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The Principle of Mileage Conservation

Note:Today’s post was written for #201 and above Milenomics–because it includes discussion of international travel.  

At it’s core Milenomics is about finding balance. Balance between Mileage supply and mileage demand.  Between travel needs and travel budgets.  Today we talk about the balance between your domestic flights and your international flights.

Differentiate between domestic and International travel.

If you wrote out a demand schedule as part of the post “Supply and Demand” Take a look at it.  See which cities you’re looking at flying to domestically and internationally.

My schedule looks like this:

Today we will learn a new law in Milenomics: The Principle of Mileage Conservation.  We briefly touched on this when discussing “When Less is More….” Today we’ll get more formally into it.

The Principle of Mileage Conservation states that: For any trip you take domestically, try to ensure the miles used do not negatively impact your international travel plans.

Put simply: Have miles for travel domestically, and larger pools of more valuable miles for international travel.  Conserve your most valuable miles for your most difficult/costly trips.

For Milenomics that means just enough diversity in our mileage balances.  It also means we need a CHEAP mileage program for domestic US Travel.  Just as important as the miles we use are the cost of those miles.  Three programs that can be excellent for US domestic flights are BA Avios, Southwest (WN) RR points, and Delta Skymiles. Let’s look at each of them

Find At least One that Works For you

These three are by no means the only programs out there that work for domestic travelers. Based on where you live and where you fly and how cheaply you can earn miles these might not work for you.  Evaluate programs that work with your travel needs, you’ll want to find the ones that fit your needs.  Use these domestic mileage pools to conserve miles in your other, more valuable programs.

Fill each side with your own program(s) & remember the Principle of Mileage Conservation.

An active US domestic traveler who wants to fly internationally would want to focus on programs like AA/US/UA/MR/UR for international travel. Simultaneously you’ll need to keep a stash of miles for those US domestic flights in whichever of the above three programs makes sense based on where you are and where you want to go.  Remember to check airline routes so you’re not earning in a Mileage program that doesn’t service the cities you need to get to/from.

It would be ideal to need just 1 program for all your domestic travel.  If you can fit all your domestic needs into that one program, and earn miles for it at a low enough cost you then can focus all other earning on your international programs.   For most of us we’ll need a few programs to make it to the different domestic cities we travel to.  I hope you’ve seen the importance in a program (or two) for these flights, thanks to the Principle of Mileage Conservation.

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Yesterday’s Milenomics giveaway asked you to post where you want to go with your miles.  The responses have been amazing so far!  If you haven’t entered yet today, head over to the contest page and enter to win 2 American Admirals club lounge passes.  The passes expire March 31, 2014, something I neglected to mention yesterday.

 

 

 

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