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Unfair fares: Avoid the bait-and-switch

Mon Oct 27, 2008 9:59 AM EDT
business, travel, only-on-msnbc-com, price, san-francisco, pricing, christopher-elliott, fares, availability, expedia, fare, andy-daniel
msnbc.com News — Christopher Elliott, msnbc.com - Only on msnbc.com

Nate Gibbons, of Westport, Conn., uses a ticket kiosk at JetBlue Airways' new Terminal 5 at John F. Kennedy International Airport on Saturday, Aug. 23, 2008 in New York. About 1,000 JetBlue frequent flyers were invited by the airline to put the $743 million terminal through a trial run. The terminal, designed to handle up to 250 flights daily, is scheduled to open Oct. 1. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

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— Andy Daniel thought he had found a terrific airfare from San Francisco to Miami for Christmas. Instead, he found a terrific disappointment.

When Daniel tried to book a $400 ticket advertised on Expedia, the price suddenly more than doubled.

“I called Expedia and a very polite, helpful agent apologized for the problem and found my $400 fare,” says Daniel, a microchip designer from Palo Alto, Calif. “She tried to book it for me — and then informed me that the fare had changed to $900 ‘because fares can change in seconds as tickets are purchased.’”

Right.

Bait-and-switch offers are one of the oldest — and popular — tricks in the travel trade’s book.

Maybe that’s one reason why customer ratings for online travel agencies such as Expedia are on the skids even as e-commerce companies as a whole are getting their highest marks in history. The authoritative American Customer Satisfaction Index earlier this year found that grades for the three major online travel sites dropped, with Expedia slipping almost four percent to a score of 75 out of 100 and Travelocity and Orbitz both receiving a 73.

That’s a low “C,” in case you were keeping track.

This isn’t limited to the three big online agencies, of course. Airlines, hotels and car rental companies have suffered similar declines in customer-service ratings. It would be unfair to pin this poor performance entirely on their slippery price displays. But it would be equally unfair to claim these fluctuating fares had nothing to do with it.

Travelers don’t trust their Web sites any farther than they can throw their desktop computers. Which isn’t very far.

I asked Expedia about its fare displays, and specifically about Daniel’s problem. Turns out the online agency has two systems that track airfare availability: one for shopping and one for booking. “While uncommon, the two systems will rarely return disparate fares, as appears to have happened in this case,” says Expedia spokeswoman Katie Deines. “It speaks to the highly dynamic nature of pricing and availability. Expedia works throughout the booking process to verify pricing and availability so we are showing customers the latest information.”

But travelers don’t care about the highly dynamic nature of pricing and availability. When they see a low fare one minute and a higher price the next, they call it a bait-and-switch. So do I. The price you’re quoted should be the price you pay. Every time.

Not everyone agrees with this simple assertion. One of my colleagues took me to task for referring to Delta Air Lines’ fare displays as a “bait-and-switch” a few weeks ago, claiming that it revealed my ignorance about the highly dynamic nature of pricing and availability.

I wish I was wrong about this, but I’m not. Calling these illegal sales tactics by their correct name reveals my indignation with the system — a system, I would add, that lot of so-called “experts” not only accept, but also defend, even as the customers whose interests they’re supposed to represent are foiled when they try to buy a ticket.

But wait. Aren’t travel companies — particularly online travel agencies — just victims of this scheme, like us? Not really, says Chris Lopinto, a partner for a site called ExpertFlyer.com that lets you connect directly to the computer reservations systems used by airlines. Without getting too technical, here’s what you need to know about how prices are set: Fares and rates are loaded into these reservations system and adjusted by the minute in order to maximize revenues for the travel companies. Companies use a team of math whizzes to predict demand and instruct the systems how to set the prices. Think of it as a game of “chicken” on a grand scale. And it’s played by nearly everyone in the business.

“The average person doesn’t understand what’s happening behind the scenes,” Lopinto told me.

We may never fully comprehend what’s commonly known as “yield management” in the travel industry, but there are a few ways of making sure you don’t become a victim of these deceptive pricing practices.

Always read the fine print
Beware of terms like “as low as” and “starting at” — as in “rates as low as $99” or “fares starting at just $49.” They’re almost always followed by “taxes not included”, “based on a roundtrip ticket” or “based on double accommodations” in four-point type on the bottom of the page. Perhaps the worst offenders today are airlines. They’ve begun a practice called “unbundling,” which is a sophisticated bait-and-switch tactic. By removing the cost of meals, luggage and advance reservations, they are making their prices seem artificially low. But when everything is added up, the ticket often costs much more than you expected. Incidentally, airlines love unbundling. In a recent earnings conference call, a Delta Air Lines executive declared, “a la carte pricing is where we need to go as an industry.” Do yourself a favor. Next time you hear the word “unbundling” just substitute the word “bait and switch.” It’s much easier that way.

