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Nothing Strange
About Odd Discounts
The Travel Tightwad · March
5, 2002
Even though she dialed
mostly toll-free numbers from her hotel room, Kepi Peterson thought her
phone bill would be outrageously high.
After all, the Atlantis Resort on Paradise Island, Bahamas, warned that
a $3 connection fee applied to "800" numbers, too. So you can imagine
the Mesa, AZ, homemaker's surprise when the charges mysteriously disappeared
from her account at checkout time. "Without us even asking, the desk clerk
removed all fees incurred when we used an 800 number," she remembers.
"We didn't even ask why."
Good thing, since she probably wouldn't have gotten a straight answer.
Unusual discounts like hers are everywhere these days, as the travel industry
tries to make nice with customers who stopped vacationing last fall. The
deals are difficult to classify but easy to quantify. If you stumble upon
one of these surprise reductions, you could save a significant amount
of money on your hotel or restaurant bill.
One of my favorite "odd discount" stories comes from Sharon Wingler, a
flight attendant who wrote a book called Travel Alone & Love It. "I was
in shop that sold lace linens on the Greek island of Santorini," she told
me. "I selected a tablecloth, and when I paid with my First Chicago Visa
card, the young salesman grinned and pointed to a poster on his wall of
Michael Jordan, who was then with the Chicago Bulls. He said, 'You get
a Michael Jordan discount'."
In the Florida Keys, where I live, restaurants often surprise patrons
with a "local" discount. If you eat at the establishment several times,
you'll get a card that entitles you to 10 or 20 percent off all future
meals. But more often than not, the discounts are informal. An employee
will size you up as local and quietly reduce your bill when you get ready
to pay. It's happened to me numerous times, especially during the "off"
season.
How do you find an odd discount? You don't; they find you. But you can
turn yourself into a discount magnet by observing a few rules:
- Don't stand
out. Odd discounts often aren't given to people who look like tourists.
Loud clothes and a sunburn are a tip-off in the Keys. If you don't seem
to belong, you'll get charged full price for everything, because shopkeepers,
restaurateurs, and hoteliers correctly assume you've got a budget for
your vacation and are planning to spend it all, and if they don't get
your money, then someone else will. There's another, more practical
reason for trying to fit in: You're less likely to be a target of a
crime. That could save you a lot of money in the end.
- Be friendly.
Discounts are often left to the discretion of front-desk clerks or salespeople.
Treating these front-line employees with respect and a little friendliness
will often yield surprising results. In some travel businesses, workers
are allowed to adjust a bill at their discretion, and they're more likely
to make a downward revision when you're pleasant than if you're disagreeable.
- Ask, ask, ask.
Are there any additional discounts that you qualify for? If you don't
ask, you may not get them. Some salespeople clip coupons out of the
newspaper and keep them under their desks. If they want to lower a price,
they pull a coupon out of an envelope, scan it, and-there you go-instant
discount. I've heard hotel clerks advise customers to stop by a local
chamber of commerce before check-out to pick up a "Save 15 percent"
coupon from one of the brochure racks. It's almost always worth the
detour.
The important thing to
remember when you secure one of these discounts is to reward the discount-giver.
Offer a generous tip or send a thank-you note. It's not only the right thing
to do, but it ensures that these odd discounts will be there on your next
trip.
Christopher
Elliott is a travel commentator based in Key Largo, Fla. All e-mailed
questions may be edited, condensed or republished at the site's discretion.
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