andye
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jan 14, 2013
- Posts
- 6,137
- Qantas
- Qantas Club
- Virgin
- Silver
- Oneworld
- Sapphire
I always thought that from an airline's perspective, the FF programme should be there to drive incremental spend (in air and on ground) rather than just a proportionate reward for spending.
I'd expect that the majority of people flying expensive flex domestic fares have minimal input into who they fly with.
Whereas the moderate/low fare flyer might be prepared to spend a bit more to achieve a status level (and hence be more likely to engage in credit cards/other partners too) if they can make it work.
Cash is not unimportant too though. There are quite a few people who claim to be QF loyalists when they fly their biennial Y trip. This is like expecting a partner to be grateful just because you don't sleep with anyone else, but never pay them a compliment or take them to dinner
I'd expect that the majority of people flying expensive flex domestic fares have minimal input into who they fly with.
Whereas the moderate/low fare flyer might be prepared to spend a bit more to achieve a status level (and hence be more likely to engage in credit cards/other partners too) if they can make it work.
Cash is not unimportant too though. There are quite a few people who claim to be QF loyalists when they fly their biennial Y trip. This is like expecting a partner to be grateful just because you don't sleep with anyone else, but never pay them a compliment or take them to dinner