Don’t count on a price until you have a confirmation
Most travelers believe a price quote from a travel company is like seeing a price tag on merchandise in the store. They couldn’t be more wrong. The price you see is almost never the price you actually pay, because at best, taxes, fees and surcharges are added to it. And at worst, the price changes between the time you get the quote and the time you click the “buy” button. Incidentally, why is it that you never hear of a fare going down during the reservation process? If prices are so highly dynamic, why can’t they be dynamic to the downside every now and then? Just something to think about. Bottom line: don’t count on a price until you have the confirmation e-mail and your credit card is charged.

Avoid the worst offenders
If you’re unsure about a travel company’s offer, you might want to consider what the Federal Trade Commission has to say about it. The government agency publishes an archive of case files going back to 1996 that could shed some light on the company you’re thinking of booking a trip with. Unfortunately, the worst offenders change their names, move and start another questionable business until they’re slapped with a “cease and desist” letter from the government. Another good place to look is your local Better Business Bureau which keeps files on businesses, including any recent complaints from consumers.

Use a travel agent
Competent travel advisers can spot a bait-and-switch offer from a mile away. It’s what they get paid to do. But not every agent is competent. Christine Austin, a homemaker in Louisville, Ky., swore off her travel agent after she fell for one of those “now-you-see-it/now-you-don’t” fares. “She called, told me the fare and ten minutes later called back and said the lower fare had disappeared while she was talking with me,” she remembers.

Since timing was important, Austin felt she had no choice but to buy the more expensive ticket. I think a good agent would have handled the situation differently — either by explaining that the first price was just a quote, and that prices could change, or by waiting until she was ready to buy before offering a price.

If it looks too good to be true, it probably is
Perhaps the easiest way to spot a bait-and-switch offer is to ask: Does this look too good to be true? If it is, then run, don’t walk. Reader Marianne Ventruella received one such offer in the mail last year that offered everything but the kitchen sink.

It included a travel voucher in the amount of $1,600, a cruise, resort visit and theme park tickets. She phoned the company and was connected to a salesman who insisted that she make an immediate purchase. “I knew it was a scam,” she says. Others aren’t so lucky.

I can’t cure the travel industry’s bait-and-switch epidemic in a single column. It takes concerted action by consumer groups, government regulators and fellow travelers like you.

But with just a little research, a skeptical attitude, steering clear of the worst companies and finding professional help, you won’t just minimize your frustration. You also won’t fall for the oldest trick in the book.

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  • Public Discussion (8)
Bryan-in-KC

While there is some truth to the story, the reality is that airfare pricing, in particular, is very complicated and sophisticated. I have spent a year in the pricing organization at a major US carrier, setting airfares and working with our yield management group to maximize our reveunes. So while you might call it bail and switch, in truth it is supply and demand working at its best. Yes, yield management is complex in nature, but it can still be easy to understand. For instance we have 3 fares. A,B, and C. A is $50, B is $60 and C is $70. We then determine, using yield management we are going to sell 10 seats at price A, 12 seats at price B, and 14 seats at price C. Well if we have sold 9 seats on the plane, that means there is still 1 seat of price A available, so when you search that is what you see, but if between when you search and when you go to buy, someone else has purchased the 10th seat on the plane, you are now moved up into price B, which is now $60. We didn't bait and switch, as is claimed, you were merely unluckly in that the predetermined demand of the flight changed while you were completing your purchase. Sure you might be unhappy about this change in price, but was it malious intent on the airlines part to lure you in at a $50 fare then force you to pay $60, absolutely not. It is simply dynamic nature of the business. And that is just my 2 cents.

    Reply#1 - Mon Oct 27, 2008 1:26 PM EDT
    steven-671474

    Populist tripe!

    Using Travelocity, Orbitz or Expedia you will run into this issue frequently. They can not update their site often enough to catch all the airline price updates.

    The best way to handle it is to go to these sites to find the best price then go to the airlines website and purchase your ticket. There will be 100% confirmation of price the whole time you are booking and you receive no charge for the service like Orbitz etc.

      Reply#2 - Mon Oct 27, 2008 2:51 PM EDT
      Anniek

      Drive there lol

      • 1 vote
      Reply#3 - Mon Oct 27, 2008 3:43 PM EDT
      KCar

      Priceline.com is the worst with true Bait and Switch.  They proclaim at the the end of the negotiation that the tickets at the first negotiated price are no longer available but can guarantee you another at $10-15 more.  When you say yes, it cycles you through again for another $10-15 jump.  And on and on, acting like you "just missed out".

