United Extends Discounted Coach Short-Haul Awards

Posted on: August 31st, 2010 by: Gary

At the end of July, United re-introduced discounted short-haul awards, but only offered the option through August 31.

Instead of the usual 12,500 miles one-way or 25,000 miles roundtrip, they’re charging 8,750 one-way or 17,500 roundtrip.

This applies to awards booked at least 7 days in advance of travel (no discount on last-minute award bookings), and is for flights that are 700 miles or less each way and only within the Continental U.S. or between the U.S. and Canada.

Now that it’s August 31, they’ve extended the offering — but only for tickets booked by September 30, 2010 for travel through January 7, 2011.

Like last time I’d fully expect American to match.

But it’d sure be nice if they made moves like these a permanent part of the program rather than a ‘temporary’ promotion.

Why I Love US Airways Reservations Agents

Posted on: August 31st, 2010 by: Gary

Award from US to Kuala Lumpur and back, business class. Set up the reservation, agent gets ready to price. And contra Continental where the computers do everything, US Airways agents do a whole lot more fill in the blanks.

Very helpful agent asks me about Kuala Lumpur, “that’s in North Asia, right?”

Of course, business class to North Asia is 90,000 miles and to South Asia is 120,000 miles.

Sadly, I am an honest man. Or at least I’m willing to own up to my geography.

Still, I have to wonder (and I often wonder) whether US Airways made a really big mistake when they tried to save money by switching off of Sabre to SHARES.

I flew them the weekend of the systems cutover, certainly I knew better but I had a great desire to be a part of the experience. And an experience it was — online check-in was dead, the kiosks were dead, and there was a multi-hours long line for human check-in because the agents simply weren’t familiar with the system yet and were overwhelmed with everyone who would normally self-checkin needing live assistance (and wihtout concommitant ramp up in airline personnel to help).

Even the first class check-in line was 45 minutes long. I tipped the skycaps $5 to check me in, even though I had no luggage. They knew how to issue boarding passes!

From that day forward – and early on they weren’t even able to sell paid tickets on partners – they must have lost money as a result of the decision.

Now, I actually like working with US Airways agents. They’re slow doing everything manually but I don’t remember the last time I spoke to an overseas call center (actually I do, pretty sure it was November). And though the agents don’t know much about geography or world cities and have to figure out things manually or wait on interminable holds when they have to involve their rate desk, I much prefer to deal with empowered humans — and with humans you can always call back and try again rather than just getting the same answer from a human.

With Continental if the computer says something, it’s true. Even when it’s wrong.

So long live US Airways, live agents, and outdated technology.

25,000 Delta Miles for $500 in Skymall Purchases Today Only

Posted on: August 31st, 2010 by: Gary

The offer is at skymall.com/25000 and runs through 11:59pm tonight (Mountain time) only. They’ll award 25,000 Delta miles for making $500 in net purchases (excluding tax and shipping) today only.

It’s not valid on gift cards, and some items and vendors are ineligible and per the terms and conditions of the offer that’ll be “noted on the product page.”

Discussion on Flyertalk is here.

Now, I don’t have time to find anything on the Skymall site that I want, and I don’t want to do this just for the miles (as I won’t spend 2 cents a mile for Skypesos). But if you have any interest in the actual stuff you’d purchase, then this is a pretty rockin’ offer.

(HT: Carol.)

25% Bonus on Diners Club Transfers to American AAdvantage

Posted on: August 29th, 2010 by: Gary

From September 1 through October 31, folks like me who still have a Diners Club card earn a 25% bonus on transfers of Club Rewards points to AAdvantage.

Meanwhile through end of September transfers of 40,000 – 59,000 Diners Club points into Delta Skymiles earns a 20% bonus and 60,000 or more points earns a 50% bonus but that offer holds little interest to me.

In both cases my inclination is to save points in Club Rewards for their flexibility rather than being tempted into a transfer just for the bonus. Though Diners Club has lost several partners in recent years, predominantly because they’ve become a Mastercard and compete in the US against airlines’ own co-branded card offerings now (not to mention the card issuer earning a lower interchange fee as a result of the switch, which also obviously gets the card much broader accepance), partners still include Aeroplan, Alaska, South African, and others. It’s long been the only card positioned to earn Hyatt Gold Passport points, though Chase will be coming out with a Hyatt Visa shortly.

