IIRC BA was first to pull a two finger salute to Qantas and its customers: when they unilaterally decided to stop allowing Qantas Club passengers to enter BA business class lounges, and to add insult - they appeared to not even tell Qantas that it was happening, with Qantas only finding out as its customers started complaining to QF that a benefit Qantas Club was still advertising, was not being delivered.
The result of this has been - QFs alliance with EK and very little inducement from QFF for its customers to fly BA.
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And IMO it is BA that continues to add insult to the One World, especially the ethos that you treat the alliance's best J&Y customers (emerald) to all the perks of an F customer while on the ground at the terminal. First BA did this by creating lounges (CCR) for First Class passengers to use and not inviting alliance Emerald passengers to them as well AND now it is doing it by creating sections within its general lounges for First Class passengers and not inviting Emerald passengers to use those services as well.
Your argument is flawed IMO.Except your argument doesn't really hold water as BA don't allow their own Emeralds (except Premier/ CCR Card Holders) to access those lounges either. These lounges (and bar area at SIN) are separate to the OW lounges. BA does provide separate First/Emerald Lounges at both LHR and JFK which can only be accessed by OWE
IMO QF is way ahead of other airlines in its strategy, because it has realised the competitive disadvantage that an "alliance" business model represents to its commercial interests, and it has started to deal with it.IMO QF is way out in front when it comes to penalizing its own members for flying other OW airlines at least as far as status retention is concerned. No-one else in OW is doing this.
Doesn't QR do the same?The fact that BA attempts to get around this by naming another lounge "First Class", IMO shows BA's contempt for the oneworld philosophy. It is typical British bureaucratic bull. So I feel the need to repeat the concept again, it is quite simple - "what every you do for your own airline's First Class customers on the ground at the terminal, you also do for Emerald customers from other airlines".
- American Airlines, US Airways and Qantas offer programmes enabling customers to pay to gain access to their lounges. These programmes are not part of the oneworld agreement, and members of these programmes are not entitled to access lounges under the oneworld agreement.
- American Airlines AAdvantage® members and US Airways Dividend Miles members, regardless of their tier status or class of travel, are not eligible for lounge access when travelling solely on North American flights within or between the U.S., Canada, Mexico (except Mexico City), the Bahamas, Bermuda and the Caribbean. For more information, visit, Admirals Club Lounge | Airline Clubs And Lounges | American Airlines and http://www.usairways.com/en-US/traveltools/club/default.html
- Qantas Frequent Flyer Gold members, regardless of their oneworld tier status, cannot access Qantas Domestic Business Lounges.
- Qatar Airways Al Safwa and Al Mourjan lounges at Hamad International Airport in Doha and Qatar Airways Premium Lounge at London Heathrow Terminal 4 are excluded.
- First and Business Class customers who do not hold Emerald or Sapphire tier status are not eligible to access American Airlines or US Airways lounges when travelling on solely domestic flights within the U.S. or between the U.S. and Canada, Mexico [except Mexico City], the Bahamas, Bermuda and the Caribbean; customers travelling in First or Business class on U.S. transcontinental flights between JFK-LAX, JFK-SFO and MIA-LAX (and vice-versa) are eligible for lounge access.
- Guests are not permitted at Qatar Airways Al Safwa and Al Mourjan lounges at Hamad International Airport in Doha or Qatar Airways Premium Lounge at London Heathrow Terminal 4.
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Is it no wonder that BA sponsored QR into oneworld!Doesn't QR do the same?
Is it no wonder that BA sponsored QR into oneworld!
Make no mistake, IAG is trying to redefine and subordinate oneworld interests, to its own. (Which is what I would do if I were them, so good on them. But Qantas must respond, and appears to have been doing so.)
The oneworld concept is clear, on the ground at the terminal - treat other airlines Emerald customers that are not flying First Class, the same way you treat your own First Class customers. (You can treat your own Emerald customers however you want though.)
No, I disagree again (I am very disagreeable today aren't I). QF needs to treat other airlines Emeralds on the ground at the terminal, the same way it treats its bog standard First Class customers, which in SIN is...!?When you go into the QF SIN Lounge turn immediately left and then left again. You'll see an area to one side with four or five tables. Each one has a reserved sign on it. These tables are reserved for QF CL and P1 customers who also receive preferential treatment and food offerings that are not available to others in the lounge. So QF has created it's own, albeit rough and ready, version of the BA CCR. I guess the main difference is that BA openly promotes its CCR concept.
No, I disagree again (I am very disagreeable today aren't I). QF needs to treat other airlines Emeralds on the ground at the terminal, the same way it treats its bog standard First Class customers, which in SIN is...!?
I think that the next step we might see, particularly relevant for Singapore and Hong Kong, is for Qantas to bar QFF passengers from status based access to other lounges in terminals where QF operate their own lounges :arrow: :-|
I recognise that BA, operating in such a class based society, needs to offer "snob-level" exclusivity to its "top customers": And that some of Qantas "top customers" (defined in this example by their Emerald carrying cards) are not the "type" which some of BAs would like to fraternise with. And that BA also needs to deal with LHs FRA situation (where LH is not "restricted" by an alliance-wide Emerald level). But Qantas' top customers are Qantas' top customers - and Qantas needs to go in to bat for them, every day in every way.
On a tangent, as an alliance, perhaps the airlines need to come up with a common way to treat frequent flying F customers, but it is unlikely to happen because that may provide an opportunity for poaching. But I accept that lumping Bog Standard First Class passengers together with Frequent Flying Emeralds is mildly problematic, because even though they DO have a very similar financial value to an airline (profit $ per person per year), they have different customer service needs.
What happens prior to reaching (and after departing) the terminal is not included in benefits, so in this example while Emeralds can't book before they arrive, they can still utilise the service, once they are there - if available....try booking a spa appointment at the QF F Lounge 24 hours in advance as a OWE flying in Y or J with QF....or any other OW airline for that matter.![]()
Personally a host escort would only slow me down as I move through a known terminal. But I agree that it is a service that QF should "offer" to Emeralds from other airlines, perhaps not wait to be "requested". (The only time I have been "hosted" by QF through SYD T1, is when I missed a damn flight, and I was "hosted" out of the building. LOL)Oh and make sure you get the F host to escort you through immigration and security.![]()
Note - I don't take issue with exclusive invitation only card based access to services.Take a look at the outpouring from GCH's on FT about the CCR Bar concept - it is really quite amusing.![]()
What happens prior to reaching (and after departing) the terminal is not included in benefits, ...
Note - I don't take issue with exclusive invitation only card based access to services.![]()
No it doesn't. LOL. c'mon, at least give me something to bite at!Oh and how is the chauffeur service working for you as a OWE flying Y with QF to LHR? ....technically it does fall within your parameters...![]()