I have been on numerous AA flights and witnessed Pilots, in uniform (I assume heading home after duty), boarding last & moving past me into the main cabin to be seated, all the while every empty First Class seat was filled with complimentary gate upgrades (to high tier frequent fliers, as per the upgrade screen rankings).The reason the article got my attention was because on my AA flight just before i read the article AA staff(wearing ID but in civvies)were down the back and at least 4 ordinary pax upgraded to F-that was the number on the upgrade list when we got to the gate.soon after they announced all upgrades had cleared.That to me is a better loyalty scheme.
Additionally, as staff names get placed with everyone else's - on the standby screens at the gate, it is very clear that they stay at the bottom of that list.
Generally, when I have arrived at an AA gate for an earlier scheduled service, to try my luck with the AA-standby-lottery (its actually quite addictive), my name goes right to the top of the standby screen ranking - just as the look on all the staff faces hanging around goes down. (Of course, due to the way standby is processed; as a non-flexible* First Class ticket holder [i.e. Instant Upgrade] with carry-on only, I always check the likelihood that a First Class seat will be available with the gate agent, before I try my luck. [i.e. The upgrade screen is processed first, then the standby screen, then the upgrade screen is reprocessed allowing confirmed standby passengers to be upgraded only if all First Class seats weren't filled in the first round of upgrades...] all quite complex, but very fun & *flexible enough for me! Obviously flexible First Class ticket holders are confirmed immediately into First Class seats as soon as requested/available.)
I have said it before, and I will say it again, if airline businesses want frequent fliers to fly their airline, they should run it the way AA does. Leave Qantas to their stuffy nosed "fly with empty premium seats" market position, and they will start to haemorrhage (they can only get away with "protecting revenue", while their bread and butter frequent fliers in lower cabins aren't enticed away!)