• Home
  • Reviews
    • Flight Reviews
    • Hotel Reviews
    • Lounge Reviews
    • Trip Reports
  • About
    • Press
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Award Expert
Live and Let's Fly
  • Home
  • Reviews
    • Flight Reviews
    • Hotel Reviews
    • Lounge Reviews
    • Trip Reports
  • About
    • Press
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Award Expert
Home » News » Who’s Excited About IHG Promotions? Nobody, Apparently
IHGNews

Who’s Excited About IHG Promotions? Nobody, Apparently

Kyle Stewart Posted onSeptember 15, 2019September 14, 2021 35 Comments

The purpose of offering a promotion is to gain interaction, drive incremental sales, and engage a customer base. But when your promotion is so bad that customers don’t respond, why run one at all?


If you are considering booking travel or signing up for a new credit card please click here. Both support LiveAndLetsFly.com.


If you haven’t followed us on Facebook or Instagram, add us today.

Promotions Are Important to Drive Incremental Activity

A certain amount of customers will make a purchase decision no matter what. In the case of hotels that purchase decision may be down to location, cost, amenities or brand. But for those at the periphery, where competition could win the day, promotions are one way to earn the business from those who might be subject to go elsewhere.

Promotions, especially with hotel chains, have a way of delivering that incremental business. It’s a cheaper way of getting guests into hotels across the business without engaging in price wars. It also aims at those who have the ability to steer the economic decisions and encourage their best customers to even further entrench themselves with the business.

Fall and winter are particularly important times to bring more heads into beds for hotels as holiday periods can slow normal business travel.

Sofitel's pool and pool rooms
Sofitel’s pool and pool rooms

IHG’s Promotions Have Gotten Worse Over Time

The Accelerate promotions that IHG have offered have been positive for some in the past. When I had a customer that required me to choose between IHG and Hilton, IHG won out for a time due to the quality of the Accelerate offers I received.

I used to recieve offers for over 100,000 IHG points. The activity required to achieve that would make me touch a number of different brands, stay during the week using business rates, weekends, and usually about 20-25 nights during the period.

This year I remain a Spire with IHG (my earned Spire status last two years) but haven’t stayed with the brand at all. You’d think I would be a target to get back into the fold – I have spent more than 180 nights with the brand in the previous 24 months.

IHG is getting none of my business
IHG is getting none of my business

In the latest quarter, my personalized Accelerate promotion has just 28,900 points on offer and requires just 6 nights to earn the points. How does that help either of us? I don’t have enough incentive to get back with the brand (bonus too low) and the brand might pick up six nights from me, but that’s not a terrific prize for them either.

Lackluster Accelerate Offer
Lackluster Accelerate Offer

The brand also recently changed their once very popular Pointsbreak promotion from 5,000 points per night for an extensive list to limiting the list and adding segments for 10,000 and 15,000 points per night. Initially, I hoped the new higher point offerings would bring better hotels into the promotion. Maybe it did, but customers aren’t responding.

Promotions With Low Response Rate Reflect Poor Value

Loyalty Traveler recently posted that many of the, once extremely popular, Pointsbreak properties remain available long after they were posted for the quarter.

That’s not good.

It’s specifically poor when you place into context that Pointsbreaks were once snatched up almost immediately, creating so much excitement that posts would come out with preview lists the days ahead so enthusiasts could plot their redemptions as soon as they were released. Adding injury to insult, those points can be purchased for as little as $5/1,000 points – meaning that even $25-75/night rooms are completely uninspiring.

When interest drops off on $25/night rooms – things have taken a turn for the worse.

Conclusion

It’s no secret that IHG hates their elites; their Spire requirements are the highest in the industry and yield the fewest benefits. But now that Accelerate has fallen off, and even $25 hotel nights with Pointsbreaks don’t inspire their membership, maybe it’s time that IHG reconsiders loyalty.

What do you think? What are some of the worst promotions you’ve seen? Is there something I am missing with IHG’s offering? Why don’t they try harder?

Get Daily Updates

Join our mailing list for a daily summary of posts! We never sell your info.

You have Successfully Subscribed!