That said, since it’s now widely expected that American Airlines will be discontinuing their practice of counting miles earned from any source towards lifetime elite status qualification at some unknown point in the near future, folks with lots of Diners Club points and an eye of lifetime Gold (1 million miles earned from any source) or lifetime Platinum (2 million miles earned from any source) in the AAdvantage program might consider taking advantage of the bonus now.

Expedia and Citi Thank You Network Severing Ties

Posted on: August 29th, 2010 by: Gary

Expedia and Citi Thank You Network are severing ties on December 1.

Currently Expedia’s prepaid hotel bookings and air and hotel packages earn Thank You Points, and Expedia offers a co-branded credit card issued by Citi which earns bonus points for Expedia purchases. That earning goes away for purchases December 1 and thereafter.

Expedia promises a new rewards program in early 2011. We’ll see what they have in store. To date they haven’t been especially aggressive.

Hotels.com doesn’t have an especially rewarding program, but will give you a free night for every 10 booked — the idea being you can book through them and not be tied to specific chains (or specific chain booking sites) and still earn rewards. Sure, those Hotels.com nights can only be redeemed based on your least expensive nightaverage hotel rate, but it’s something.

Expedia doesn’t reward air-only bookings, which is what I’ve used them for most often. And they don’t reward hotel bookings outside of their lucrative ‘special rate’ offerings. So the Thank You Points was something, an outsourced reward for some bookings, but hardly a driver.

Expedia has an elite program as well, but there’s no real benefits to it other than a higher priority customer service number. When they launched they at least offered to cover the fee for Mileage Manager, which tracks frequent flyer and frequent guest accoutns, tracks expiration dates, and assists with award bookings. That was dropped after a year, and they really just promise ‘special offers’ (aka ‘useless spam’).

Hopefully Expedia’s loyalty rewards re-think will actually be creative, rather than just a way of cutting costs by not having to buy points from Citibank. Anyone with knowledge here, much appreciated.

Tewwowism Paranoia, Then Again Maybe We SHOULD Consider Government Officials to Be Threats…

Posted on: August 29th, 2010 by: Gary

I know you’re not supposed to joke about aviation security, but seriously was this really a threat?

A former Prime Minister of the Cook Islands, Sir Geoffrey Henry, has been removed from an Air New Zealand flight for remarking that he was a terrorist when boarding the plane.

According to Air New Zealand,

Safety of our passengers and crew is of paramount importance so the passenger was escorted off the aircraft.

Bet the flight became that much safer!

Sure, the former Prime Minister is an idiot. You didn’t joke about bombs in an airport long before 9-11. Hard to imagine what was going through the guy’s head, this wasn’t funny. But hard to imagine as well that anyone believed he was a threat to have on board the aircraft.

Current Best Mileage Offer for Flowers: 30 United Miles Per Dollar from FTD

Posted on: August 28th, 2010 by: Gary

Not as good as the offer of 30 miles per dollar plus 1500 miles was, but I do try to keep track of the best mileage offers for flower orders, great for business gifts as well, FYD is offering 30 United miles per dollar at least through Setpember 30, that’s the expiration date listed on the offer I received via email from United but these FTD offer websites usually stay around long past their expiration and continue to work successfully.

US Airways Promo: Up to 100,000 Bonus Miles for Partner Activity

Posted on: August 25th, 2010 by: Gary

US Airways has brought back their Grand Slam promotion (registration required).

Step up to the plate. Get up to 100,000 bonus miles (6,000 of which are Preferred-qualifying miles) with every major-league hit. Get your hits between September 1 and November 14, 2010.

They ran this promo in similar form in 2008 and in 2009.

You can register now for the promo (and might as well), but activity won’t count until September 1. Activity undertaken by November 14 will count, and that activity must post to your US Airways account by February 25.

This year there’s no popping into a Starwood hotel property, having two cokes and running up a $10 tab and having your miles credited directly to US Airways, they’ve implemented a minimum spend for earning credit with Starwood (100 miles minimum to count as a credit in the promo).

Only those partners list on the promotion page count, and US Airways has apparently heard all the excuses and arguments to date such that they feel the need to say that activity with a partner only counts to the extent that it actually earns miles. (Are they talking to you, Steve..??)

Here’s the Bonuses on Offer:

Total number of Hits Total bonus awarded
4 hits 4,000 miles
8 hits 8,000 miles
12 hits 14,000 miles (+ 3,000 EQMs)
16 hits 20,000 miles (+ 6,000 EQMs)
20 hits 30,000 miles
24 hits 40,000 miles
28 hits 60,000 miles
32 hits 80,000 miles
36 hits 100,000 miles

You’ll want to review the qualifying activities on the promo page, looks like I can hit about 16 partners without too much effort.

