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Some of the IHG promos from about ten years back when you’d get a list of different criteria to meet, most of the criteria could be stacked, and if you met all (or sometimes almost all) of the criteria you got an additional bonus. So the game was figuring out how to hit the bonus with the minimum amount of cash outlay, and you’d end up with like 120K points for staying three nights (criteria #1) at an Even hotel (criteria #2) in New Jersey (criteria #3) or something like that and could then turn around and spend some of those points on 5K per night point break properties in somewhat decent locations.
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TWA was a wealth of gamification as the 40k miles for one FC UPG and a free FC ticket.
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I think of AA's 20th anniversary of AAdvantage 20/20 promo back in I think 2001, that awarded a bunch of miles if you earned from 20 distinct partners. That one was fun, had a bunch of us donating a dollar to something called the Erin Go Bragh Foundation, and buying $3 spools of fishing line from Orvis.
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Originally Posted by MSPeconomist
(Post 36239524)
Originally I read the thread title as "glamification" which made me wistfully recall the TWA RT IFC (Ambassador class) TATL award tickets that included a ticket on the Orient Express for 50,000 miles (plus an upgrade to IFC that I could use later on any TATL RT coach fare).
Under gamification, when I flew to Russia regularly, the cost in miles to upgrade the TATL RT (including connecting segments) from coach to "world" business class on PMNW (with KLM segments AMS-SVO and vv) was roughly equal to the number of redeemable miles I earned for the trip (and of course I also earned a ton of elite qualifying and lifetime miles on these trips). It wasn't rocket science but upgrading without guilt was nice. I took my grandmother to London/Paris from LAX on TWA in 1990 with a FC award ticket. She actually helped me earn miles as she flew a couple times in 1988 when all the airlines had triple miles. That was back when earning FFB miles meant peeling a sticker off from one of the sheets they sent you and affix it to the back of the paper ticket. If you ran out of stickers or forgot them from home--no worries, GAs were happy to give you blank stickers to hand write your name/FFB number on, peel off and slap on the back of the ticket. My grandmother had no idea she technically was breaking the rules putting her first initial/last name on the sticker--which was the same as my first initial last name. I was just a undergrad student at the time and never would have flown enough for the TWA European FC award for *2*. For 90K miles, not only did you get 2 FC RT tickets to any European city, but it also came with certificates good for 5 nights stay at any Hilton and 5 days of car rental from Hertz. Nowadays I've seen single domestic transcon flights run more than 90K. Those were the days! |
Wow - I had no idea that FF miles were credited in such a manner. I never flew TWA (to my knowledge) and definitely wasn't a member in their FF program, but I don't remember such a mechanism on any other carrier from the early 90's when I first started participating in such programs on other carriers.
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Originally Posted by Steve M
(Post 36710767)
Wow - I had no idea that FF miles were credited in such a manner. I never flew TWA (to my knowledge) and definitely wasn't a member in their FF program, but I don't remember such a mechanism on any other carrier from the early 90's when I first started participating in such programs on other carriers.
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Who remembers the Latin Pass Million Mile run back in 2000?
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Originally Posted by mia
(Post 35467126)
Some Flyertalk posters are interested in, and motivated by, Badges and Titles, in addition to Miles and Points.
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Originally Posted by LAXFlyer00
(Post 36705621)
Ah, the memories of flying TWA.
I recall the 50K awards I redeemed in the late 80s - FC anywhere, plus an FC upgrade anywhere, plus 7 nights of hotel, plus 7 days rental car. |
More than once Hilton Honors ran a 5/10/15/20 promo. First stay 5K bonus points, then 10K then 15K then 20K - so four stays netted 50K extra points.
This was also at the time where you could get a six-night stay at a Hawaii resort (Oahu or Waikoloa) for 100K points all in. We scored this one twice back in the day! |
Originally Posted by LAXFlyer00
(Post 36705621)
Ah, the memories of flying TWA.
I took my grandmother to London/Paris from LAX on TWA in 1990 with a FC award ticket. She actually helped me earn miles as she flew a couple times in 1988 when all the airlines had triple miles. That was back when earning FFB miles meant peeling a sticker off from one of the sheets they sent you and affix it to the back of the paper ticket. If you ran out of stickers or forgot them from home--no worries, GAs were happy to give you blank stickers to hand write your name/FFB number on, peel off and slap on the back of the ticket. My grandmother had no idea she technically was breaking the rules putting her first initial/last name on the sticker--which was the same as my first initial last name. I was just a undergrad student at the time and never would have flown enough for the TWA European FC award for *2*. For 90K miles, not only did you get 2 FC RT tickets to any European city, but it also came with certificates good for 5 nights stay at any Hilton and 5 days of car rental from Hertz. Nowadays I've seen single domestic transcon flights run more than 90K. Those were the days! |
Some personal favorites were the IHG Priceless Surprises. I was in India at the time and was able to fill out postcards to do the max # of entries for about $27. I netted $150 of VGCs and about 200k points if I recall correctly. A couple months before that there was a different IHG promo, I stayed 2 weeks in Wakkanai Japan at $7 a night and ended up with 70k points.
And of course Eurobonus millionaire! I can say this now, I just got my mil today. Really fun promo!! |
I had no idea this was even a thing, I will have to look into this more. I just thought we earned points and miles and redeemed the, and now you're telling me we can make a game out of it? That's some genius marketing there who ever came up with that idea.
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