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Freebasing
Points
ChrisCrossings · April 4, 2001
Q: Why
do we spend so much time and effort registering for every frequent stay/travel
award under the sun? Is it just me or are these awards as useless as anything?
Next week I am taking a leisure trip to New York City with my wife and
daughter. I booked three nights at a Holiday Inn online. Looking at my
award balance, I have over 25,000 points. It only lakes 15,000 points
for one night. Uh-oh, not so fast - New York City costs 25,000 points.
"OK, let's get one night free, cash one in please," I told the customer
service person.
"I'm sorry sir, this property is sold out of award rooms for those three
days."
Wait a minute, I am paying for two nights and you have the rooms but won't
redeem my award? So, I moved on to a supervisor, told him the details.
"Unfortunately, that property is sold out, but I can move you to this
other location that will accept your reward for one night."
Of course, it still costs 25,000 points.
This is madness! Why do we do this? Starwood Preferred is getting more
of my business just because of their liberal redemption policy, and I
told the supervisor the same thing. He was as helpful as he could be,
but I am not happy about this run-around. And it's not just hotels, it
is airlines too. Blackouts and exceptions are everywhere.
-- Nick Coury
A: Rewards points are the crack cocaine of the travel industry.
And I'm afraid you've become an addict.
What's in it for the travel supplier? From all outward appearances, a
mileage program is nothing but a headache - there are so many resources
that go into building and maintaining the databases of customers. For
what?
Well, there's a big-time payoff. First, the hotel or airline gets access
to a lot of great data about you. Information like spending patterns,
travel itineraries and preferences. Not only would the companies spend
good money for that data, but it turns out that others, like credit card
companies, would too.
Cha-ching! That's money in the supplier's pocket.
Second, the mileage programs effectively control your behavior. That's
what's happening with you and the hundreds of thousands of other travelers.
Just how are you being controlled? Well consider that you didn't shop
for the best deal on a hotel. Instead, you tried to accumulate more points
with Starwood.
Now you think your loyalty ought to be paid off with a hassle-free redemption
of your hard-earned points.
Yeah, right. To continue the drug analogy, the travel suppliers make it
easy for you to get hooked - they dangle free hotels and airline tickets
in front of you. But they don't mention the hidden expenses, which is
that you'll pay outrageous rates in order to accumulate the rewards and
that redemptions will remain elusive.
While it's true that some suppliers have become more generous with redemptions
in the last two years, the fact remains that collecting rewards points
isn't worth it for most travelers. The money you spend on an overpriced
hotel room, rental car or airline ticket simply doesn't make mileage collection
a worthwhile hobby.
I've written about this futile phenomenon a few times already. Last year
I called for an outright ban
on mileage programs. The year before that I documented the mileage
addiction sickness among travelers.
My advice: find a competitive rate next time you plan a trip and forget
about the miles. Unless you're traveling with the same airline two or
three times a week, flying halfway around the world on a regular basis,
becoming a mileage junkie will only benefit one entity: your pusher, the
travel supplier.
Good luck in rehab.
Christopher
Elliott is a travel commentator based in Annapolis, Md. All e-mailed
questions may be edited, condensed or republished at the site's discretion.
ChrisCrossings appears weekly
on this site.
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