Previous Article It’s Time For New Luggage – Recommendations Please
Next Article Premium Award Seats Better For Balance Sheets

About Author

Kyle Stewart

Kyle is a freelance travel writer with contributions to Time, the Washington Post, MSNBC, Yahoo!, Reuters, Huffington Post, MapHappy, Live And Lets Fly and many other media outlets. He is also co-founder of Scottandthomas.com, a travel agency that delivers "Travel Personalized." He focuses on using miles and points to provide a premium experience for his wife and daughter. Email: sherpa@thetripsherpa.com

Follow us on FacebookFollow us on Twitter

Related Posts

  • hyatt hotels slh the plymouth

    Boutique Hotels Are Eating Business Travel’s Lunch

    May 4, 2025
  • the Standard Hotel NYC

    Standard Hotel Sunsets “Secret Agent” – Privé Move Imminent?

    April 20, 2025
  • Delta FAA Cuts

    Travel Data Points Flashing To An Imminent Recession

    March 16, 2025

35 Comments

  1. Karen Reply
    September 15, 2019 at 10:59 am

    I most miss the 50% off points required for reward stays in certain IHG’s in Mexico and the Caribbean which were offered twice a year in the spring and fall.

    • Kyle Stewart Reply
      September 15, 2019 at 6:03 pm

      More confirmation, Karen, that their promotions have fallen off outside of the two I mentioned.

  2. Duane Reply
    September 15, 2019 at 11:35 am

    Totally agree, Hilton for the past 3 or 4 years has consistently offered quarterly bonus and easy status matches which moved me over. With Gold and Diamond with Hilton you get breakfast for free at every hotel in the chain. Spire, I get no benefit that comes close and my accelerate bonus is sometimes less than 10000 points. If you also take into account the down grade of the IHG branded credit cards and the better value of Hilton Amex credit cards, staying at IHG has become even less appealing. Hilton offers 5000 point hotels at all times including the Hilton Garden Inn Bali.

    • Kyle Stewart Reply
      September 15, 2019 at 6:05 pm

      Not only do I agree, but I will raise you an entire post about how you could live in Bali for about a million Hilton points at that very hotel: http://bit.ly/2Ry6m9U

  3. Joachim Reply
    September 15, 2019 at 12:44 pm

    I think the claim that Spire is one of the hardest statuses to earn in the industry is factually incorrect. I think it is one of the easiest top-tier statuses to earn.

    Your other points are a case of YMMV. My last few Accelerates were in the 50k – 120k range, and IHG isn’t my primary program. Typically, I am able to complete one or two Accelerates in a row. Then I leave one out (or complete only a small part). That way, the tasks don’t get too hard.

    As for PointBreaks: Personally, I had usuable bookings in each of the last few iterations. This time, I merely booked the brand-new HI Gdansk. But the iterations before, I booked the IC MSP, the IC Sofia, the IC Ljubljana, the IC Bucharest, an HI in Munich, among others. All great properties (the IC Bucharest perhaps being the one least good).

    • Kyle Stewart Reply
      September 15, 2019 at 6:09 pm

      @Joachim: My quote was actually that IHG has the “highest requirements” not that it’s the hardest to acquire. That remains true, matching Marriott’s Titanium tier with 75 nights/year. Hilton offers Diamond status with more benefits (fact, not a case of just for me) with either 30 stays or 60 nights, Hyatt Globalist (also more factual benefits) at 60 nights initially, 55 to retain. Even the tire fire, Bonvoy by Marriott adds more benefits for the same amount of nights.

      If you travel to small cities in Europe, those Intercontinentals sound like a great option, if not, value can be hard to find – especially in Pointsbreaks.

      • Joachim Reply
        September 16, 2019 at 10:53 am

        Well, the fact is, since Marriott limits you to a max of 10 nights/year through meetings, you actually have to sleep yourself to status for the most part.

        With IHG, there are much better options to get elite-qualifying points without spending money on accomodation or F&B.

        So, achieving Spire from scratch is a piece of cake even if you have just 20 nights of, say, $150 each. With Spire being achievable with just $2k or $3k spend, the threshold is actually much lower than the ones of the competitors.

