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InterContinental Ambassador planning changes this year

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An InterContinental presentation mistakenly placed online shows that the company is planning changes to its Ambassador loyalty scheme for 2016.

Before I come to those, I want to summarise how Ambassador works for those who are not familiar with it.

InterContinental, the luxury hotel brand inside IHG Rewards Club (which also covers Holiday Inn, Crowne Plaza and others) is a little odd when it comes to loyalty schemes:

As part of the Holiday Inn / Crowne Plaza group, it participates in IHG Rewards Club

InterContinental does not officially recognise your IHG Rewards Club status.  In reality, they often do, but it is not guaranteed.

InterContinental also has its own loyalty scheme – Ambassadorwhich costs $200 to join

And yet, despite the $200 fee ($150 to renew), I consider Ambassador a good deal and have been a member for a number of years.

The key thing about Ambassador is that, once you are a member, the benefits are GUARANTEED on paid stays. They are NOT guaranteed on reward stays, but most properties do let you have them. These benefits are:

A certificate for a free weekend night when you join and each year when you renew. In one swoop, you can save your entire membership fee with this benefit. To use the voucher, you need to book a 2-night weekend stay and pay the Best Flexible Rate for the other night.

The letter of the rules says that only standard rooms can be booked. However, many hotels let you book club rooms or suites.  I have a Junior Suite booked at InterContinental Le Grand Paris on my 2016 voucher next month.

GUARANTEED one-level room upgrade – this is usually processed before you arrive and is visible online

A voucher for 5,000 IHG Rewards Club points when you join and each year on renewal

4pm check-out – this is a guaranteed benefit and comes in very handy on a weekend break with an evening flight back home

A free pay-TV movie per stay, every stay

Free fruit and mineral water in your room

A welcome gift – varies from chocolates or wine to weird local souvenirs!

Double occupancy for single occupancy rate – useful in Germany, one of the few countries where they still charge a ‘second person’ supplement

Obviously InterContinental Ambassador is not for everyone. You can earn back the cost of membership in just one weekend stay, though. It may even be worth it if you had just one long stay booked and wanted to guarantee your upgrade.  Ambassador members also receive Gold status in IHG Rewards Club although that doesn’t get you far.

Renewal is even cheaper, at just $150, and you receive another ‘free weekend night’ certificate and another 5,000 IHG Rewards Club points.

You can learn more about InterContinental Ambassador here if it sounds interesting.  There is an option to use 32,000 IHG Rewards Club points instead of paying $200 in cash.  This is not a bad use of your points at just under 0.5p.

Changes are coming for 2016

Courtesy of Loyalty Lobby, a PowerPoint presentation from an internal IHG conference had been mistakenly placed on a publicly accessible website.  IHG has now removed it.

It is a conference presentation on how the Ambassador scheme will evolve.  It makes very interesting reading,  some of which surprised me.  IHG has even calculated the global profitability of the scheme.

You won’t be surprised to learn that Ambassador does drive more stays – once you’ve joined, you will spend more nights at InterContinental hotels.  IHG has run ‘before’ and ‘after’ numbers to prove it.

What interested me is that the dynamic is not as I expected.  Individual hotels encourage their regular guests to sign up for Ambassador at the front desk – a fairly easy ‘sell’ because of the benefits.  Those people do increase their visits to other InterContinental hotels but not hugely.  People like me, who spread their IC business across lots of different properties, are in the minority.  The majority of members are signed up by a particular hotel and receive the bulk of their benefits from that hotel.

How do Ambassador members feel?  A rough summary is that Ambassador members no longer feel ‘special’ at the hotels and are annoyed with the inconsistent delivery of benefits.

I personally find the second point odd because it is the ‘guaranteed’ nature of the benefits which attracts me.  It is possible that hotels which go ‘above and beyond’ for Ambassador members are causing problems for those hotels which stick to the guidelines and no more – the problem is that putting a foot down here would lead to a de facto devaluation.

The only proposed changes so far appear to be:

In-room fruit being switched to a choice of fruit, sweet or savoury snack

Clearer signalling of the upgrade path, in particular regarding upgrades to the Club Lounge

There are bigger changes coming for the invitation-only Royal Ambassador tier.  This is likely to gain a revenue target based purely on InterContinental spend.  At present you can achieve it by spending 40 nights in a Holiday Inn Express and then 20 nights across three separate InterContinental hotels which is not what IHG had planned.

I will keep you updated on the changes as they are made public.


IHG One Rewards update – April 2024:

Get bonus points: IHG One Rewards is offering 2,000 bonus points for every two cash nights you stay (not necessarily consecutive) between 1st April and 31st May 2024. You can read our full article here and you can register here.

New to IHG One Rewards?  Read our overview of IHG One Rewards here and our article on points expiry rules here. Our article on ‘What are IHG One Rewards points worth?’ is here.

Buy points: If you need additional IHG One Rewards points, you can buy them here.

Want to earn more hotel points?  Click here to see our complete list of promotions from IHG and the other major hotel chains or use the ‘Hotel Offers’ link in the menu bar at the top of the page.

Comments (56)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Seb says:

    I’ve never been able to get on board with Ambassador due to the fact that it does not give you automatic access to the Club Lounge. This is the one reason why I have not signed up to it, as I know I can walk into any Conrad or Sofitel and get the lounge access. I mean it doesn’t even get you breakfast of any sort, which is an absolute joke.

    • Nick says:

      An absolute joke? Not really. It’s a status you can buy for less than the price of one night at a Conrad, and that status Chinese with a free night certificate. I would say that the net cost of ambassador is no more than 20 quid, and for me it is less than zero. Of course it doesn’t come with lounge access and breakfast.

    • Rob says:

      On a long weekend, 4pm check out is very valuable. Same in, say, New York with a late flight back.

      • Leo says:

        Agree with that. Late check-out last Tuesday from IC TS for an 8pm flight, worked perfectly. Unimpressed with the IC TS however. Very much a “bed factory” as Rob has commented more than once.

  • Chris says:

    Does the Ambassador upgrade and 4pm checkout apply to the Intercontinental Alliance hotels in Las Vegas such as the Palazzo?

    • Nick says:

      It did for me.

      • Janeyferr says:

        The Palazzo told me 2pm was standard late checkout for a Gold Ambassador, and suggested later could be arranged with a fee. I only wanted 1pm, so I didn’t find out about the fee.

    • James says:

      It worked for me too! 6pm and a massive suite upgrade.

  • Joe says:

    I don’t really find the benefits very consistent, I’d say about half my stays get no upgrade. They admittedly I don’t then start pushing it at the front desk, but I feel awkward doing this, which is why I like the idea of guaranteed upgrades where you shouldn’t have to haggle. At the last IC I stayed in too, they couldn’t check me in on time which they blamed on another Ambassador having late checkout – takes away much of that guaranteed benefit if it means they can’t check you in on time either! Having (thanks to HfP) matched to Hilton Diamond, I find the Hilton benefits of free breakfast and lounge access are much more consistently provided. I get that Ambassador can be bought, but being Spire Ambassador (which in theory is much harder to get) doesn’t carry much weight when RA exists.

  • Frances says:

    How could I match my IHG Royal Ambassador status to Hilton Diamond?
    Many thanks for info.

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