I’ll transfer some minimum miles (at least 100!) from Starwood, maybe buy miles with the current 100% bonus promo, do a points.com minimum exchange into US Airways, credit some car rentals to US Airways (especially with the current generous Avis bonus), make a purchase through the US Airways mall, I’ll hold off on completing more e-miles surveys (I signed up with US Airways as my partner) until the promo period, convert some e-Rewards…

What Will Hyatt’s Fourth Quarter Promotion Be?

Posted on: August 24th, 2010 by: Gary

Lucky says that Hyatt’s Lake Tahoe property spilled the beans early on its Facebook page, and that we’ll be seeing 10,000 bonus points for every five nights between September 15 and December 15.

That’s actually not a bad promotion, just not as generous as their Faster Free Nights (or Big Welcome Back nights, whatever they wish to call it these days) of a free night for every two stays. So a big bonus actually feels like a disappointment. I know I was hoping to stack up on those free nights with check-ins at my local Hyatt airport property during the fourth quarter, but that may not be in the cards.

Still, this promo in conjunction with the pending launch of the new Hyatt co-branded credit card will make it pretty easy to rack up Hyatt points over the coming months.

I know that the Hyatt Visa is the reason I’ve deferred making any new credit card applications from Chase, since they’ve had a tendencey to only allow one new credit card signup in any given six month period of late. That’s not an across-the-board rule, but I’ve been “saving” by Chase firepower in anticipation of this card to make sure I could jump on it when it came out.

Update: Indeed, Hyatt confirmed on Flyertalk that this is the fourth quarter promo, registration will begin September 15th. And apparently it’ll be possible to earn miles and this bonus at the same time. Now, it won’t get incremental stays from me but I’ll appreciate the bonus on the stays I do make..! I guess this must mean hotel occupancy is better than forecast, since consensus was they’d offer a more generous promo.

Extreme Behavior at the Hotel Gym

Posted on: August 24th, 2010 by: Gary

USA Today picks up my post about the Hyatt Regency Pier 66 and the troubles my wife had there with another guest in the gym, and the hotel’s ham-handed handling of the situation.

Have you ever gotten into it with another guest at the hotel gym? Perhaps you verbally sparred over treadmill use or received the evil eye when you grabbed the last available elliptical machine before another guest?

If so, here’s your chance to vent.

The question came up after I read frequent flier Gary Leff’s latest blog post on BoardingArea.com this morning about his lackluster experience at a Fort Lauderdale hotel. During the stay, one hotel guest brought hotel security to the fitness center to speed possession of the hotel’s only working treadmill.

When I posted the story about the hotel’s mishandling of this situation (and many others..) the property itself almost instantly hit the comments to say they would be in touch. Many hotels seem to have software the monitors social media, and no doubt they saw my writeup right away. Though like most other things throughout my stay, I suppose I shouldn’t be surprised that I haven’t actually heard from them!

Hertz Free Rental Day for Every Two Two-Day rentals

Posted on: August 23rd, 2010 by: Gary

Hertz is offering enough bonus points for a free rental day for every two rentals of two days or longer through January 31. Registration required.

The bonus applies only to reservations made after registering, so if you have any future reservations pending you may need to cancel and rebook those in order to get them to account.

(HT: Samir.)

Hyatt Regency Pier 66 — Consistently Misexecuted Service

Posted on: August 23rd, 2010 by: Gary

This past weekend I stayed at the Hyatt Regency Pier 66 in Ft. Lauderdale, I’m in the area frequently and most often I’ve stayed at the Westin Diplomat but I had a couple of expiring Faster Free Nights so I thought I’d burn them rather than converting them to 5000 Gold Passport points each.

My wife and I arrived checked into a 10th floor tower executive room on Friday night and there was old food sitting on the ground on balcony, attracting swarms of ants.

They had said the hotel was sold out when we checked in, it was late, and the ants weren’t likely to get into the room. So I didn’t worry about it.

The room itself was fine, it did smell like a South Florida hotel that’s 40 years old, but the view sort of made up for it.

We were incorrectly checked out after one day of our two day stay. Apparently, though the reservation was made as one two-day stay, in the hotel system it appeared as split up two one-night stays. This was noted at check-in, and I was told there’d be no problem. But when I saw the bill under our door in the morning I knew that was wrong.

