Milestone Rewards
#106
Join Date: Oct 2014
Posts: 9,188
#107
Suspended
Join Date: Oct 2017
Location: Miami, Florida
Programs: AA ExPlat, Hyatt Globalist, IHG Spire, Hilton Gold
Posts: 4,009
It is a basic economic principle that the value of a commodity is not determined by what it can be used for but rather what it can be sold for on the open market.
It is too bad that Hyatt does not allow these certs to be sold, since there would be a lot of people interested in selling their Cat 1-4 certs to Joe for 15,000 pts.
It is too bad that Hyatt does not allow these certs to be sold, since there would be a lot of people interested in selling their Cat 1-4 certs to Joe for 15,000 pts.
The idea that there are people who were racking up 15,000 to 30,000 welcome-amenity points per year who somehow can’t manage to use a Cat 1-4 cert within 6 months remains silly.
Last edited by joe_miami; Dec 21, 18 at 9:35 am
#108
Moderator: GLBT Travelers & Hyatt Gold Passport
Join Date: Jan 2000
Location: CVG
Posts: 15,296
#109
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Osaka
Programs: Hyatt Explorist, Hilton Gold, UA
Posts: 3,111
Well now that the thread is back on topic, I will repeat that It think the milestone changes offer a real upside for Discoverists (which I am eventually destined to become, likely sooner than expected). Getting 2 Club Access Awards at 20 nights is a major improvement for this tier, making it worthwhile to try for 20 nights without having to go all the way to Explorist. It is also relatively sustainable: one week at an Andaz on a Prive rate and then one week each at a GH or HR using a Club Access Award does not sound too bad to me.
Last edited by OsakaWino; Dec 21, 18 at 10:52 am
#110
Join Date: Aug 2017
Location: Stilllwater OK (SWO)
Programs: AAdvantage ExecPlat, World of Hyatt Globalist, plain "member" of Marriott, IHG, enterprise, etc.
Posts: 1,627
Well not that the thread is back on topic, I will repeat that It think the milestone changes offer a real upside for Discoverists (which I am eventually destined to become, likely sooner than expected). Getting 2 Club Access Awards at 20 nights is a major improvement for this tier, making it worthwhile to try for 20 nights without having to go all the way to Explorist. It is also relatively sustainable: one week at an Andaz on a Prive rate and then one week each at a GH or HR using a Club Access Award does not sound too bad to me.
#111
A FlyerTalk Posting Legend
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Watchlisted by the prejudiced, en route to purgatory
Programs: Just Say No to Fleecing and Blacklisting
Posts: 101,098
Yes, I think that is a good point. This makes decent benefits available for a much less frequent traveller. Let's say there is someone -- Jane Doe, that is a relatively light traveller. Maybe 2 weeks of vacation and 8 nights of work travel a year. If she swings those nights all to Hyatt, she can earn lounge benefits for those 2 weeks of family vacation at a property like HR Lake Tahoe, HR Honolulu, GH Baha Mar, etc etc etc. The 10 extra nights would be out-of-the-way to make 30, and the 4 lounge passes are probably not all usable anyways. The changes can be decent incentive to choose Hyatt over Marriott or Hilton.
#112
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Osaka
Programs: Hyatt Explorist, Hilton Gold, UA
Posts: 3,111
That is a good point. It also ironically may act as a disincentive for people — specially those who would have otherwise stayed enough to reach/maintain Explorist with 4 lounge access award certs — to stay at Hyatt hotels as much as they may have when qualifying for lounge access award certs was a 4 or nothing business.
Discoverist is now especially attractive to seniors who do not travel for work. 3 weeks of vacation at Hyatt a year gets 2 Club Access Awards, which can be used on Senior rates.
Last edited by OsakaWino; Dec 22, 18 at 2:56 am
#113
FlyerTalk Evangelist & Ambassador: China
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: DEN
Programs: DL DM/MM, UA 1K, AA Exp, HH Dia, WOH Glob, IHG Plat, Marriott Gold, NA EE, Hertz PC
Posts: 17,374
Yes, miss the diamond amenity.
Yes it’s true, but points nights are ok.
#114
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: USA & UK -- AA EXP 3.5MM, Hyatt Diamond, SPG Plat, Avis President's Club
Posts: 6,411
Hyatt apparently wants an easy system where you "get something" after every 10 nights. Yet it would make more sense if the awards were stairstepped in a more logical sequence so that each 10-night milestone gives you more of an award. Right now, the sequence does not "grow" as you go up the stairsteps. If we rank the top three milestones by value:
It would make a lot more sense if the awards generally increase as you go up their staircase. For example:
I would be _perfectly_ fine with getting points instead of Room Night Awards. The Room Night Awards are flawed anyway. They can't be upgraded and they expire too soon.