        (The way to go is obv through the 75k points requirement, not through the 75 nights requirement which is indeed a high number.)

    • Lone Ranger Reply
      September 16, 2019 at 4:06 pm

      Ihg=I harbor greed

  4. Rob Reply
    September 15, 2019 at 1:01 pm

    For the second Q in a row I’ve got the message I’m not eligible for accelerate – Gold elite with 148,000 points, very frustrating especially when no explanation can be given by IHG…

    • Kyle Stewart Reply
      September 15, 2019 at 6:10 pm

      No way to encourage additional business than by excluding members who actively want to participate. Maybe instead of “Bonvoyed” for Marriott, we could rename IHG’s top elite level “Downward Spire?”

  5. Matt Reply
    September 15, 2019 at 1:35 pm

    IHG has become a terrible program. I’ll burn the points I have already accumulated, but definitely am actively trying to move paid stays to other programs.

    • Kyle Stewart Reply
      September 15, 2019 at 6:11 pm

      I am about to burn the remainder of my account. Way to take me from zero to hero and back again in three years in the program.

    • Robb Reply
      September 16, 2019 at 1:08 pm

      I’m a Spire Elite which alone would create no loyalty, but also a Kimtpon Inner Circle, which creates a lot of loyalty to Kimpton from me. The way that Kimtpon treated its Inner Circle guests is amazing a s has me hooked. As for the rest of IHG, not so much. This Accelerate offer for me was Stay 1x Earn 1000 points. I laughed and complained to the Inner Circle line and got more points, but this kind of thing actually creates disloyalty. They need new people running this program.

  6. HJAy Reply
    September 15, 2019 at 3:18 pm

    This was the first year I become Spire member because I passed the elite points threshold. Now I have experienced similar ‘humiliating’ accelerate promotion quarter by quarter, each with 20k points opportunity and complex tasks such as 17 nights or 9 weekends. I total relate to the “IHG hates elites” sentiments now!
    With Spire membership, yes, besides more points per dollar spent, there are no additional practical benefits. I haven’t been offered a room upgrade, more likely to miss the welcome amenity points, and etc.

  7. Tim Reply
    September 15, 2019 at 4:03 pm

    Could not agree more. I have been the highest level of rewards with IHG since 1998 ( spire now days). Until 2017 I would stay 50-60 nights a year with them but the last 3yrs I’ve moved to other hotel programs and don’t even stay 10 nights anymore. It’s mostly because other programs have gotten so much better with very generous rewards where as IHG just offers the same old points and bonuses for the last 7 yrs BUT back then most reward nights were 15-20k in points where as nowadays most reward nights are 25-40k in points for a free night.

    Back 3,4,5 years ago I would always complete the promotions which would be worth maybe 60-80k in points. Back then those points would be worth 3-5 free nights. My most recent accelerate offer is 35k in points if I stay 8 nights and 6 different brands. But that’s maybe 1 free night? Why bother? I haven’t completed a promo since fall 2016. Now days I spend 50+ nights with Hilton and maybe 10 with IHG, and I get the feeling IHG could care less.

  8. DaninMCI Reply
    September 15, 2019 at 5:57 pm

    Your experience mirrors mine however my wife who has a lot of IHG stays and got an awesome offer. Mine was worse than yours and I’m a spire ambassador with less than 5 cash stays year to date. Weird.

    • Kyle Stewart Reply
      September 15, 2019 at 6:11 pm

      So bizarre.

  9. Sexy_kitten7 Reply
    September 15, 2019 at 6:34 pm

    Unrelated but I have hate-clicked on every Starbucks promotion since the Great Deval. Maybe some of these bozos are dumb enough to spend $10 to save $2 but I am not. Does that count as engagement???

    • Kyle Stewart Reply
      September 15, 2019 at 6:56 pm

      1) I love the term hate-click, half of these fine blog posts are written in such a manner.
      2) Starbucks offer? What did I miss?

      • Sexy_kitten7 Reply
        September 16, 2019 at 6:32 pm

        They send crazy email offers like get 25 stars when you buy a grande frap and breakfast sandwich in the next 2 days. You have to click to activate.

