Originally posted by sailor99
1) Flying Club. For me this is one of the major strengths of VS. It is really great that you can get somewhere in the scheme without having to do ridiculous amounts. I think I would be a little cotracercial and increase the gold TP's to somewhere around 70.
That's one I'd be really careful with, TBH. Set the bar too high, and people will walk, case in point, me.
Right now, I don't fly BA because it's too damned hard to earn any sort of status without forking out for mondo expensive tickets - BAEC doesn't give any tier points (and insultingly low mileage credit) on most discounted economy fares. If I could realistically earn and retain status on BA (even Silver), I'd use them a lot more often.
I'd say my flying is split something like 50% long-haul (probably 6-8 intercontinental per year, not all to VS destinations, so about 25%-30% of total long haul flying is on VS), and 50% UK domestic and European short-haul (using a mixed bag of airlines).
Unfortunately, my company travel policy seldom stretches to full-fare Js (or even Ds), so on VS, it's Z or S/W (with mileage upgrades where availble) for me.
As VS don't have very strong European alliance partners (with poor status recognition), I keep a United Mileage Plus card, and manage to keep requalifying Premier Exec (*A Gold), which credits qualifying miles and 100% on almost all fares, and status is honoured by all *A partners, so I get fairly good Euro coverage that way.
If the bar was raised too high, it would seem very difficult to get the rewards of status, and I'd probably fall into the camp of people who would give up on VS.
If for whatever reason I don't manage enough flying to requalify my Gold status, I'd probably walk away from VS, as I won't have access to any of the things which make VS really unique and worthwhile right now - VS in it's present form just becomes some fair-to-middling carrier (apart from the IFE), with it's target firmly set on the holiday traveller, when you're sat down the back.
Mike