      Lest you think that that is really what is happening, to test the bait-and-switch theory the next I had my friend start the process 10 minutes after I did.  Same thing happened to her, only on a 10 minute delay from my "sold out at that price".  Priceline would say "sorry we can honor that price but we CAN for $10 more...oops, no we can't, but for $10 more..."

      Disgusting.

        Reply#4 - Mon Oct 27, 2008 4:15 PM EDT
        Roland-320510

        We avoid flying as much as possible, in part because the industry is so full of so much scumbag practices and they appear to be inventing new ways to screw you as you are standing there.  The author correctly hit the practice as "bait and switch", and the airlines and the discount airfare sellers can invent whatever psychobabble they want - a rose by any other name is still a rose, and this industry has some of the worst slimeball practices around. 

        We also try to avoid flying as much as possible because in the end, driving almost always is cheaper, and the time needed is not all that much different.  Between having to get yourself to the airport hours before your flight, having to check in, being charged for bags, spending money at the airport waiting for your flight, being cramped in an airline seat, getting to watch (and usually being charged) some "B" rated movie, landing (and if you are not lucky, you arrive later than planned) and retrieving your luggage, and then obtaining a rental car at your destination so that you can get around, you are often just better off driving yourself there.  Any trip 500 miles distance or under is definitely cheaper by car, and it ultimately takes about the same time.  Even longer trips aren't that bad.

        We just recently decided to drive from Chicago to Gainsville Florida for a soccer tournament, and at the end of it all, it took about 8 hours longer door to door to drive, but we ended up saving (family of four) better than $1000 than had we used air, and rented a car.  Not only that, but longer road trips gave us a chance to talk, and actually see some of the country.  

        The entire trip was so much less stressful than my last air trip.  There, the flight did not take off on time, but was delayed for four and a half hours, while the crew got their required rest time (a storm the day before resulted in them not getting enough time off, so some 130 people sat in the terminal for the 4 1/2 hours while the crew twiddled its thumbs waiting to comply with FAA regulations).  That delay resulted in our missing our connecting flight in Charlotte NC, necessitating an overnight stay.  We then managed to get ourselfves on board a flight leaving the next day for our final destination (we got lucky, some 20 to 30 people going to the same place and having left at the same time ended up not getting out until the next day - so a two day layover for them), but by the time we landed in St. Thomas and got to the dock were we were barefoot chartering a sailboat, the dock was closed, resulting in another overnight in a hotel, and the loss of two days of vacation time.  The return trip was little better, with our plane sitting on the tarmack while the engineers debated whether the insulation materials that had been shreading in the turbines (due to a lack of preventative maintenance) still allowed the plane to fly.  They let the plane fly, but the 1 and 1/2 hour delay nearly resulted in missing the connecting flight (we literally ran through the airport, and if we had checked luggage, it would have been impossible to make the flight), and eventually go home.  It will be the last time I will choose US Air, but unfortunately, it is one of the few carriers that has "convenient" flights to St. Thomas.  (Oh, I almost forgot - we took the same plane back as the one from Charlotte NC to St. Thomas some 10 days earlier, and the same toilet still didn't function, and in the meantime, one of the emergency exits was "sealed" by having paper towels stuffed around the seals to prevent (minimize) air from leaking.  I am amazed that the FAA allows some of these planes to fly - I thought I was experiencing Air Sudan, or was in some other third world country - about the only thing missing were caged chickens and feathers flying).

        • 2 votes
        Reply#5 - Mon Oct 27, 2008 5:14 PM EDT
        superdave6482

        As an Travel Agency Manager for 10 years , back in the late 80's and 90's, when Agencies didn't charge a service fee. The number of fares can make your head spin.For example, 1 Airline had over 500 different fares between Los Angeles and New York.

        I now live in Seattle, WA, but my family is still in Southern California. I go home every other year to visit for the Holiday's. In 2006, I paid $360.00 R/T. When Oil prices started to go through the roof this last Spring, I started to look to see what was out there for December. I have used Orbitz in the past and have had very good results. Looking at that time at the discount sites and the Airlines themselves, it was going to be very bad, over $450.00.

        I then heard about a website called, Airfare Watch Dog. It's free to sign up for. I would usually get an email once a day, showing the very lowest and hidden fares from cities all over the country. When you scroll through the list, you click on the city you want and you'll get the Airline thats offering the fare and the dates of travel allowed. Most of the lowest are from Southwest. The problem with Southwest is they don't offer reservations more then 6 months out.