  10. Donald Rodgers Reply
    September 15, 2019 at 8:55 pm

    Well I feel I made out like a bandit on their last accelerate. I stayed a total of 6 nights for an out-of-pocket cash expenditure of about 450 bucks and let it out after it was all said and done about 85,000 points. With the 10% rebate I get from having their old credit card I should easily be able to stay 6 to 9 nights only point. By the way on the same trip I redeemed 30000 points minus a 3000 Point rebate for three nights in two different hotels both of which were points breaks and both of which while I was there were running over $100 a night. In general I think their loyalty program isn’t crate and upgrades are hard to come by in fact they were impossible in the Northeast but the points back for the out-of-pocket dollars were hard to beat. That said I didn’t get nearly as good an accelerator all for this time so apparently they do throttle you back when you take advantage of one to the fullest extent.

    • Kyle Stewart Reply
      September 16, 2019 at 8:16 am

      Throttling back those who respond to their promotions makes no sense at all.

  11. Jeff Hicks Reply
    September 15, 2019 at 11:51 pm

    Yes they keep getting worse. My summer accelerate had a possible 32500 points but had to stay 4 weekends to accomplish but typically travel during the week so only earned 12k. The fall accelerate is a joke. 1 thousand points to stay once until December. My coworkers talked me into switching to Hilton Honors as they had a deal going on to switch and they would match my Spire Elite status

  12. Poorly written Reply
    September 16, 2019 at 12:18 am

    Very poorly written. You claim that “customers aren’t responding” however you provide no data to back that up beyond the fact that pointbreak offers stay available longer than before. How do you know that IHG hasn’t made more nights available?

    • Kyle Stewart Reply
      September 16, 2019 at 8:15 am

      @Poorly written – An expert, such as yourself, surely knows the difference between poorly written and poorly researched. Assuming it is the latter for which you take issue, IHG wouldn’t make that publicly available so there’s no amount of additional research that can be performed. However, there is anecdotal evidence. As a three-year Spire Ambassador, my own experience qualifies some, then there are the commenters who have generally agreed. Add the evidence that those nights once sold out instantly and now seem readily available, that the costs have risen and that Accelerate promotions have decreased and we have ourselves a causal case that seems to add up.

  13. Brian Reply
    September 16, 2019 at 3:41 am

    I am platinum status with their credit card. Besides a friendly front desk agent thanking me for my membership and a pair of drink tickets at the Intercontinental, I really don’t understand what this rewards program is good for. Some kind of non-existant room upgrade at a bland Holiday Inn? And to top it off, being a mastercard I can’t use it at Costco. I’m thinking about abandoning it for a different card. IHG, I hope you read this and make some fast changes.

    • Kyle Stewart Reply
      September 16, 2019 at 8:10 am

      I hope they take note as well.

  14. Kindly_giant Reply
    September 16, 2019 at 3:52 am

    I’m spite Elite three years running, and I pay for ambassador status to get the guaranteed room upgrade. I must say I agree with your post. I keep trying to maintain my status to maintain points to occasionally use in the rewards catalogue (e.g. bought a rowing machine the other day), and occasionally to stay on a city break with family – but I find that more and more I am tempted to stay at non IHG properties due to a combo of better/more aggressive pricing and more included benefits as standard. In general I find their IC properties overpriced for whats on offer and not worth paying *nearly double* what you can get elsewhere in the chain. I am also beginning to find that the reward night option gets greyed out more and more, even when booking well in advance (was considering staying in Arnhem Holland for a few nights holiday in June next year, their only property there is a HIEX – nearly 50% more than another chains better hotel, no reward nights available ).
    The one thing that keeps me going at the moment however is that I could in theory get a full week’s all inclusive resort stay (e.g. in Aruba or Mexico) for my whole family just on points, I.e. “Just add flights”. I am considering switching my loyalty though.

    • Kyle Stewart Reply
      September 16, 2019 at 8:09 am

      We’ve stayed at that property in Aruba and those folks do care. But that’s not a good enough reason to stay with the brand. Put it this way, if you’re an earned Spire (75 nights), for an extra 10 nights you could Hyatt Globalist (55 nights) and Hilton Diamond (30 stays could be 30 nights).

