If the revenue behind the points that QFF is selling to merchants is growing, that's really the important part.
If people are slowly accepting the fact that they now need more points for a redemption, in theory there will be more unredeemed points on the balance sheet. This, plus growing revenue into QFF, could occur concurrently. That is a good thing for Qantas.
Inflationary changes have been occurring in all FF programs for a long time now.. yet they are still doing well.
It's always interesting to read posts that assume Qantas Loyalty is bullet proof and keeps going from strength to strength.
It's particularly interesting when only a page earlier I
spelt out that every key metric is currently going backwards. YOY points accumulation growth is down, points redemption growth is down, revenue growth is down, earnings are negative, operating margin is down.
That doesn't mean Qantas Loyalty is doomed or anything remotely of the sort. To the contrary, Qantas Loyalty will continue to grow and remain profitable, especially because Australia is such an uncompetitive market for domestic airlines & loyalty programs.
But it means what they offer to customers still matters.
Those people (and there a LOT) who are engaged with QFF holistically - status and perks are probably contributing as much or more to the QF Group bottom line overall - which is the point of loyalty programs.
Anyone who knows how a business works would know that what happens at the margins are all-important. You might have a loyal customer base that will buy your product no matter what (and Qantas has that in spades), but a business is in big trouble if it cannot attract people at the margins (ie new customers) because (a) the loyal customer base does not provide much growth — it is hard to convince someone only collecting Qantas points and only flying Qantas to spend more with Qantas and (b) that loyal customer base eventually stops consuming the product — that is especially important for Qantas as a huge portion of its customers are boomers who will eventually stop flying for health reasons.
If you look at the younger demographic, they
really hate Classic Plus (all separate links). Again, it doesn't mean Qantas is doomed. Far, far from it. But there's very little evidence to say Classic Plus has been some big win — for Qantas or for customers.
Edit: FWIW I think we're about to see a big uptick in Classic Plus redemptions. Once the Classic program devalues later this year, the difference in points price between Classic and Classic Plus is going to significantly diminish. Indeed, Classic Plus will be cheaper than Classic on a regular basis — pretty much whenever there's a sale on cash fares. The big long-term question is whether getting 1-1.5c/pt will excite enough customers to drive new/incremental spend towards Qantas-earning products.