American Airlines just announced free, high-speed inflight Wi-Fi for AAdvantage members, sponsored by my past employer, AT&T. The rollout starts this month (January 2026) and is expected to reach most of the fleet by early spring.
That is great news.
But the headline isn’t really about bandwidth. It’s about correcting a massive imbalance in how companies treat their revenue source:
Most companies keep chasing the next customer… while the ones funding the business get a “thanks for your order” and nothing else.
The Loyalty Imbalance
I’ve seen this across companies for a very long time:
- New clients get the highest discounts.
- New sign-ups get the best terms.
- Loyal customers get the mediocre, standard rate.
American Airlines is flipping that script.
They are stepping up in a landscape where the bar is rising fast. United Airlines has already started offering free Wi-Fi on Starlink-equipped aircraft, and Delta Air Lines has been doing free Wi-Fi for loyalty members, too. (You can read more about these airline offers and policies in article by Zach Wichter in USA TODAY.
So, is American too late?
No.
This isn’t a race to provide the best internet speed. It’s a strategic choice to fix a broken definition of “connection.”
Connectivity vs. Connection
In business, there are two types of connection. There is digital connectivity (the utility, the bandwidth, the internet). And there is emotional connection (the relationship, the feeling, the loyalty).
The problem is that you cannot build a strong emotional connection while holding the digital connectivity hostage.
Think about the signal a paywall sends: You are a loyal flier. You sit down in your seat, ready to work, but the airline blocks you. They ask for a credit card. This creates a negative interaction. It adds friction. It creates distance. It tells the customer: “We can connect you to the internet, but only if you pay a toll.”
Now, look at the shift American is making. By removing the paywall, they are removing the friction. You sit down, and the internet is just… there. This creates a positive interaction. It removes the distance. It tells the customer: “We want you connected—to your work, to your family, and to us.”
They decided that the relationship was worth more than the transaction fee.
They are choosing to Love the ones they have™. That is Doing CX Right®. By removing the barrier, they proved they are willing to invest in the people who invest in them.
That is how you become irreplaceable. You stack enough of these positive interactions together until the sum is so high that the customer wouldn’t dream of going anywhere else.
Now the business lesson, even if you’re not in airlines: A perk isn’t the point. The signal is what matters. And the signal means: “We recognize you. Your loyalty changes how we treat you.”
How to Find Your “Wi-Fi”
My recommendation: Examine what you are doing to appreciate your existing customers who trust you. This requires knowing your customer at a deep level. You need to identify the friction they have learned to live with and make it disappear.
In your industry, your “Wi-Fi” isn’t about bandwidth. It is about removing the “tax” you charge for loyalty.
- In Retail: Maybe it’s the return policy. Stop asking your regulars for a receipt. You know them. You know they bought it.
- In E-commerce: Maybe it’s the shipping speed. Stop holding back the “fast lane” for a surcharge. Give them the upgrade because they’ve earned it.
- In B2B: Maybe it’s the clock. Stop running the meter on a five-minute phone call. Treat the advice as an investment, not an invoice.
Whatever it is, identify the barrier that makes your best customers feel like strangers. Then, remove it.
Give them the Wi-Fi equivalent in your business.
Go find your Wi-Fi.
Want more proven strategies to boost revenue and retention, let’s talk.