        Here is a travel trick I'll pass on about Southwest and other Airlines.

        When Southwest flies in and out of your city they always offer the lowest fares, but the other Airlines don't want them to have any advantage, so they do match them.

        When the fares came out for the dates I needed, I clicked on the Southwest web site made a reservation and got the total fare with all the taxes included. I then went over to Alaska Airlines and picked the same dates and times. The fare was lower then Southwest and $50.00 less then in 2006, plus, they're non-stop, both ways. That's where you will pay more. If the Airline your on is making stops, or a change of planes, you have to pay the PFC's, Passenger Facility Charge. Those are the taxes that the Airports charge all passengers to make improvements to the Airport.

        Yes, this is a long post, but there are ways of beating the system if you have enough time and some patients.

        • 2 votes
        Reply#6 - Mon Oct 27, 2008 7:32 PM EDT
        helen-574623

        I have  had expedia  switch  class of ticket  on me..I purchased  a  biz class ticket to   Europe only to  see when the ticket  printed it was  coach...and at  twice three times the  normal  coach price.  I was then on the  telephone  for over an hour getting the  charge cancelled.  And they acted  as if  it were a favor to me...I  finally threatend  all sorts  of litigation and only then  did  I get  my credit...

        • 1 vote
        Reply#7 - Mon Oct 27, 2008 7:33 PM EDT
        Carol-339312

        If you're going to be shopping for airfare, and find one that fits but can't make an immediate buying decision, make sure you clear the cookies in your computer's browser before you go back to book your ticket.   I had a "lost" airfare to Hawaii reappear after I cleared the cookies and re-entered the reservation data.I often use Expedia or Orbitz to check general fares and almost always book directly with the carrier - it usually saves $5-$10 or so.  I was very surprised recently when I priced a 10-day trip for 2 from Detroit to Oahu, with a car and came up with $1443 on NWA- about the same as what I paid for my last trip on AA in 2005/6; NWA had the better schedule, but if you unbundled the car, the flight went up quite a bit.  We need a car on the island, anyway.

          Reply#8 - Mon Oct 27, 2008 9:12 PM EDT
          citizen2008

          For the past 19 years we have always made the trip from Denver to Pennsylvania by car.  It is a 30 hour trip.  We drive it in two days spending the night in the St. Louis area.  We make this trip 2 times a year.  I love the time spent talking and catching up, listening to our favorite music, reading a favorite book, etc.  Only in an amergency have we made the trip by plane (when we could get a flight out at the last minute).  I have no respect for the airline industry and their shady dealings.  We were in PA when Columbine happened.  We had a child in the school.  Aalthough we had driven to PA to take care of an elderly parent, United Airlines could not get us back to Denver unless we were willing to pay $4800 RT.  And it would be two days for the first available seats.  Needless to say, we drove non-stop home to our child.  When my ffather passed away I was told to contact United for a "bereavement fare".  What a joke!!!!  They wanted to fly us from Denver to San Francisco to Baltimore for $2300 RT per person.  The agent I spoke to , Eric Johnson, said they were the only seats available because of the holidays.  The funny thing about our conversation is that his accent was so thick it was difficult to understand him.  I had to ask him to repeat his information 3 times to make sure I understood him correctly.  I did not take the fare and checked out Orbitz instead.  The soonest flight out was on Untided and the fare was $500 RT per person.  I booked it and when I attempted to get seat assignments by phone, United said the plane was full and we were on stand-by, we would have to pay more for a confirmed seat.  Not what Orbitz indicated.  When we got to the airport, we got our seat assignments without any problem and found the plane half empty.  I am not a fan of United or any of the other major airlines, they have forgotten that the customer pays for a service and they are there to provide that service.  This is a small example of why we drive instead of fly whenever possible.

            Reply#9 - Tue Oct 28, 2008 12:49 AM EDT
            LimeyDot

            One thing that Christopher Elliott forgot to mention in his article on BAIT AND SWITCH PRACTICES  is that you have to pay for ExpertFlyer.com. Sure they have a free trial but it's only to navigate the site. If you want to see any actual fare information, YOU HAVE TO UPGRADE FROM THE BASIC TO PREMIUM MEMBERSHIP. Tsk Tsk! Bad journalism. Does anyone see the irony here??

              Reply#10 - Fri Oct 31, 2008 4:20 AM EDT
              rmeeuwsenDeleted
              william fearn

              To be honest, I'm hoping the airline business ends up like the auto bus.. Put them in the tank and flush

                Reply#12 - Mon Jan 5, 2009 10:43 PM EST
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