Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Job opening: BA wants a new loyalty head

Links on Head for Points may support the site by paying a commission.  See here for all partner links.

No idea what happened to the old BA loyalty head …. but if you’re looking for a new challenge then this could be the job for you.

British Airways is recruiting for a new Loyalty Manager, which I believe is the most senior loyalty role within the airline – IAG Loyalty is separately run.

Let’s look at what you get to do. Most of it seems to involve a creating a new ‘transformation plan’ ….

British Airways is recruiting a loyalty manager

The full job description is on ba.com here.

We’re seeking an experienced airline Loyalty Manager to maximise the value to BA of Loyalty by optimising the Loyalty Programme (The BA Club) and uses of the Loyalty currency (Avios).

You’ll define the Loyalty strategy, building positive relationships with key stakeholder and developing and inspiring the team to success.

What you’ll do

  • Be accountable for defining and implementing BA’s strategy and approach to Loyalty
  • Lead a team of 5 providing coaching, expertise & guidance to deliver optimal results
  • Create a long-term vision for Loyalty, aligned with IAGL, and put in place a transformation plan to achieve this vision
  • Deliver significant commercial and customer benefits through transformation
  • Balance trade-offs between commercial and customer outcomes from Loyalty
  • Lead Loyalty governance and stakeholder management within BA including managing IAGL relationship; and informing or reaching agreement with other BA stakeholders (Customer, PR, CLT, etc.)
  • Lead creation of monthly CEOs Loyalty Board content and material
  • Review and monitor Loyalty performance from all angles: customer, commercial, and internal BA/IAGL including Loyalty ‘trading’
  • Make Loyalty a data-led discipline where decisions are always quantitative and objective with clear rationale
  • Act as the central point for Loyalty within BA, representing to IAG, joint businesses, oneworld, etc
  • Oversee Loyalty tech changes, including managing a budget, developing business cases, and delivering changes and improvements on schedule

Your Experience

  • Education to degree level and/or equivalent experience
  • Proven experience of getting things done and driving beneficial change, ideally including tech or product changes
  • Expert knowledge of Loyalty and its role in airline commercials
  • Expert knowledge of wider airline commercial and customer strategy
  • Practical experience with data and analytical tools and techniques, and articulating argument using data

At British Airways, you’ll not only be shaping the future of our programmes—you’ll be shaping the future of travel itself

You’ll be based in Waterside. No salary is given but no-one ever joined British Airways for the money.

Historically this job – and the CEO role at IAG Loyalty – has been filled by a BA ‘lifer’ with no experience of loyalty. The job description implies that the net is being cast more widely this time which can only be a good thing.

Applications close on 9th September. I suspect I know who will get it if British Airways is serious about looking externally, but it never hurts to throw your hat in the ring if you’re in the industry.

Comments (55)

  • Chris W says:

    So who is in this role currently? Were they the architect of the revenue based status earning? Are they leaving because the job is done, or being forced out because of how it went?

  • Alan says:

    It was all looking so good. Knowledge of industry, well just need to ask on hear for any advice needed. But the need to have a degree! What is with this modern thinking that everyone needs to get a degree? You can be a perfectly good employee without a degree.

    • Peter A says:

      Standard HR requirement for most roles these days.

      • AndrewF says:

        As someone in HR, it’s not always “HR” who require this. I’ve had many a conversation with hiring managers who insist on a degree that goes along the lines of (and I’m paraphrasing) “Are you seriously telling me someone without a degree but with loads of experience couldn’t possibly do this role?”

      • Throwawayname says:

        Definitely not HR requirement in 2025, maybe it used to be one 20 years ago.

        The recruitment policy at my employer goes even further – we don’t ask for sector-specific experience unless it’s relevant to a particular role. E.g. when trying to hire an accountant, management are actively discouraged from selecting anyone based on whether they used to work for KPMG, a car dealership, or the NHS.

    • Ready2go says:

      That was my first thought too… cutting off nose to spite face… BA obvs never heard of social mobility! There’s a level of arrogance by any company/hiring manager that add needing a degree to a role profile. Why someone with 25 year old textiles degree would be more qualified than someone without any degree and a passion for travel/customer loyalty is beyond me

    • Steve says:

      Maybe they’re attempting to find someone who can understand those complex phrases like “and/or”?

      • Throwawayname says:

        @Steve, that’s definitely what they think they’re saying, but many/most candidates who don’t have a degree will be discouraged from applying because of the way it’s phrased/framed. That statement isn’t quite the same as saying that they expect a good overall standard of knowledge.

  • apbj says:

    “Balance trade-offs between commercial and customer outcomes”

    “Make Loyalty a data-led discipline where decisions are always quantitative”

    Gold help us…

  • kevin86 says:

    “The job description implies that the net is being cast more widely this time which can only be a good thing.”

    Just because it has been advertised externally doesn’t mean that an internal candidate hasn’t already secured it.

    • Chris W says:

      Would they want it though? Surely anyone with any loyalty experience knows how unpopular the recent changes are.

      Or perhaps now it is an easier job given the damage has already been done?

    • Rob says:

      I suspect IAGL would like BA to raise its game in hiring. Everyone has experience of dealing with ‘counterparts’ at work who are massively less smart / experienced / commercial than they are.

      • JDB says:

        BA has some very smart and well paid people in roles they consider more mission critical such as regulation, commercial, revenue etc but elsewhere often poorly paid and tough working conditions although many coasters attracted by benefits. Those perceived as high flyers can progress very quickly.

  • AJ says:

    The incumbent might’ve just been close to retirement or close to a move anyway. Now he/she has done “The Club” move, which would have been someone else’s strategy, and all that aggro (rather than presiding over a programme that has been static for 20 years – low pressure gig), the juice isn’t worth the squeeze now. Especially as the next bit of the strategy is probably revenue-based Avios redemptions – where this programme will truly die.

  • Spaghetti Town says:

    What sort of salary could this job offer?

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Please click here to read our data protection policy before submitting your comment

The UK's biggest frequent flyer website uses cookies, which you can block via your browser settings. Continuing implies your consent to this policy. Our privacy policy is here.