How Midwest Airlines Is Like Schlitz
How is Midwest Airlines like Schlitz beer? A traveler angry over how Midwest's wider business seats now cost an extra $50 explains. [Upgrade: Travel Better]
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Comments:
His math is off. Even though there might have been 3 people who took advantage of the $50 seating, that doesn't mean that Midwest only made $150. Now there is more capacity on the flights overall, letting Midwest sell more seats.
But I do wish Midwest wouldn't have made the change. It was such a fantastic product.
It sounds like Midwest is pulling a JetBlue... The latter used to be my favorite reasonably-low-priced airline until they pulled a stunt like this, now I comparison shop and often fly other airlines. However, JetBlue didn't make their seats smaller or lower the pitch, they just dropped a row and upped the price on those seats, which isn't all that much, but makes them too much more expensive than their competition, since they have less available seats per plane that do not require the additional fee. The funny thing is that those seats are usually empty now, and were even worse when they first started the program...
Some never learn and totally misunderstand their strongest customer demographic.
@misslisa: That's just it, though - you aren't paying less. You're paying the same price and getting less. If Midwest had kept the old seats at the old prices, and added narrower seats for lower prices, *that* would be paying less for something that suits you.







wow.. the link has been consumeristed :)