trippin_the_rift
Established Member
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2006
- Posts
- 3,997
Over the two decades or so that I've been on frequent flyer forums, the topic of lifetime status regularly pops up.
Aside from lifetime Platinum, Qantas's lifetime status offering has never changed.
This is despite the airline growing, shrinking, changing routes, making loads of changes to the way status is earned, penalising it's own members for flying some oneworld member partners, and running loads of status-related campaigns.
Fundamentally, what served airlines well 5, 10, 20 years ago, is far less effective in today's world.
I believe it's time for Qantas to bring lifetime status into the 2020, so that the tier has benefits and leverage to deliver new revenue to the airline into the next decade, while protecting premium pax revenue in the program.
The number of lifetime status holders is more today than it ever has been, and there has now been a tipping point, where it makes sense to recognise the lifetime value through new benefits versus be concerned about adverse selection on revenue dilution (which is correct logic with a smaller program - aka: qantas loyalty 20 years ago).
The current lifetime setup means that if you're Lifetime Gold (with no hope of ever hitting lifetime Plat), you're incentivized to stop using the qantas loyalty program.
Infact, if you are QF lifetime gold, and you wanted lifetime oneworld emerald status - it would be easier, faster and cheaper to start from ZERO with BA to achieve their lifetime emerald status, than it would be to try and move from QF lifetime gold -> lifetime platinum.
All of this amounts to Qantas effectively writing off the very customers who have shown loyalty and spend over a sustained period of time and hold elite status.
These members are better off, in almost every case - switching their business to other airlines, splitting their business, or buying flights based entirely on price/network instead of being influenced by loyalty benefits. This is the exact opposite of what airlines want.
Alaska Airlines recently made changes to their lifetime status, which are fantastic changes: Alaska Airlines Making Huge Improvements To Lifetime Elite Status - View from the Wing
Some ideas to mitigate the lifetime revenue loss QF experiences (they might not even know it):
- Lifetime status holders begin their membership year with status credits to encourage spend-up. Currently, lifetime status holders are de-incentivized to fly/spend beyond their lifetime tier, as they have that tier to 'fall back' on. Why would a lifetime gold member bother to strive to earn any status credits unless they could hit platinum status? They don't.
- Lifetime status should appear on boarding passes, and crew should be able to recognise these pax.
- Lifetime status should receive priority over non-lifetime status holders at the same level.
And like magic, Qantas would instantly pull back all lifetime elites away from Virgin and other carriers.
Virgin has no way to counter this without costing them a small fortune.
Qantas has a waiver from oneworld to implement these initiatives.
Let's get the party happening, QF!
Time to make lifetime status more interesting again.
Aside from lifetime Platinum, Qantas's lifetime status offering has never changed.
This is despite the airline growing, shrinking, changing routes, making loads of changes to the way status is earned, penalising it's own members for flying some oneworld member partners, and running loads of status-related campaigns.
Fundamentally, what served airlines well 5, 10, 20 years ago, is far less effective in today's world.
I believe it's time for Qantas to bring lifetime status into the 2020, so that the tier has benefits and leverage to deliver new revenue to the airline into the next decade, while protecting premium pax revenue in the program.
The number of lifetime status holders is more today than it ever has been, and there has now been a tipping point, where it makes sense to recognise the lifetime value through new benefits versus be concerned about adverse selection on revenue dilution (which is correct logic with a smaller program - aka: qantas loyalty 20 years ago).
The current lifetime setup means that if you're Lifetime Gold (with no hope of ever hitting lifetime Plat), you're incentivized to stop using the qantas loyalty program.
Infact, if you are QF lifetime gold, and you wanted lifetime oneworld emerald status - it would be easier, faster and cheaper to start from ZERO with BA to achieve their lifetime emerald status, than it would be to try and move from QF lifetime gold -> lifetime platinum.
All of this amounts to Qantas effectively writing off the very customers who have shown loyalty and spend over a sustained period of time and hold elite status.
These members are better off, in almost every case - switching their business to other airlines, splitting their business, or buying flights based entirely on price/network instead of being influenced by loyalty benefits. This is the exact opposite of what airlines want.
Alaska Airlines recently made changes to their lifetime status, which are fantastic changes: Alaska Airlines Making Huge Improvements To Lifetime Elite Status - View from the Wing
Some ideas to mitigate the lifetime revenue loss QF experiences (they might not even know it):
- Lifetime status holders begin their membership year with status credits to encourage spend-up. Currently, lifetime status holders are de-incentivized to fly/spend beyond their lifetime tier, as they have that tier to 'fall back' on. Why would a lifetime gold member bother to strive to earn any status credits unless they could hit platinum status? They don't.
- Lifetime status should appear on boarding passes, and crew should be able to recognise these pax.
- Lifetime status should receive priority over non-lifetime status holders at the same level.
And like magic, Qantas would instantly pull back all lifetime elites away from Virgin and other carriers.
Virgin has no way to counter this without costing them a small fortune.
Qantas has a waiver from oneworld to implement these initiatives.
Let's get the party happening, QF!
Time to make lifetime status more interesting again.
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