United “TWARE” Deal: 40% off to Sydney and Melbourne Between October 1 and November 30

United just announced a Twitter deal to Australia, 40% off (for real) to Australia in October and November. These deals usually don’t last long, just a couple of hours, although at times continuing to enter the promotion code will continue to work (at times even for a couple of days!) long after the deal ‘ends’ on the landing page for the offer. In this case, the promo code is TWRAU. These fares do earn miles, but are not ugpradable with United 1K Systemwide vouchers. Fares aren’t as low as a month ago when United made a similar 40% off offer, but that’s a function of the calendar — October and November are more expensive months to fly to Sydney than August/September.

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All Nippon and Asiana Long Haul First Class Award Availability

I’m stuck flying nothing but domestically for the next couple of months, I have an India trip coming up (my first time in India!) but I’ve been still itching to at least book something internationally. So I did some research and put together a first class award to Asia, something I do at least once a year. It’s still about six months off, but I booked it anyway just to satisfy my wanderlust. Remember that planning a vacation is what brings the most happiness. And I’m pretty happy with what I came up with, flying All Nippon, Singapore, and Thai. I thought I’d share some of the comprehensive availability searching that I did yesterday, in case it’s useful to any of y’all in planning your own first class awards. In all cases I searched beginning…

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Hyatt Credit Card Still Coming Soon

In February, Chase announced that they’d be bringing a new Hyatt co-branded card to market. And since then we’ve heard… nothing. Chase execs that I’ve pressed have clammed up, ‘we’re not allowed to talk about it.’ I surmised tha there might be trouble in paradise on the way to making the card a reality. But Hyatt now says that the card is on track to launch “in a month or two.” No word yet on benefits.

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Announcing the Frequent Traveler Awards — the Answer to Which Program is the Best, as Voted on By Real Frequent Travelers

After 21 years, the Freddie Awards were retired. And that was sad news for those of us who follow loyalty programs closely. They were real awards voted on by large numbers of real travelers, focusing on what’s being done right by frequent flyer and frequent guest programs. These were awards programs wanted to win, and really did influence the thinking of program executives towards how to better deliver value for their members. Moreover, there really does have to be a way — beyond just reading this blog — of answering the question, which program is the best? Fortunately there’s going to be a new award stepping precisely into this space, the press release has gone out, so this is now public, the new Frequent Traveler Awards are coming. Voting will begin next month and the…

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Why Your Choice of Frequent Flyer Program Needs to Match Your Award Goals

Continental’s generous routing rules are one reason why I’m not all that happy about the pending Continental-United merger. Wandering Aramean writes about his booking from the US via Europe and Asia to Australia. US Airways permits this, Aeroplan often won’t (though booking via Asia is perfectly doable). United on the other hand requires US-to-Australia awards take a much more direct routing, eg San Francisco, Los Angeles, or Vancouver to Sydney or to Auckland and on to Australia. (There are a couple of other permissable routings, such as via Hawaii and New Zealand, but those aren’t generlaly useful.) Continental offers one stopover and an open jaw, whereas both US Airways and United will allow only one or the other. But more importantly Continental doesn’t really have much in the way of routing rules. Like US Airways…

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Avoiding Delta Telephone Booking Fees When Ticketing Partner Awards

TM Travel World explains how to avoid telephone ticketing fees with Delta when booking partner awards. Most partners cannot be booked online, and if you ticket over the phone they charge a fee. But Troy points out that on the web (and only on the web, not by phone) Delta will permit you to hold an award. So hold whatever segments of your trip are avsilable online. That creates a reservation. Then have an agent update the reservation over the phone with the additional flight segments you need. You can refresh your screen and the reservation right in front of you will show up with the new segments. Once they’re there, instead of having the agent book the ticket, just purchase the ticket online.. no telephone booking fee. Sneaky, eh?

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Everything I Thought I Knew About Complaining Was Wrong

I’ve always thought that the best way to complain to a travel provider was to be concise, stick to the facts, leave out extraneous details and minor annoyances. And if possible, ask clearly for what respoinse you believe is warranted. Often on Flyertalk, on Tripadvisor, and elsewhere you’ll see long rants about the taxi ride to the airport as part of a complaint to the airline. Those are just beside the point, they make it harder to get through the letter andundersand the point. And usually the complaints are being read by customer service center agents who aren’t equipped to decipher complex arguments. You want to make it as simple as possible for the person reading your complaint to digest it, put it into the appropriate category, and act. And yet… I read this complaint…

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US Airways Double Elite Qualifying MIles To and From Select Cities

Via Lucky: US Airways is offering a a double elite qualifying and redeemable miles promotion for select markets through the end of the year. Those markets are PIT, RDU, BOS, and MSP. Unlike the similar Delta and American promotions that require travel to originate in the targeted city offering double elite qualifying miles, the US Airways offer includes travel to those cities as well. Registration is required separately for each fo the double elite qualifying offers.

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American Re-Introduces Discounted Short-haul Awards (Monkey See, Monkey Do)

Last week United announced that they were bringing back discounted economy short-haul awards through August 31. So naturally I just received an email from American announcing the same — down to the length of flights this applies to and the deadline for booking those flights, as well as the pricing. With short-hop awards, customers can fly on American Airlines®, American Eagle® or AmericanConnection® non-stop routes under 700 air miles each way within the continental United States and Canada for a reduced number of miles. Travel one-way in Economy Class for only 8,750 miles (17,500 miles round trip) — a 30% savings off of the standard MileSAAver award! To qualify for this special award, book your reservation by August 31, 2010 and travel between August 3 and December 15. As before, these awards are more expensive…

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250 Free Continental Miles for Learning About Wasting Your Hard-Earned Miles on Merchandise Auctions

Through September 30, Continental is offering 250 free miles for registering on a page promoting spending your miles on Continental Onepass auctions. As with many of these offers, I don’t necessarily bet the points will post for folks who don’t have a Continental Mastercard. But they might. And since the rules of the promotion don’t say you need to have the card, you could probably argue for your 250 points if you don’t and they don’t appear.. Oh, and these auctions seem to be even worse than the ones on eBay. Not that the items on the Continental auction site are fake, of course, but 11,000 miles for two Cleveland Indians tickets… with a week left to go and the price left to rise?

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