WARNING: Have You Received YOUR Vacation Club Cruise Certificates?
Published Thursday, September 2nd 2010I wanted to share some excerpts from an article I read. This hit EXTREMELY close to home as both my husband and I each recived the same exact mailer being discussed here. I knew right away it was a scam...but I want to share this with you so that you don't mistakenly fall for it when you receive yours in the mail.
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Thumbs Down to Vacation Club Cruise Certificates
August 12th, 2010 . by Les-Lee Roland
I just received a mailer addressed to me and where the return address is, is printed:
“Carnival Ticket vouchers enclosed.” On the opposite side of the mailer, is a picture of the Carnival Conquest, and line, “Important Information Enclosed.”
I open it and read-“Congratulations, Pack your bags, In celebration of our 28th Anniversary you have been personally chosen to receive at your request a COMPLIMENTARY 5 DAY/4 NIGHT CRUISE for 2 adults leaving from Major Ports across the US, including Florida.” Bonus: If I responded within 72 hours, I would also get a Free Blu-Ray DVD player.
I have investigated similar vacation club offers before, but never so blatantly, and falsely, looking as though it had come directly from Carnival or another cruise line.
So the phone started ringing. My clients, who also received these, called and asked if I was going to match the offer. One said she was canceling her booking, unless I gave her a DVD player.
....the insight on what it is all about: In order for them to redeem the offer, the consumer has to attend a seminar on the vacation club. They have to attend with their spouse or significant other and bring a credit card. The location is usually at a hotel. I have also attended one in an office building, but there was absolutely no signage on the building, and surprisingly, not one travel brochure on display.
They will be shown a slide presentation of ways to travel at ridiculously low rates, with rates that compare favorably to what travel agents pay for fams. When it comes to air tickets, attendees are told they can get upgrades the same way that travel agents get them. (When was the last time you did get free upgrades from the airlines?) I even witnessed one salesperson offering to show the sports car he rented from Hertz, an upgrade from a tiny subcompact. He also said he was staying a luxury hotel in the area, for the cost of a Motel 6 – all perks that they could receive as well, saying these are the same perks travel agents get. Cruise ships, river cruises, Hawaii and Caribbean land packages, everything was offered.
Attendees are told all they have to do, is sign up for this “travel club” and these discounts will be theirs forever. In fact, they are encouraged to pass this membership on to their family when they pass on. What’s the cost for this too good to be true, once in a lifetime offer? It can range from $4,000 TO $12,000. Whatever is negotiated.
After the drooling subsides, “closers” appear, usually one for each couple, to try to get them to sign on the dotted line. And of course, either way, they get their voucher for the FREE cruise. Oh, how does that work?
They get a voucher and when they decide to use it, they have to request the space, plus pay a fee for taxes and handling and shipping. The taxes/port fees are higher than what Carnival charges. The handling and shipping…for what…e-tickets??? And of course, this is only if the space is available and bait and switch may be offered.
This type of marketing is not unusual. It has been offered for Carnival, Royal Caribbean, and Norwegian Cruise Line. In this example, though, it is totally misleading, appearing to have been sent from Carnival, directly, as I already stated.
Over the years, I have asked key people at these cruise lines about “these” certificates, and was given “no comment” answers. When I mentioned it to an executive with one of the river cruise companies, I was told that they do not ever sell their cruises to the public at the fam rates I saw on their slide presentation.
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These offers are predominately sent out in Florida. When I contacted the State Consumers Division, I was told that there are many records of complaints about these companies. And surprisingly, they said one out of eight Florida seniors has been scammed by many types of offers, including vacation clubs such as these. Remember, the cost involved is in the thousands of dollars. Who falls for it? People who usually travel and have higher credit card limits.
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