Maybe the math would have to be tweaked. You'd want to give approximately the same cumulative value under any new program. Still, it makes a lot of sense for the award values to increase each 10 nights, instead of sometimes increase (30 or 60 nights) and sometimes decrease. (40 or 70 nights).
- 60 nights (biggest)
- 30 nights
- 50 nights
It would make a lot more sense if the awards generally increase as you go up their staircase. For example:
- 10 nights - a club certificate
- 20 nights - 5K points and a club certificate
- 30 nights - 10K points and a club certificate and Explorist status (better rooms, more bonus points)
- 40 nights - 15K points and club certificate
- 50 nights - 15K points and a TSU
- 60 nights - 20K points and a TSU and Globalist status (better rooms, more bonus points, concierge, club access)
- 70 nights - 25K points and a TSU
I would be _perfectly_ fine with getting points instead of Room Night Awards. The Room Night Awards are flawed anyway. They can't be upgraded and they expire too soon.
Maybe the math would have to be tweaked. You'd want to give approximately the same cumulative value under any new program. Still, it makes a lot of sense for the award values to increase each 10 nights, instead of sometimes increase (30 or 60 nights) and sometimes decrease. (40 or 70 nights).
Last edited by CloudCoder; Dec 22, 18 at 8:05 pm
#115
Moderator: Mileage Run, InterContinental Hotels & Radisson Hotel Group
Join Date: May 2004
Posts: 5,752
Maybe I'm just a little slow today, but how do the club lounge awards benefit Globs? We get lounge access anyway, so we get nothing at 20 nights? Or will we receive 2 lounge access awards that are valid for the following year in case we don't requalify? Or are they for the current year and we can use them for friends or gift them to others?
#116
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Jul 2011
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#117
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: USA & UK -- AA EXP 3.5MM, Hyatt Diamond, SPG Plat, Avis President's Club
Posts: 6,411
Maybe I'm just a little slow today, but how do the club lounge awards benefit Globs? We get lounge access anyway, so we get nothing at 20 nights? Or will we receive 2 lounge access awards that are valid for the following year in case we don't requalify? Or are they for the current year and we can use them for friends or gift them to others?
Under the old program, you'd "soft-land" to Explorist and you'd get 4 lounge awards.
Under the new program, you'd "hard-land" to whatever level you actually earned. Stay zero nights in 2019 and you get zilch in 2020. Stay 20 nights and you get two lounge certs.
The net result is that sort-landing is a thing of the past, and you have to requalify every year.
#118
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Osaka
Programs: Hyatt Explorist, Hilton Gold, UA
Posts: 3,111
If you qualified for Glob in 2018, then you get Glob benefits for all of 2019. But what if you don't qualify in 2019?
Under the old program, you'd "soft-land" to Explorist and you'd get 4 lounge awards.
Under the new program, you'd "hard-land" to whatever level you actually earned. Stay zero nights in 2019 and you get zilch in 2020. Stay 20 nights and you get two lounge certs.
The net result is that sort-landing is a thing of the past, and you have to requalify every year.
Under the old program, you'd "soft-land" to Explorist and you'd get 4 lounge awards.
Under the new program, you'd "hard-land" to whatever level you actually earned. Stay zero nights in 2019 and you get zilch in 2020. Stay 20 nights and you get two lounge certs.
The net result is that sort-landing is a thing of the past, and you have to requalify every year.
I do realize that a strict reading of the T&C would seem to preclude any type of soft landing, but wasn't that also the case with the old T&C? Hyatt just said that it had always been their policy to only downgrade one tier.
#119
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: LAS ORD
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Posts: 5,992
Soft landing definitely wasn't in the old T&Cs, but was explicitly stated by Hyatt reps (I even think Zidell mentioned it once). I'd thus expect Hyatt to announce publicly and explicitly if they were to change the policy, even if not technically in the program terms.
#120
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Osaka
Programs: Hyatt Explorist, Hilton Gold, UA
Posts: 3,111
World of Hyatt [Pre-Launch]
4. If a current 2016 Diamond will transition to be a 2017 Globalist, and completes 5-9 stays (but less than 10 nights) in Jan-Feb 2017 -- thus earning Platinum -- what will be their tier starting March 2018 (assuming no further stays)? Discoverist or Explorist?
Answer: As always, our members are transitioned down one tier if they fail to qualify to maintain their tier level. Therefore if someone is a Globalist and is set to downgrade at renewal, the member will become an Explorist.
After Jeff left I wanted confirmation and this is the response I received from the Hyatt concierge on FT on 11 OCT 2017:
I did get clarification and you are correct. Members only ever go down one tier at a time.
But I guess policy that is not documented in the T&C could be changed without notice...