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It absolutely has to be brokers/bots. I started refreshing the Choice page about 30 seconds before the atomic clock turned 13:00 on my PC and phone simultaneously and kept at it for at least 15 minutes until I miraculously managed to get one of the 55K packages. Everything was already "on hold" as soon as it went on sale. Same w IHG. Things were never like this for those programs in the past. And HH @ 0.5 cpp is just incomprehensible. I would never buy HH at that price and in most cases it's a terrible deal-- but for a handful of luxury properties I imagine a broker with enough points might be able to sell the rooms at a discount off the cash price-- probably without telling the buyer it is a points redemption. I can't think of any other viable explanation. "Revenge travel" just doesn't explain it.
Originally Posted by GundamWing01
(Post 35348534)
exactly. i did a double take and started reading blogs/reddit and doing my own math for cents per pt calculation to verify i didnt miss some insane deal cuz i was so confused. doesnt look like anyone else in the comments section noticed anything because they prob didnt even care.
wyndham and BW are coming up. if those get nuked in a few seconds, we know something doesnt smell right. maybe some broker bot just buying everything. |
Originally Posted by josephstern
(Post 35348358)
I'm wondering if Daily Getaways is just buying the Hyatt points at the regular price and selling them at a lower cost just to keep some of us paying attention. That would explain the basically useless quantities.
Originally Posted by gil123
(Post 35348235)
No I was thinking the same. Just crazy and taking all the fun and usefulness out of it. Only thing I can say is whoever/whatever is buying everything seems to be too stupid to realize what is a good deal and what isn't
IHG awards nights are now eligible for elite status benefits; and there is that fourth night free thing that has some people wanting as many IHG points as possible. I am thinking Wyndham also will get grabbed faster this time. Best Western? Well, there was the value gotten on the night of the Beyoncé concert in Stockholm that has me almost thinking maybe I should consider buying more BW points. [Not likely.] |
One of my colleagues, who I'd given the heads up to, told me they used their teenager's help to set up a 'clicker' app on their computer and set it to repeatedly mash/click on the purchase button when the Choice deal went live. While not quite a bot, I think workarounds like this may be putting many packages into shopping carts nearly instantly after they become available. They managed to pick up four sets of Choice points (and not the $84 variety either).
I've only had luck with the $100 (2) Marriott gift cards this year.
Originally Posted by gil123
(Post 35348633)
It absolutely has to be brokers/bots. I started refreshing the Choice page about 30 seconds before the atomic clock turned 13:00 on my PC and phone simultaneously and kept at it for at least 15 minutes until I miraculously managed to get one of the 55K packages. Everything was already "on hold" as soon as it went on sale.
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I didn’t have us try for Marriott, but we got most of what we wanted for Choice.
Wyndham hasn’t sold out still from today’s sale, and that’s even as it’s not like Super8 and DaysInn are all they have to offer as redemption options. |
The MGM packages today were all on hold within 15 seconds of the 1:00 window. I was looking first at the Skylofts packages, and they were on hold at 13:00:02. No fun to compete with bots.
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The quantity of the packages is so few that they would go fast even without automated grabbing tools in use.
It’s rather telling which packages aren’t selling out at all yet. |
Originally Posted by josephstern
(Post 35348358)
I'm wondering if Daily Getaways is just buying the Hyatt points at the regular price and selling them at a lower cost just to keep some of us paying attention. That would explain the basically useless quantities.
Originally Posted by GUWonder
(Post 35349379)
If not that, then the basically useless/reduced quantities could be a function of USTravel.org’s partners cutting back on their own marketing expenditures funding the sale of discounted items.
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Originally Posted by GUWonder
(Post 35354159)
I didn’t have us try for Marriott, but we got most of what we wanted for Choice.
Wyndham hasn’t sold out still from today’s sale, and that’s even as it’s not like Super8 and DaysInn are all they have to offer as redemption options. |
Originally Posted by Jitin Kakkar
(Post 35366729)
Have you received the Choice points to your account? My first year participating in this, so wondering how long does it generally take to get the points in the account
Originally Posted by oliver2002
(Post 35366697)
AFAIR these packages are donated by the companies to the US Travel Association for free.
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Originally Posted by Jitin Kakkar
(Post 35366729)
Have you received the Choice points to your account? My first year participating in this, so wondering how long does it generally take to get the points in the account
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Originally Posted by oliver2002
(Post 35366697)
AFAIR these packages are donated by the companies to the US Travel Association for free.
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Originally Posted by josephstern
(Post 35368605)
That would explain the tiny quantities.
In earlier times the package quantities used to be significantly more in number than they have become. But it’s not like the organization sponsor companies’ ability to expense and get related deductions is much lower now than in earlier times. But marketing expenditures often get toyed with when times are perhaps too good or expected to be bad and earnings management is the driver of the day. |
Got my Choice points into my account today.
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Hyatt packages all grabbed within the first 2 seconds at most — and probably more likely within the first second or so.
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Originally Posted by GUWonder
(Post 35375508)
Hyatt packages all grabbed within the first 2 seconds at most — and probably more likely within the first second or so.
Sold out at 10:19. |
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