It was a redemption stay and our bill had the Gold Passport internal reimbursement rate charged to us instead of to Hyatt Gold Passport. I saw that on the bill under our door on the first night. It was removed at the front desk, but it re-appeared after the second night.

As a Diamond I was told they simply take breakfast off the bill automatically, “the computer does it,” there are no coupons for breakfast in the restaurant. This was confirmed by the restaurant. But breakfast was on our bill and had to be removed.

I was in the room when housekeeping came on Saturday, I asked them to return later. When we went out to dinner I called down to ask for housekeeping to service the room. We came back four hours later, they never came. (And the turn down service offered at check-in never came, either.)

Consistent with my other experiences during the stay, the flavored water in the lobby was naturally empty and not replenished.

All minor annoyances for sure. The biggest issue was that my wife was working out on the treadmill in the hotel gym, only one of the three treadmills was functional (the other two had missing emergency stop switches and wouldn’t function at all as a result).

My wife is training for a marathon and needed to get in a run. A woman asked her how much longer she’d be on the treadmill, and my wife told her 30 minutes. The woman cursed the malfunctioning other treadmills and stormed off. Fifteen minutes later, she returned with hotel security and explained that the front desk had sent them to remove my wife from the treadmill because she was hogging it.

At that point my wife had only 15 minutes left of her run, and had never been asked if she’d mind ending her run early, which she would have done if the woman hadn’t simply run off in a huff.

My wife went to the front desk and the Front Office Manager said that the woman had never contacted the desk at all, security was there only because the woman had asked them to accompany her but hadn’t gotten an explanation as to why.

Now, the hotel was not at fault for the woman’s behavior, though if their treadmills were functional the confrontation would have been avoided. But their security guard’s behavior — he just stood by while the woman insinuated he was there in a show of force to remove her – was inappropriate, when he wasn’t there for any such purpose and hadn’t been sent there by management, contra the woman’s claims. The front office manager promised to ‘investigate further’ and be back in touch with us. He wasn’t, though I checked out with him the next day and he shared that the woman was both nuts and entitled, he couldn’t apologize enough.

Ultimately I suppose that the hotel is convenient for an overnight before or after a cruise departing Ft. Lauderdale. It has a decent pool area and rooms are perfectly well-renovated. But after the repeated service issues we experienced, we’re unlikely to return.

If my complaints are unreasonable I have no doubt y’all will let me know in the comments!

Three Offers I Didn’t Have Time to Write About Yesterday (Outsourced Blog Post Edition)

Posted on: August 20th, 2010 by: Gary

  • As an alternative to earning a 100% bonus on purchased miles, US Airways also has an offer of 1000 elite qualifying miles for every 10,000 redeemable miles purchased, up to 5000 elite qualifying miles. The 100% bonus on redeemable miles is the more lucrative option, unless you know you will be a specific number of qualifying miles short of the next elite status level. (HT: Lucky.)

  • Airtran is offering $12 discounts. Book by September 30 for travel through December 16. (HT: Frugal Travel Guy)

  • Starwood’s fourth quarter promotion will be double points if you stay 9 nights during the promo period and triple points if you stay 10 or more nights, the bonus you earn will apply to all of your nights between September 8 and December 15. Registration will begin for the promo on September 8. (HT: Lucky)

    And for what it’s worth I hear that Hyatt will be coming out with an announcement next week, I’m guessing or hoping that it’s a return of Big Welcome Back nights (aka Faster Free Nights), stay twice and earn a free night anywhere in the world. It’s the best hotel promo around when they offer it, they seem to do so frequently, and I’m hoping to load up on a few of those..

  • US Airways Brings Back Up to 100% Bonus on Purchased Miles

    Posted on: August 18th, 2010 by: Gary

    US Airways has brought back a bonus on purchased or gifted miles, after only a little more than two weeks. And as last time the bonus is only on purchases for yourself or purchases to gift to others — not on transfers of miles between accounts.

    The bonus runs through September 15, and this time though it’s not a straight 100% bonus. Rather, it’s a tiered bonus from 25% to 100% depending on the number of miles you buy.

      1,000 – 9,000 miles – 25% Bonus
      10,000 – 24,000 miles – 50% Bonus
      25,000 – 39,000 miles – 75% Bonus
      40,000 – 50,000 miles – 100% Bonus

    And 50,000 bonus miles is the most that can be earned from the promotion, except that the gift miles offer is stackable with the 25% bonus running all year for elites gifting miles. So elites doing the gifting will generate an extra 25% bonus for mileage recipients, on top of the bonus of up to 100% under this offer.

