Creston
Junior Member
- Joined
- Mar 1, 2011
- Posts
- 25
Dear Mr Joyce,
I am writing an open letter to you and your team in the hope that you will re-visit your stategy and treatment of loyal QFF's. Hopefully that day is not too far in the future, as you may find no one left to listen, or worse, no one left to even care.
You have finally succeded in pushing this loyal Qantas fan and loyal Qantas Frequent Flyer too far, and I have just converted some of my cards to earn non Qantas points. I feel only by cancelling my automatic Qantas points accruing cards will anybody in your office start to take notice. And I make sure the credit card companies know why I am switching.
I will state some of my frustrations below, but if your marketing team is doing their job, they already have the information at hand, which makes me believe that Qantas does not care about their frequent flyer. (Forum members have been saying this for years, but I, like your team, always turned a deaf ear to the noises).
I know nothing about how an airline works, but I know what works for the ordinary frequent flyer. How hard can it be to to develop a website that is useful, rather than the pathetic web site you are currently using? Many a time my heart beats faster when I see the rare and almost impossible to find yellowish icon stating a business seat is available, only to click 50 more steps to realise it is for a segment of the booking for a 1 hour flight, and the other 27 hours is actually in economy? (These days my heart beats fatser if I even manage to see an increasingly rare red icon!!) Why would you allocate premium seating to the caterers first cousin from his second wifes third husband, instead of to your loyal frequent flyer members? (My brother in law manages to get a business class seat for a few hundred dollars due to his family connection in catering and I fly economy paying thousands of dollars, whilst banking millions of (useless?) points is not fun. Actually to be frank, it is a slap in the face).
Is the intention so we spend points on the Qantas store rather than on a Qantas plane? My friends always manage to fly business class with your competition using their points, whilst I have to be content with yet another Dyson from the Qantas store?
As a business owner myself, I know the value of existing loyal customers, and I also know that once they decide to swtch, it is virtually impossible to get them back.
Mr Joyce, you and your team need to change direction before it is too late. I read somewhere that the QFF division is one of the most profitable parts of the group. If this is correct, you need to retain your loyal QFF's, whether they earn you money on the ground via credit card spend, via flying, or via walking. Once they realise that it is quite easy to switch sides, you will need to work very hard indeed to win them back.
I am writing an open letter to you and your team in the hope that you will re-visit your stategy and treatment of loyal QFF's. Hopefully that day is not too far in the future, as you may find no one left to listen, or worse, no one left to even care.
You have finally succeded in pushing this loyal Qantas fan and loyal Qantas Frequent Flyer too far, and I have just converted some of my cards to earn non Qantas points. I feel only by cancelling my automatic Qantas points accruing cards will anybody in your office start to take notice. And I make sure the credit card companies know why I am switching.
I will state some of my frustrations below, but if your marketing team is doing their job, they already have the information at hand, which makes me believe that Qantas does not care about their frequent flyer. (Forum members have been saying this for years, but I, like your team, always turned a deaf ear to the noises).
I know nothing about how an airline works, but I know what works for the ordinary frequent flyer. How hard can it be to to develop a website that is useful, rather than the pathetic web site you are currently using? Many a time my heart beats faster when I see the rare and almost impossible to find yellowish icon stating a business seat is available, only to click 50 more steps to realise it is for a segment of the booking for a 1 hour flight, and the other 27 hours is actually in economy? (These days my heart beats fatser if I even manage to see an increasingly rare red icon!!) Why would you allocate premium seating to the caterers first cousin from his second wifes third husband, instead of to your loyal frequent flyer members? (My brother in law manages to get a business class seat for a few hundred dollars due to his family connection in catering and I fly economy paying thousands of dollars, whilst banking millions of (useless?) points is not fun. Actually to be frank, it is a slap in the face).
Is the intention so we spend points on the Qantas store rather than on a Qantas plane? My friends always manage to fly business class with your competition using their points, whilst I have to be content with yet another Dyson from the Qantas store?
As a business owner myself, I know the value of existing loyal customers, and I also know that once they decide to swtch, it is virtually impossible to get them back.
Mr Joyce, you and your team need to change direction before it is too late. I read somewhere that the QFF division is one of the most profitable parts of the group. If this is correct, you need to retain your loyal QFF's, whether they earn you money on the ground via credit card spend, via flying, or via walking. Once they realise that it is quite easy to switch sides, you will need to work very hard indeed to win them back.