juddles
Suspended
- Joined
- Aug 2, 2011
- Posts
- 5,283
- Qantas
- Platinum 1
I have posted this somewhere before, but I feel it may be useful here regarding upgrade benefits:
With Avianca I am at their "Diamond" level which is their P1 equivalent. Their treatment is exactlky the opposite of Qantas - the benefits are published, easy to understand, and IMHO a perfect balance between airline and pax needs.
Avianca sell their Y fares in 4 basic buckets: I will call them "Super Sale", "Saver", "Standard", and "Flex". Obviously this in order from cheap to expensive.
An important central concept here is that the two lower fare buckets, Super Sale and Saver, are NOT able for upgrades. IE if you buy the cheap ticket you do so knowing you will not be upgraded.
If you spend more on the higher fare buckets you enter their two-part lottery. The first comes into effect days prior to the flight. This is where they look at loads and if they are light they give you at LEAST two days in advance a confirmed upgrade to J. In my experience this probably happens at least about 1 out of 10 flights, and that is with no effort on my part seeking out lightly loaded travel times.....
The second part is the upgrades at the airport. Here they will upgrade using any space-available seats in J. This is done in priority order of status and fare bucket. I buy my tickets at the "Standard" fare bucket usually, and enjoy about an 80% success rate at these upgrades.
So essentially they encourage higher spend on base tickets, but reward this with a very high success rate at upgrades.
Oh, and also they give me 4 upgrade certificates per year which I can use at time of booking to buy any ticket at any Y price, and immediately get a confirmed upgrade to J, on any route (includes international, such as Colombia-Spain, etc etc.
I love their system, it is clear, it works for both airline and me, and when I do not get an upgrade I understand exactly why I did not get one.
With Avianca I am at their "Diamond" level which is their P1 equivalent. Their treatment is exactlky the opposite of Qantas - the benefits are published, easy to understand, and IMHO a perfect balance between airline and pax needs.
Avianca sell their Y fares in 4 basic buckets: I will call them "Super Sale", "Saver", "Standard", and "Flex". Obviously this in order from cheap to expensive.
An important central concept here is that the two lower fare buckets, Super Sale and Saver, are NOT able for upgrades. IE if you buy the cheap ticket you do so knowing you will not be upgraded.
If you spend more on the higher fare buckets you enter their two-part lottery. The first comes into effect days prior to the flight. This is where they look at loads and if they are light they give you at LEAST two days in advance a confirmed upgrade to J. In my experience this probably happens at least about 1 out of 10 flights, and that is with no effort on my part seeking out lightly loaded travel times.....
The second part is the upgrades at the airport. Here they will upgrade using any space-available seats in J. This is done in priority order of status and fare bucket. I buy my tickets at the "Standard" fare bucket usually, and enjoy about an 80% success rate at these upgrades.
So essentially they encourage higher spend on base tickets, but reward this with a very high success rate at upgrades.
Oh, and also they give me 4 upgrade certificates per year which I can use at time of booking to buy any ticket at any Y price, and immediately get a confirmed upgrade to J, on any route (includes international, such as Colombia-Spain, etc etc.
I love their system, it is clear, it works for both airline and me, and when I do not get an upgrade I understand exactly why I did not get one.