    Last year the price for purchased miles was 2.5 cents apiece and this year they raised it 10% to 2.75 cents, I’m guessing because of high demand for miles under these promos and they realize if they’re running a 100% bonus all the time that they can squeeze more money out of those transactions.

    During the last purchase miles promotion, the best line (which I recall repeating on an Upgrd Podcast is that US Airways seems to have become the official consolidator for Star Alliance premium cabin seats. Buy miles from them cheap to redeem for otherwise unsold business and first class seats on their Star partners. Crazy stuff.

    100 Free Priority Club Points

    Posted on: August 16th, 2010 by: Gary

    This three question quiz will award 100 Priority Club points instantly. (Well, ok, it’s five questions including your Priority Club account number and last name…)

    The answers are 15, All of the Above, and Silver.

    (HT: The Gate)

    200 Free Marriott Rewards Points

    Posted on: August 15th, 2010 by: Gary

    Hat tip to bhatnasx on Flyertalk, you’ll receive 200 free Marriott Rewards points if you become a fan of the Fairfield Inn Las Vegas Airport on their Facebook page by August 31st and send an email to fairfieldinnrewards@hotmail.com with your Facebook Name and Marriott Rewards number. They promise points to be credited in 4-6 weeks.

    Hooters Opens in Frankfurt Airport

    Posted on: August 15th, 2010 by: Gary

    Via Online Travel Review, Hooters has opened at Frankfurt airport.

    They’re promoting it as “international, multicultural gastronomy” and you can find it “located in Terminal 1 on Level 0 (Area C) above the Regional Train Station.”

    Offerings are the typical Hooters American fare of burgers and wings, plus beer and Apfelwein. The restaurant features a “Biergarten for up to 70 guests.”

    I wonder, though, can this possibly be true?

    Hooters Frankfurt Airport will cater to passengers, the general public as well as the more than 70,000 staff working at Frankfurt Airport.

    (Emphasis mine.)

    Their Facebook page hasn’t been updated, it still says “coming soon.” And @HootersFRAir hasn’t even tweeted the opening.

    Nonetheless, the press release claims the restaurant opened on August 11. I won’t be verifying this personally, my next trip through Frankfurt I’ll be in the First Class Terminal. And the servers there are generally more atractive than at Hooters in any case.

    The Most Important Post on Flyertalk I Read This Week: Using Delta Miles for Business Class to Australia

    Posted on: August 14th, 2010 by: Gary

    I can’t seem to recall whether I’ve posted about this before on the blog or on Flyertalk, but award availability between the US and Australia in business class on V Australia is really quite good.

    In my experience the toughest two awards in all of frequent flyer-dom are North America-Australia and North America-Tahiti.

    In the latter case, the constraint is simply not a lot of flights and seats. Air Tahiti Nui, a Delta and American partner, offers decent availability but often only just a single business and first class seat per flight. They used to offer two first class seats on each flight, which is how I flew them as part of my honeymoon. But beyond Air Tahiti Nui you’re looking at non-daily Air France service from Los Angeles, and in the summer months it is tough tough tough to get a couple of business class seats. Hawaiian serves Tahiti once-weekly if memory serves, and one can access it from other islands. But there really aren’t a lot of options. And the award is a pricey one at that.

    With Australia, things used to be much easier. Qantas was never an easy premium cabin award to get and it still is not. Air Canada business class from Vancouver-Sydney is never an easy award though does sometimes exist. And Air New Zealand is hard far in advance, in my experience they tend to open seats 60 days in advance though they do become quite available in the June-August months.

    But United used to be quite available in both business and first class cabins. That’s no longer the case. It seems now that a few seats may be available at the 331 day window in which schedules open, and then on random days throughout the year, but it’s a rare pheonomenon.

    With most requests I wind up having to route to Australia via Asia. Air Canada Aeroplan will generally permit a transpacific Asia routing from North America to Australai. US Airways and Continental will permit transpacific or transatlantic routings to Australia (via Europe and Asia). And with Star Alliance, the Bangkok – Sydney flights are quite easy to get.

    United unfortunately will not allow routing from North America to Australia via a non-direct route.

    American won’t either, except using their distance-based oneworld awards, which require using two different partners other than American (so Cathay and Qantas, for instance) and the mileage cost on this route is higher.

    In recent years the Australia route has seen additional service from Delta and V Australia. Delta premium cabin awards are, of course, a joke in terms of availability. But V Australia… much easier.

