
There are people used travel trailers for sale utah who grew up wanting to be Mickey Mantle. They go to Yankees fantasy camp. Others dream of playing Carnegie Hall. They join the summer orchestra at the shore. Then there are aviation geeks like Mueller. People like him and there are more than you think charter a commercial airliner and hop across the country visiting the Meccas of the aviation world.
The most recent journey had 160 people paying up to $1,699 for a seat and access to spots normally off limits: Boeing's sprawling 737 factory, American's mission used travel trailers for sale utah control-like operations center and the cockpit of the world's largest used travel trailers for sale utah passenger jet.
They can differentiate between Boeing and Airbus jets just by looking used travel trailers for sale utah at their tails. They know that on even-numbered flights, meals are served first from the front left of the cabin, while on odd-numbered flights, it's the back right.
The camaraderie was part of the trip's appeal. Sure, it was really cool to walk inside the first 747 ever built. But it was also fun to gulp down gin and tonics midair with other guys three out of four passengers were male who have the same passion for flying. How much fun? Well, American stocked the plane with four times the liquor of a normal flight.
In each row, stories were swapped of amazing meals and opulent hotels in faraway lands all paid for with frequent flier miles. These travelers don't just love to fly; they are obsessed with collecting frequent flier miles at the cheapest possible cost.
The fliers, who ranged in age from 20 to 81 and hailed used travel trailers for sale utah from as far away as Chile, India and Italy, know the ins and outs of the programs better than anybody else and share pointers in online travel forums such as MilePoint. One tip: prevent miles from expiring with a tiny online purchase at Target, Macy's, iTunes or another retailer that's part of the airline's shopping portal.
Such expertise led American Airlines and several other travel companies to help set up the trip and use it to pick the brains of these veteran used travel trailers for sale utah fliers. They wanted to know what these travelers like and hate about the loyalty programs. Airlines need to keep their most-frequent customers happy. The top 20 percent of American's customers generate about 70 percent of its revenue.
That's why Suzanne Rubin, the new president of the American's frequent flier program AAdvantage hopped on the plane, along with other executives, for what she called a "crash course in customer used travel trailers for sale utah research."
For those who don't travel frequently or play the mileage game, it can be daunting to understand the appeal of the programs. It's not just about free trips for this group. It's a hobby some would say obsession similar to collecting stamps or brewing your own beer.
"Everybody has an interest. My neighbor polishes his 1967 Cadillac every other day," said Tommy Danielsen, 40, the director of sales at a telecommunications company. The Chicago resident organized the trip, called a MegaDo frequent flier lingo for a large group of people meeting up to talk miles. It was the fourth such adventure Danielsen has put together since 2009.
Michael Rubiano, a Silicon Valley product manager did six such roundtrips to Chicago over eight days last month. He would catch a flight after work, sleep on the way to Chicago, immediately turn around and sleep on the flight home. Rubiano, 41, then showered in the San Francisco lounge, changed clothes and went to work only to repeat the trip eight hours later.
Each of his six tickets cost him less than $200 and, thanks to some bonus offers, earned used travel trailers for sale utah him 11,076 miles on American to be used later for a dream vacation. All told, that gave him 66,456 miles and put him over the top in his annual quest to re-qualify used travel trailers for sale utah for the airline's top elite status.
With that status he gets: another year of upgrades, free liquor, waived bag frees, the ability to skip security lines and double miles on all his flights. Compare that to the folks in the back who get ... well, there's a reason some in the industry refer to coach passengers as "self-loading freight."
A free domestic coach ticket can be had for 25,000 miles. But that's not the goal. People in this group would rather shell out the $300 for the ticket and save for a big reward like flying first class to Asia for 125,000 miles, a ticket that normally sells for more than $10,000.
The man with the most: Michael Joyce, 61, from Forest Park, Ill. His lifetime total is more than 44.4 million. (The top AAdvantage member has 77.6 million miles but wasn't on this trip.) For eight years, Joyce, a former computer systems analyst, commuted between New York and Chicago. In 1994, he bought a lifetime unlimited-travel pass for $500,000 and now hops around the world for fun.
Less than a third of the miles he generates are actually flown. The rest come from various bonuses. Joyce donates miles to his church and gives flights to friends who can't afford vacations. He also bid 453,000 miles to secure a seat on the MegaDo.
(The MegaDo also raised more than $65,000 used travel trailers for sale utah for charity, auctioning off items like a Qantas deck of cards, British Airways pajamas, model airplanes, used travel trailers for sale utah fluorescent yellow rain suits worn by American's ground crew, two free tickets to Europe and 60,000 American miles.)
There was a stop at the Boeing store in Seattle yes, there's really a Boeing gift shop. It's just south of downtown, steps away from the runway at Boeing Field. The group rushed in and stocked up on yellow used travel trailers for sale utah 787 ties, aviator teddy bears, Boeing Christmas ornaments, garment belts fashioned out of airplane seatbelts and T-shirts saying: "If it's not Boeing, I'm not going."
But the real mementos were the photos. Most tourists snap shots in front of the pyramids, Machu Picchu or the Taj Mahal. At Los Angeles International Airport, used travel trailers for sale utah this group pressed up against used travel trailers for sale utah a chain-link fence to take photos of a Cathay Pacific 777 nose to nose with a Qantas A380. There was something used travel trailers for sale utah sexy about the way the two giant planes faced each other.
Once onboard, used travel trailers for sale utah like kids set free on a playground, the passengers climbed into the cockpit, spread out in plush first class beds and crawled into the hidden bunk beds where crews nap during long trans-Pacific flights. Moments later, photos were on Facebook.
Even the most mundane parts of flying excited this group. American chose to premier its new safety video on the flight. There were wild cheers and screams as it ran. People recorded it with their iPhones and chanted "play it again" when it finished.
It turned out that one flight attendant working used travel trailers for sale utah the trip was also featured in the video. She was treated like a movie star. When the video was over, the passengers did what star-struck fans do: they asked for her autograph on seatback used travel trailers for sale utah safety cards.
We are testing different comment ordering to see which the community prefers. You've been randomly chosen to see the most favorited comments first. Do you prefer this over most recent comments first?
Great article! Why didn't I find any of these fantasy camps when I looked on our local summer camp directory ( www.GreensboroSummerCamps.com )? I guess we leave all the fun to kids these days and wonder why our marriages break-up and job turn-over and morale is so poor. We need to encourage more adults to have FUN these day!
This isn't going to help get American Airlines out of bankruptcy. They need to concentrate on the basics....Customer Service. Catering to these few elitists isn't going to do it. And as for them, geez, get a life! I can think of nothing worse than having to fly to and from Chicago for eight days in a row, just to earn some miles.
No comments:
Post a Comment