IHG Rewards Club – the loyalty program for Intercontinental, Crowne Plaza, Holiday Inn and related brands — is offering a 100% bonus on purchased points through June 30.
This means you can buy points at $0.00575 apiece.
by Gary Leff
IHG Rewards Club – the loyalty program for Intercontinental, Crowne Plaza, Holiday Inn and related brands — is offering a 100% bonus on purchased points through June 30.
This means you can buy points at $0.00575 apiece.
by Gary Leff
A truly top quality time lapse YouTube video of the Dubai airport made from 88,000 shots that you can spin 360 degrees.
by Gary Leff
A couple of comments I’ve heard over the past several days are worth addressing, because they represent ideas that make flyers worse off. And it’s flyers doing it to themselves.
The first is that — no matter how much better a program is — “I’m not going to switch because the other program will devalue too.”
by Gary Leff
American flies 3-cabin 777s sold as 2-cabin domestically. And right now anyone, even without elite status, can reserve those business class seats when buying an economy ticket at least on one important route.
by Gary Leff
Earlier I wrote about loyalty program fraud discussions that take place at the major programs and how they often prioritize the wrong things and start out with a ‘blame the customer mindset’ even when it is against the interests of their own program.
But I don’t want to leave the impression that all members behave reasonably towards these programs and that it’s only hackers that loyalty executives ought to worry about.
by Gary Leff
British Airways has devalued their mileage in a major way. They’ve built a system that rewards paid full fare business and first class passengers who want to redeem their miles for short haul economy. They’ve made status harder to earn. And the truth is that once you earn it, it isn’t very valuable.
Indeed, even a British Airways Gold member who primarily flies BA and lives in London even would likely be better off flying the airline but crediting their trips to American AAdvantage.
by Gary Leff
I’ve been around several ‘loyalty fraud’ discussions recently amongst airline and hotel loyalty program executives. Fraud by members is a huge topic of conversation for loyalty programs these days.
And I’ve figured out that there are really four kinds of loyalty program fraud. And programs are focusing on the wrong ones. They think their members are out to get them, even though they write the rules… and too often are themselves the ones committing the fraud.
by Gary Leff
A collection of the most interesting links you’ll want to see, many you’ll want to click.
by Gary Leff
Earlier today I wrote about how Delta charges you extra miles for award tickets even when saver space is available on all your flights.
It’s not a secret. In fact, Delta actually spells this out on their website. They won’t publish an award chart, but they’ll tell you why they may not price two segments that have the lowest available inventory at the lowest level when booked together.
by Gary Leff
While the card is still on the Fairmont website, the application link does not work as of this writing – and the product is not included in Chase’s list of hotel credit cards. This has happened before, so is it just a repeat of a year ago or something more permanent?
Gary Leff is one of the foremost experts in the field of miles, points, and frequent business travel -- a topic he has covered since 2002.
Co-founder of frequent flyer community InsideFlyer.com, emcee of the Freddie Awards, and named one of the "World's Top Travel Experts" by Conde' Nast Traveler (2010-Present) Gary has been a guest on most major news media, profiled in several top print publications, and published broadly on the topic of consumer loyalty. More About Gary »