) whether or not you will you use the airline card enough in one year to justify its fee and 2) whether or not an alternative card giving you “cash back” would be more beneficial.

    As of now, most airlines preserve your miles for at least 18 months as long as you have some activity on your account. The danger of course is if an airline goes bankrupt without another airline honoring its obligations in some sort of bankruptcy sale. Nevertheless, any new owner would be foolish not to try to retain the loyalty of current customers.

  • Michelle B.

    This year I flew business class round trip from Chicago to Honolulu using “free” miles. In the past I’ve done the same to Paris, and also to Rome (twice). About once or twice a year I use miles to upgrade from coach to business on cross-country trips. So I say that I am benefitting. I know the airlines can change the rules at any time. Heck, my timeshare membership can and does the same (free valet parking once included now gone, along with other perks).
    But not joining and using the rewards program is like not joining your grocery card loyalty program. The business woudn’t offer it unless there is something in it for them, yet by not taking advantage of it you are subject to their business policy whims anyway (higher prices, less legroom, no free snacks, etc.).
    I will not go out of my way (read: take a connecting flight), if there is a non-stop on a different carrier, but all other things being equal, then sure, I’ll play their game as I do get benefits.

  • emanon256

    They sort of do that, bust still mostly based on miles flown. Full fare and near full fare get extra elite qualifying miles. Premium fares get an ever higher percentage of elite qualifying miles. So it’s really a bonus if you pay more, not a reduction if you pay less. The big change is I used to get 100% elite qualifying miles if I flew on a partner, now a lot of patterns only give 50% premier qualifying miles if it’s a discount ticket.

    I personally like that’s its based mostly on Butt In Seat miles (BIS: I had to ask what that meant). I feel like it gives more meaning to those of us who actually do fly a lot. I think if they went to a system where people earn miles based on what they paid it would come back to bite them. Also, if they did that, how could they justify charging close in booking fees and mileage re-deposit fees to the majority of mileage plus members?

    It’s interesting to compare different loyalty programs. I once compared Hilton v. Marriott because I hear people swear by both and shun the other. I didn’t trust Hilton because I think they grossly inflate their points. What I found was that Marriott was much better in value if you stay at cheap low end hotels. You get a great value there, but not so much on high end luxury hotel like the Ritz. On the other hand, Hilton is a waste if you stay at cheap hotels, but if you use your points on high end luxury hotels like the Waldorf Astoria, you get a great value. So I split my nights between both.

    Now for my confession. I am getting off the road, I have been home more than usual the last few weeks and will begin a new job near home. I won’t even make Silver this year it looks like. It’s worth it to be home every night and see my son, buts it’s going to be a hard change. I have to be honest, I am going to miss the miles, points, and status.