    And V Australia is a Delta partner.

    Whereas Delta will often want 140,000 miles for a coach award from Los ANgeles to Sydney, they’ll charge 150,000 miles for a business class award on V Australia.

    Flyertalk member Wiirachay relayed an experience booking V Australia with Delta miles. And it reminds me that I really do need to update my post on What to Do with Skypesos, because Delta miles may indeed be one of the best bets for a premium cabin award from North America to Australia.

    1. Have at least 150k miles available.
    2. Call DL.
    3. Specifically ask to book on V Australia, flying business class, booking into “Z” class. Give initial set of dates. Don’t forget that VA also has LAX-BNE and LAX-MEL flights, in addition to LAX-SYD. Note that LAX-BNE and LAX-MEL don’t run every day of the week. (VA is quite generous with their award availability for business class! )
    4. Allow the agent to put you on hold as she/he looks up the instructions on how to make VA bookings. (Every single agent I spoke to did this. It looks like they’re not well-versed in VA bookings.)
    5. After agent comes back, you can ask for availability on others dates, and he/she will answer you very quickly, as they are now familiar with the commands.
    6. If the agent quotes you 100k miles, tell them to “price as booked,” it’s supposed to cost 150k miles. What happens is that the system thinks there’s a lower bucket available for the same cabin and will change the booked bucket to that one. But that new bucket is coach.
    7. Bring out credit card to pay for taxes and fees, around $280.

    Often the biggest challenge will be getting to and from Los Angeles as part of the Delta award. But especially if you’re on the West Coast your best bet for that will be Alaska Airlines. Because tight availability of award seats on Delta itself will often bump up the award price dramatically. You may be best off from much of the East Coast (if you can’t find an Alaska flight) just buying separate tickets to and from Los Angeles, though of course you want to leave plenty of room for error in that case because when traveling on a separate ticket if you misconnect the long-haul carrier won’t be responsible for that.

    Southwest Double Credits To and From the Boston Area

    Posted on: August 12th, 2010 by: Gary

    Southwest has jumped on the destination-specific double elite qualifying promotion bandwagon, with double credits for flights to and from Boston, Manchester, or Providence. Book by September 15 for travel through October 31. Registration required.

    (Via @upgradetravel.)

    The Best Piece of Advice in Travel: Hang Up, Call Back

    Posted on: August 12th, 2010 by: Gary

    Many of y’all know this, but it’s helpful to be reminded occasionally.

    Never argue with an agent. Never tell them how much more you know about ticketing than they do. Always thank them for being so helpful. Even when they’re not.

    Instead, when you discover you’re working with an agent who doesn’t know what they’re doing, just hang up politely and call back. And I do mean hang up politely, or at least as politely as you can. Perhaps you have another call, or someone is in your doorway, thnak them for their time but emphasize that you have to go and will need to call back.

    It’s always better to try again with the next agent than it is to try to educate an agent. Now, occasionally there are genuinely helpful agents who don’t know some of the intricacies of their partners. And sure you’d be doing apublic service by educating them. But most of the time showing how much more you know than they do isn’t taken well at all, it’s threatening. After all, this is their job, maybe they’re veterans at it, and the customer isn’t supposed to know more than they do.

    And the last thing you want is to anger an agent who has your reservation open, they might write something nasty in it, “CUSTOMER ADVISED THEY MAY NOT ______.” or “CUSTOMER ADVISED OF $$$$ FEE TO CHANGE _____.”

    Once so notated it’s often harder to get the next agent to do what you want, even if it’s within the rules for them to do so. So always remain pleasant.

    But you don’t like the answer you get the first time, espeially when you think that answer is incorrect? Hang up, call back. Call center roullette.

    I do this quite frequently, this morning with US Airways which is probably the airline with the greatest variance in answers you’ll get across agents at the same airline, discussing the same question.

    There’s an award ticket booked in first class with one short domestic segment in coach. Today business on the domestic segment opened up. Rang up US Airways.

    Call 1: “I’m sorry, with partner awards we cannot change that, we have to cancel and redeposit the miles and start over.”

    Call 2: “We can make the change, but the change fee is $150.”

    Call 3: “I’m sorry, with partner awards we cannot change that, we have to cancel and redeposit the miles and start over.”

    Call 4: “Sure, no problem. That’s great news! I’m going to need to hold for the rate desk to do it, but it shouldn’t be a problem.”

    Solved.

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