Wonder if CX ever does this, will they do it with any empty seats up front or only honor bids when there is cabin oversold situation. Sounds like if they are solicitating bids, it will be the former, as long as there are empty seats CX will take whatever money it can to fill them up. So let's say this: someone bought a discounted Y, made a bit for $100 USD for Y+. Y+ has 5 seats left. In theory, if say the bids are $400, $400, $300, $200, $100, all five of them will have "won the bid" and sit in Y+ with some paying $400 more and as little as $100. That in itself isn't a problem because in CX's accounting eyes it made extra revenue.
However, the concern should be shrew travelers can game the system to end up paying less than what they were willing to pay in the first place. Say if Y+ is sold at $2500, he knows Y+ cabin is unlikely to be sold out, and he can buy a cheap Y ticket at $1000 and submit a bid for say another $1000 to give himself a good chance of winning, that from his perspective he saved $500. Shrew traveler that knows seasonal loads should be very able to take advantage of the situation, so instead of his original willingness to pay Y+ price, he can game the system and fly Y+ at cheaper fare. Same can be said for Y+ to J. A person could be willing to pay $6000 J fare, but would just buy $2500 Y+ fare, make a solid bid of another $2000 for J, and during low-seasonal loads will very likely win the bid, and instead of willing to pay $6000 for J he now only paid $4500 for J. I agree with a poster here that this kind of bidding will only worked on short-regional flights when no one is dumb enough to pay 3 to 4 times extra for just 1 to 3 hours of Business Class on their own dime (unless you are on corporate dime), but may be tempted to make a bid to sit up front at minimal cost. However, for longer flights, this might backfired. |
Originally Posted by Cathay Boy
(Post 21421356)
Wonder if CX ever does this, will they do it with any empty seats up front or only honor bids when there is cabin oversold situation. Sounds like if they are solicitating bids, it will be the former, as long as there are empty seats CX will take whatever money it can to fill them up. So let's say this: someone bought a discounted Y, made a bit for $100 USD for Y+. Y+ has 5 seats left. In theory, if say the bids are $400, $400, $300, $200, $100, all five of them will have "won the bid" and sit in Y+ with some paying $400 more and as little as $100. That in itself isn't a problem because in CX's accounting eyes it made extra revenue.
However, the concern should be shrew travelers can game the system to end up paying less than what they were willing to pay in the first place. Say if Y+ is sold at $2500, he knows Y+ cabin is unlikely to be sold out, and he can buy a cheap Y ticket at $1000 and submit a bid for say another $1000 to give himself a good chance of winning, that from his perspective he saved $500. Shrew traveler that knows seasonal loads should be very able to take advantage of the situation, so instead of his original willingness to pay Y+ price, he can game the system and fly Y+ at cheaper fare. Same can be said for Y+ to J. A person could be willing to pay $6000 J fare, but would just buy $2500 Y+ fare, make a solid bid of another $2000 for J, and during low-seasonal loads will very likely win the bid, and instead of willing to pay $6000 for J he now only paid $4500 for J. I agree with a poster here that this kind of bidding will only worked on short-regional flights when no one is dumb enough to pay 3 to 4 times extra for just 1 to 3 hours of Business Class on their own dime (unless you are on corporate dime), but may be tempted to make a bid to sit up front at minimal cost. However, for longer flights, this might backfired. |
Originally Posted by Kachjc
(Post 21419710)
with all the overseas LCC's coming in CX will have to start doing that soon-or risk losing market share
For example on TPE HKG they have various other airlines competing but not exactly LCC. Which routes are you thinking of and airlines you class as LCC. I think the only ones I have ever used was Air Cebu and Air Asia I have used but always flown business class which I thought was great value for money between TPE & KUL. |
I used an upgrade from BA recently for a 2.5 hr flight and it wasnt exactly a bid it was first come first served at 80 Euro. When I booked the flight the seats were not business class but the middle seat blocked up front. So I normally bag the exit row seats with no seat in front of you as they are simply the roomiest seats on these kind of flights around europe.
Lucky me ended up and a different plane type with real where the outside and inside seats are actually pushed to make a very slim middle seat and the legroom was actually way better than normal economy. I ended up with a nice seat, a hot meal, loads of legroom and was first off the plane at LHR T5. I think bidding will be a good idea and certainly good for people who might strike lucky and do a hell of job promoting CX business class products. The travel agents I do know have all told me that CX is making it harder and harder each year to work with them unless you are booking group tours. They really want the end user to book direct with them by the sounds of it. Would be interesting to see if those that can bid are only allowed to do where they booked direct not via an agent. |
Wirelessly posted (Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; CPU iPhone OS 6_1 like Mac OS X) AppleWebKit/536.26 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/6.0 Mobile/10B142 Safari/8536.25)
Originally Posted by mayodave
I used an upgrade from BA recently for a 2.5 hr flight and it wasnt exactly a bid it was first come first served at 80 Euro. When I booked the flight the seats were not business class but the middle seat blocked up front. So I normally bag the exit row seats with no seat in front of you as they are simply the roomiest seats on these kind of flights around europe.
Lucky me ended up and a different plane type with real where the outside and inside seats are actually pushed to make a very slim middle seat and the legroom was actually way better than normal economy. I ended up with a nice seat, a hot meal, loads of legroom and was first off the plane at LHR T5. I think bidding will be a good idea and certainly good for people who might strike lucky and do a hell of job promoting CX business class products. The travel agents I do know have all told me that CX is making it harder and harder each year to work with them unless you are booking group tours. They really want the end user to book direct with them by the sounds of it. Would be interesting to see if those that can bid are only allowed to do where they booked direct not via an agent. |
Originally Posted by kaka
(Post 21424863)
Wirelessly posted (Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; CPU iPhone OS 6_1 like Mac OS X) AppleWebKit/536.26 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/6.0 Mobile/10B142 Safari/8536.25)
Club europe had been that way for a long time - tge 2 seats on the side eating into the middle |
CX seeking opinions here: http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/catha...ck-sought.html
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Originally Posted by IanFromHKG
(Post 22930108)
CX seeking opinions here: http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/catha...ck-sought.html
I will cease flying CX until they stop this fiasco. What a disgrace for a world- class airline. |
Originally Posted by JALPak
(Post 21417251)
I got the insight survey a couple of days ago. One of the questions that caught my eyes was on "bidding for seat upgrade". Looks like CX was considering to implement such system.
https://twitter.com/JALPak/status/37...931328/photo/1 It's an interesting idea. Probably could generate more revenue than giving out free op-ups. But then those sticking to MPC because of the op-ups might give their business elsewhere. |
Originally Posted by blueonions
(Post 22984135)
I will cease flying CX until they stop this fiasco. What a disgrace for a world-
class airline. I know this topic gets sensitive amongst FFP members as it would disadvantage them from their freebie op-ups. This is what it boils down to. If you want to travel one class higher, then pay for it! |
Originally Posted by 380Flyer
(Post 22991283)
Nothing wrong with this idea as airlines such as Air NZ and Etihad Airways are doing this. It's all about filling seats and getting the extra ancillary revenue for seats that would otherwise go empty.
I know this topic gets sensitive amongst FFP members as it would disadvantage them from their freebie op-ups. This is what it boils down to. If you want to travel one class higher, then pay for it! and now i am not sure if we need 2 threads talking about exactly the same problem... |
I am closing this thread. You can continue discussion here: http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/catha...ck-sought.html
sxc Cathay Pacific Moderator |
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