  15. Paolo Reply
    September 16, 2019 at 5:39 am

    It’s beyond weird. Someone buys your product 100 times but then stops, suddenly: don’t they want to know why?…Is the customer unhappy, buying somewhere else? How do we get him back?
    IHG couldn’t care less: they make virtually zero effort to survey customers ( other than via some dodgy TripAdvisor linked reviews); they don’t try to recover a ‘lost’/ dormant customer with incentives via promos. In fact, they do sweet FA.
    I’m a bit shocked by some of the passivity of hotel groups : none of them make much of an effort to win back lost customers, in contrast to other sellers of goods and services.

  16. Roger Blogs Reply
    September 16, 2019 at 9:21 am

    Bitter part of one.

    • AR Reply
      September 16, 2019 at 8:27 pm

      party*

      If you’re going to be snide, you should at least proofread first.

  17. Aubrey Green Reply
    September 16, 2019 at 6:29 pm

    I started using other brands when I realized the treatment I was getting at IHG hotels.

    The other brands, of same quality, called me by name when I checked in and recognized that I had stayed in that particular hotel before.

    When you are treated like cattle you begin to wander to see if there are greener fields nearby…

  18. Cm Reply
    September 16, 2019 at 10:49 pm

    I got their credit card one year ago and did well w their intro point offers. It’s been hard to really earn and maintain since I used the big intro offers. I thought about canceling or somehow downgrading the card but realized it’s $89 and gets a free anniversary night (haven’t quite hit a year so waiting for that, although VERY bummed to find it basically excludes kimpton bc of points required). Anyways I figure $89 is a fine price to pay once a year for a free room but my Hilton card is baller, I see my points stack up like there is no tommorw and my diamond upgrades are usually so yeah, I’m 95% a Hilton exclusive now!

  19. Pingback: סיכום חדשות ומבצעים מהשבוע האחרון - FlyingOut

Leave a Reply to Rob Cancel reply

Search

Hot Deals for May

Note: Please see my Advertiser Disclosure

Capital One Venture X Business Card
Earn 150,000 Miles Sign Up Bonus
Chase Sapphire Preferred® Card
Earn 100,000 Points
Capital One Venture X Rewards Credit Card
Capital One Venture X Rewards Credit Card
Earn 75,000 Miles!
Capital One Venture Rewards Credit Card
Capital One Venture Rewards Credit Card
Earn 75,000 Miles
Chase Ink Business Unlimited® Credit Card
Earn $750 Cash Back
The Business Platinum Card® from American Express
The Business Platinum Card® from American Express
Earn 120,000 Membership Reward® Points

Recent Posts

  • Breeze Airways A220
    My First Time Flying Breeze Airways: Friendly, Fashionable, But Filthy… May 9, 2025
  • Richard Quest Island Hopper
    “We Are Delivering The Mail And Milk!” Richard Quest Flies The United Airlines Island Hopper May 9, 2025
  • Hyatt gifted awards restriction
    Hyatt’s New Award Gifting Rule Just Made My Life Harder… May 9, 2025
  • Marriott Restroom Woman
    Marriott Hotel Accuses Woman Of Being A Man, Demands ID In Restroom Incident May 8, 2025

Categories

Popular Posts

  • a room with a table and benches
    Where To Smoke At Paris Charles De Gaulle Airport (CDG) April 26, 2025
  • United Airlines Polaris Lounge Chicago Review
    Review: United Polaris Lounge Chicago (ORD) May 1, 2025
  • United Airlines Refresh Polaris Lounge Chicago
    First Look: United Airlines Reopens Renovated Polaris Lounge In Chicago (ORD) April 29, 2025
  • a hand holding a blue card
    Chase Sapphire Preferred 100K Bonus Offer Ending Soon May 2, 2025

Archives

May 2025
M T W T F S S
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031  
« Apr    

As seen on:

facebook twitter instagram rss
Privacy Policy © Live and Let's Fly All Rights Reserved. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Live and Let's Fly with appropriate and specific directions to the original content.