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Originally Posted by MarqFlyer
(Post 9899813)
I won't dispute that many flyers book based on price. But I beileve you overestimate this factor, and underestimate the importance of miles. If you properly consider the fact that many flyers DO very seriously consider miles, then factor in the $$ that airlines make selling miles, you will have the answer to your question of why airlines keep the programs.
So, in response to your question, your theory that "because the programs exist they must be worth keeping" is not necessarily or even obviously true. My theory can just as well explain the outcome we're witnessing. |
Originally Posted by magiciansampras
(Post 9900110)
But if all, or most, airlines decided to get rid of their programs, it would mean that the airlines would just compete on price.
The last thing most sellers want to do is compete only on price, because the natural effect is that the price keeps going down, down, down. Instead, sellers of everything from cars to ketchup to airline seats try to convince consumers that their product is just a little bit better than their competitors' products, which would allow them to resist downward price pressure. Witness the billions of dollars sellers spent on advertisements. And one way airlines can do that is by using FFPs -- which essentially tell consumers that it's better for them to keep buying tickets on that airline because they will eventually get something in exchange for their loyalty. Granted, as prices continue to increase, this might be a less relevant factor, but it still is a factor -- at least the airlines (and I) believe it is. Do you really think the airlines want to drive prices ever lower by competing only on price? |
Originally Posted by YXUFlyboy
(Post 9899340)
Most leisure travelers look at price and that's the bottom line.
http://www.jdpower.com/travel/articl...Ahead%E2%80%A6 |
Originally Posted by MarqFlyer
(Post 9900513)
The last thing most sellers want to do is compete only on price...
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Originally Posted by magiciansampras
(Post 9900110)
...would mean that the airlines would just compete on price.
Frequent flyer programs work because the airline can use seats which would be otherwise unsold to reward loyalty. The key is that these seats are worth more, much more, to the passenger than they are to the airline. This has made the programs cost effective for the airlines and good value for their customers. I think we are making the assumption that this has changed or will change soon. Reduced capacity will squeeze the otherwise unsold seats out of the system, and award redemptions will of necessity replace revenue seats. This depends how well the airlines match capacity to demand at higher fares. I am sceptical that airlines have good models to project demand at sustained higher fares, because it's been too long since the industry has been able to implement major fare increases. Reducing capacity will lower the absolute number of seats, but they need to simultaneously increase load factors. If this proves difficult there may still be an ample supply of unsold seats. Even if award redemptions do displace some revenue passengers it's not a damaging revenue loss because reward tickets are not "free" tickets. A material proportion of miles are purchased from the airlines by their marketing partners. Reward tickets are substantially discounted prepaid tickets. It would seem more sensible to raise redemption levels than to eliminate the programs. I think we will see most carriers follow Delta's lead and introduce penny-a-mile redemptions in parallel with traditional fixed mileage redemptions. For example, a $650 domestic economy class ticket would cost 65,000 miles if there were no award-eligible seats allocated. |
A certain former AA CEO gave a speach. You could enjoy reading it. I do not fully agree on it on the whole, but no mention about FFPs... so I presume he thinks the FFPs are not so bad after all.
Every person has the right to have his own ideas, but be aware of other's ones could be anyway useful. |
Originally Posted by magiciansampras
(Post 9873331)
I think the people that fly based on FF program are in the minority.
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If airlines want to compete on just price, they had better look over their shoulder as RyanAir is looking at setting up a US airline and also planning to fly TATL.
RyanAir has a solid business plan, and is one of the few airline stocks worth investing in. One of my mutual funds that invests only in overseas stocks holds only one airline stock among its portfolio, RyanAir Holdings, and it beefed up its holdings there last year by over 30%. For the passenger, however, RyanAir is not very customer focused. |
Originally Posted by Carolinian
(Post 9906331)
According to our travel office in the international organization that I work for, most of our employees fly their business travel on ff programs, and actively specify which carrier they would prefer based on their ff program. Business travel tends to be the most lucrative for airlines.
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Originally Posted by magiciansampras
(Post 9906427)
Interesting.. in the firms I've worked for most employees flew based on convenience and times, not on FF programs.
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Originally Posted by Carolinian
(Post 9906495)
Almost all of our travel is international. Was your firms' mostly domestic? Our employees also have a useful perk, in that if a trip is over a set number of hours, we are entitled to a stop over enroute, with per diem and hotel. Many of us take advantage of that when we can.
IME a lot of business travelers are racking up FF miles on flights they would be taking anyway. !-) |
Originally Posted by mia
(Post 9880409)
The problem with this approach is that many frequent flyers are travelling on tickets paid by their employers, and rewarding spending creates an incentive to choose higher fares. I think we will not see redeemable miles linked directly to dollars, but we may see more booking classes earn zero or reduced redeemable miles. The airlines may also prefer this because booking class may be more closely correlated to profitability than gross dollars.
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Originally Posted by ANDREWCX
(Post 9873406)
On the topic of credit cards - the banks pay a lot of $$$$ to the airlines for those miles, and with restrictive redemptions, the liability isn't anywhere near its book value.
I think we are seeing the last days of the airlines' cash cow known as affinity cards. This in turn will change FF programs from profit centers back to marketing expenses. More reason to devalue.
Originally Posted by ANDREWCX
(Post 9874769)
If FF programs really don't have any value to the bottom line, I am sure Southwest, AirTran, JetBlue etc etc would have dropped their programs.
Originally Posted by mia
(Post 9876189)
Elite status was grafted onto frequent flyer programs and is logically distinct. Any airline could easily operate a recognition program which offered preferred booking, lounge access, boarding, seating, upgrades, etc without any type of redeemable miles program.
Originally Posted by redwall850
(Post 9877323)
Changing loyalty FF programs to award miles or points based on dollars spent makes way more sense for a cost standpoint.
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I know my behavior is modified by the frequent flyer program at UA.
I fly for work maybe four domestic round trips a year, but when I do it's Star Alliance or nothing. Not because I love them or anything, but because their network is convenient to ORD. I probably also make one more leisure flight on UA--with wife--than I would otherwise as well. Why? The lure of a free ticket to Hawaii or Europe. If I were flying strictly on price or the FFP were junked, I'd fly AA out of ORD or drive another 20 miles to CHI and fly WN (not always cheaper) or drive another 40 miles to MKE (sometimes a big price difference). But I doubt I'm far from normal. No miles, no loyalty. For me anyway. |
I think that everyone here is forgetting the real advantage the airline is getting from "loyalty cards".
They get a comprehensive database of all our (frequent flyers) personal information and direct access to us in order to target their advertising most effectively. I believe the airlines get just as much from these programs as we, the loyalty card holders, do. |
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