Home Up Travel Links My Guidebook Travel Tips Comparisons Newsletters Classes Appearances & Media My Travel Humor About Bob & Contact Custom Classes

Frequent Flyer miles, are they worth it???

For those old enough to remember S&H Green Stamps, they were a bribe to keep the customer shopping at the same store.  Eventually all stores offered them.  I was not old enough to figure-out why the economics failed, but all of the redemption stores eventually closed and customers forgot about them.

More than 25 years ago, American Airlines introduced the AAvantage Frequent Flyer program.  It is a huge success because it instilled passenger loyalty to a specific airline.  Today, all airlines offer almost identical frequent flyer programs.

I have traveled over 1,000,000 real air miles (not earned on credit cards, hotels, car rentals, mortgages, etc.), am a gold card holder on Northwest and get some pretty special treatment.  However, when most people try to redeem frequent flyer miles, it's almost impossible to get where they want to go when they want to go unless you plan very far ahead (11 months) or are very flexible.  Accepting frequent flyer miles is like buying a "pig in a poke."  You really have no idea of the cost of what you will be buying with the miles.  There are rarely seats available without invoking the "spend extra miles" option.  That means spending more miles to get a seat.  I call that "moving the goal posts" because it deflates the value of your miles by 50%.  The airlines argue that there are so many more ways to earn frequent flyer miles, you should expect to pay more miles for your "free" ticket.  Can you say "frequent flyer mileage deflation" boys and girls? 

The NW web site is one of the best in the business. It allows you to make (or shall I say "attempt" to make) reservations using frequent flyer miles.  Funny thing about it, if you use the standard miles rule, there are rarely any seats available.  Yes, they will be happy to sell you a seat or take twice the number of miles but it's darn hard to find a seat (how about enough seats for the entire family?).  You try for your first date, then the second, then the third, etc.  You then can try to find a seat over the next seven days.  You get the idea.  If you find a seat for the outbound portion of your trip, good luck finding a seat for the return.  I'm a pretty slow learner but eventually I got the idea.  They don't want to make any free seats available.  I usually call the special "elite member" phone number for help.  That costs them both phone line charges and labor costs.  The very nice phone agent has some special software at her disposal.  I asked when the next date was that had any seat available.  Eventually she found something on a date and a time that was totally inconvenient (I can't imagine how hard it is for the "regular" customers to find seats). 

If you have full disclosure, we will know the value of our frequent flyer miles to be able to make informed buying decisions.  Otherwise, NW will continue to convince us that we should try to use our green stamps to go to Peoria in the winter rather than Paris in the summer.  I've never been an advocate of anything big or governmental (together the two are dangerous) but I believe it's time for frequent flyer seat availability full-disclosure.