Los Angeles Times

Earning degree in savings

- BY J. KEITH VAN STRAATEN travel@latimes.com

Maybe it’s wrong to look at a university education as your ticket to more money — unless you’re attending Frequent Traveler University. I was one of about 200 people who spent a fall weekend absorbing info from travel experts at a Frequent Traveler University, in a makeshift campus of conference rooms at a hotel near Chicago’s O’Hare airport. Students came from as far as Singapore and paid $249 to hear savings ideas from teachers.¶ After more than 14 hours of presentati­ons, I came home with new strategies and a notebook full of pointers. Here are some for almost any traveler looking to save money and miles:

Make the bargains come to you

Opportunit­ies for cheap flights and hotels can appear suddenly and disappear quickly, sometimes within hours. Let the deals come to you for free using Twitter notificati­ons.

First, follow accounts that post deals. Then, set Twitter’s mobile app to send push notificati­ons to your smartphone when these accounts send a new tweet.

Nick Reyes of the Frequent Miler and Jared Kamrowski of Thrifty Traveler recommende­d Twitter handles such as @theflightd­eal, @secretflyi­ng and their own @FrequentMi­ler and @ThriftyTra­veler.

I’ve been using this technique and can vouch for it, having pounced on some solid bargains, including an upcoming nonstop round trip from LAX to Auckland, New Zealand, for $533 and a recent round trip to Taipei for $402.

A world of confusion buys more miles

Airlines don’t always agree on world geography, Richard Kerr of Award Travel 101 reminded me. For instance, most people with a grasp of geography know that the Caribbean islands are an easy reach for Easterners and that Hawaii is far closer for West Coasters than their Eastern brethren.

Flying Blue, an Air France and KLM program, lumps the Caribbean and Hawaii in the same region, allowing travelers to cover a long distance for few miles, including 12,500 miles to fly from Honolulu to St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands.

This also can work to your advantage when paying for tickets with stopovers. Some airlines consider some far-apart cities to be in the same region, allowing you to add another destinatio­n to your trip for little (and sometimes no) extra cost.

Even though Tokyo and New Delhi are more than 3,600 miles apart, Alaska Airlines considers both in its “Asia 1” region, allowing you to visit both (on partner Japan Airlines) from the U.S. for as few as 35,000 miles one way, significan­tly less than carriers that put India in its own region.

Shorter can be better

Although airline loyalty programs seem to change for the worse from the traveler’s perspectiv­e, one category of mileage redemption in United’s MileagePlu­s has improved, said Matthew Klint of Live and Let’s Fly. If you need to fly one way outside the United States, he told us, some of United’s airline partners in the Star Alliance Network offer trips of 800 miles or fewer outside the U.S. for as little as 8,000 miles, handy if you find a great deal on a flight that gets you close but not quite to your destinatio­n.

A reward atop a reward

Hotels.com has a rewards program that gives you one free night after booking 10 nights. That’s a nice bargain in its own right, but using Hotels.com gift cards can increase your savings even more.

Here’s how: Buy a Hotels.com gift card from a third-party seller at below face value. Gift Card Wiki lists many reputable companies that offer gift cards, including for Hotels.com, at a discount.

After you get your card, search Hotels.com for a room that can be paid for with its gift card (an easy box to check on your search criteria) and enter the card number at checkout.

Getting better

How do you get an upgrade when checking into a hotel? The tip from Jon and Ben Nickel-D’Andrea of No Mas Coach requires nothing but a smile: Be friendly and ask.

No upgrade? Ask for lounge access.

No lounge access? Ask for free Wi-Fi.

I can attest that being polite and not arguing if you get turned down has worked for me, as has politely asking for compensati­on when something goes wrong. That’s how I scored 5,000 points from Hyatt after a window shade fell and a repair didn’t happen when promised.

The next Frequent Traveler University is Feb. 23 and 24 in Seattle, followed by sessions in Brisbane, Australia, and London.

Now that I’ve graduated, I can’t wait to try what I’ve learned in the real world. I’m fairly confident I’ll get more practical value out of it than my bachelor’s degree.

 ?? YakobchukO­lena Getty Images/iStockphot­o ?? TAKING THE FAMILY on a flight can cost less if you set Twitter notificati­ons to alert you to deals.
YakobchukO­lena Getty Images/iStockphot­o TAKING THE FAMILY on a flight can cost less if you set Twitter notificati­ons to alert you to deals.

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