Loyalty Programs Continue to Deliver Impressive Results

Advances in data collection and predictive analytics, along with the mainstreaming of technologies such as consumer data platforms (CDPs), have ‘disrupted’ the application of customer lifetime value (CLV). Artificial intelligence and machine learning (AI/ML), in particular, have impacted how today’s businesses prioritise, calculate and seek to leverage CLV.

We at Eagle Eye are all for technological progress. Our team takes a close interest in innovative, CLV-based marketing strategies. For instance, Wendy’s recently launching an ‘AI-Driven Loyalty Platform to Deliver Customised Rewards’.

Wendy’s has started using AI to analyse data such as a customer’s purchase history to create ‘bespoke’ incentives that will, all going well, resonate more strongly than off-the-shelf rewards. That will presumably mean, for example, the Wendy’s customer who buys a coffee on their way to work will be offered a different reward to one who semi-regularly stops in to buy a hamburger for lunch.

With these types of stories, everyone focuses on the whizzbangery – the AI, in this instance – rather than the old-hat “loyalty platform”. There’s nothing wrong with this. Indeed, one of my colleagues, Jean-Matthieu Schertzer, Eagle Eye Group‘s first chief AI officer, went straight to AI-enabled ‘mass personalisation’ when asked to comment on Wendy’s initiative. He noted, “Consumers understand that loyalty programs reward them for desired behaviour, which creates an expectation of personalisation.”

You probably immediately focused on the second half of that sentence, not the first.

But it’s worth remembering that the high-tech solutions that facilitate mass personalisation are usually bolted onto a pre-existing loyalty program.

Loyalty programs in the modern age    

If you’ve forgotten your uni lectures or need to convince your organisation’s CFO to sign off on a substantial investment to launch or reinvigorate one, here are some noteworthy facts about loyalty programs from one of Eagle Eye’s partners.

Philip Shelper is the CEO of Loyalty & Reward Co. This global consulting firm has helped create or improve loyalty programs for some of the world’s best-known brands (McDonald’s, Hugo Boss, Klarna, Rip Curl, Schneider Electric, Penfolds)). Shelper literally wrote the book on loyalty programs with Loyalty Programs: The Complete Guide. He makes these three points to loyalty program sceptics:

  1. Loyalty programs make money: “Loyalty programs have evolved from marketing cost centres to valuable business units driving significant long-term profit outcomes for companies in almost all categories globally.”
  2. Loyalty programs make money in many ways: “Loyalty programs can deliver value for companies in the following ways: driving profitability from behavioural changes; cost saving and operational efficiencies; improving strategic decision-making; as well as unlocking third-party data and other monetisation opportunities.”
  3. Default to a currency rather than discounts/cashback offers: “Loyalty programs are a potent antidote to heavy discounting addictions. Providing marketers with an alternative value offering for high-value customers can help boost margins and focus customers on their next visit. .”    

Shelper also has one final piece of advice on the vexed issue of calculating CLV. He notes that simple CLV calculations assume average purchase value and frequency remain unchanged over a member’s active period. As is often the case with marketing-related calculations, this makes the arithmetic more straightforward but doesn’t necessarily reflect what is happening in the real world.

“In practice, member behaviour changes, just as prices and margins change for businesses,” he says. “If a loyalty program is working, the assumption should be that purchase value, frequency, and, ideally, margin would increase yearly. As such, the calculation should be broken down into years, with assumptions changing and the total value summed to determine CLV.”

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How one sandwich chain leveraged its loyalty program to boost customer engagement

Loyalty programs have been around forever, but they still offer near endless scope for innovation. Using solutions supplied by Eagle Eye, British sandwich shop chain Pret A Manger recently launched ‘Club Pret’. One publication described it as “the first in-shop, flat subscription service to be launched by a hospitality operator in the UK, with subscribers able to redeem up to five drinks per day for a fixed monthly price”.

That’s right, Pret A Manger is offering Netflix-style pricing. It’s not exactly the same given Pret customers can’t consume completely unlimited barista-made beverages. But it’s in the same ballpark, given most people would struggle to drink more than five coffees a day.

Even better, it’s a win for everybody involved. Pret’s customers can satisfy their thirst whenever they want (within reason). As my colleague, Eagle Eye’s Chief Sales Officer Al Henderson, observes, “Pret can now tie sales analysis to a view of where and who its most valuable customers are. This will enable it to develop new ways to foster greater loyalty at a time when the high street needs a much-needed boost. This game-changing digital initiative will also allow Pret to launch insight-led propositions more quickly, and at scale.”

Theoretically, Pret is on the hook to provide up to 155 drinks a month to anybody who pays the £30 (A$60) a month ‘Club Pret’ subscription. Few subscribers end up taking full advantage of their subscriber privileges. But even if they did, Pret still comes out ahead because it has found out that the increase in CLV more than offsets this.

The results from Club Pret have been remarkable, with subscribers spending four times more than non-subscribers. Club Pret subscribers transacted with Pret 28 times per month, compared to non-members who transacted only two times per month. With some technological assistance from Eagle Eye, Pret created a compelling and transparent value proposition that increased customer engagement and boosted customer lifetime value.

Do sweat the unsexy stuff  

In mid-2024, marketers are confronting both discombobulating disruption and the eternal challenge of convincing consumers to consume.

Understandably, that means there’s a lot of focus on shiny new martech tools. But given the worsening cost-of-living crisis, perhaps there should be a little more on loyalty programs.

Loyalty program members outspend non-loyalty members by a wide margin, providing a source of long-term recurring revenue to businesses. Loyalty programs create a strong bond between the customer and the brand, driven by affinity, convenience and value. They increase the number of touchpoints a customer has with a brand and yield valuable first-party data related to purchase history and preferences. This means these programs can supercharge personalisation and engagement strategies and make a retail brand more prominent in a consumer’s daily life.

If you discover a powerful emerging technology that guarantees your high-value customers everlasting satisfaction and loyalty, you should deploy it immediately. But in the meantime, you might want to invest in improving the functioning and appeal of your business’s existing loyalty program. No matter how old school such an approach may appear.

 

ABOUT EAGLE EYE

Eagle Eye is a leading SaaS technology company enabling retail, travel and hospitality brands to earn the loyalty of their end customers by powering their real-time, omnichannel and personalised consumer marketing activities.

Eagle Eye AIR is a cloud-based platform, which provides the most flexible and scalable loyalty and promotions capability in the world. More than 850 million personalised offers are executed via the platform every week, and it currently hosts over 500 million loyalty member wallets for businesses all over the world. Eagle Eye is trusted to deliver a secure service at hundreds of thousands of physical POS destinations worldwide, enabling the real-time issuance and redemption of promotional coupons, loyalty offers, gift cards, subscription benefits and more.

The Eagle Eye AIR platform is currently powering loyalty and customer engagement solutions for enterprise businesses all over the world, including Asda, Tesco, Morrisons, Waitrose and John Lewis & Partners, JD Sports, Pret a Manger, Loblaws, Southeastern Grocers, Giant Eagle, and the Woolworths Group. In January 2024, Eagle Eye launched EagleAI, a next-generation data science solution for personalisation, already being used by leading retailers worldwide including Carrefour, Auchan and Pattison Food Group. Web – www.eagleeye.com

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Picture of Jonathan Reeve

Jonathan Reeve

With nearly three decades of experience, Jonathan is a seasoned expert in the retail industry, collaborating with retailers worldwide to ensure they remain at the forefront of digital innovation. After successfully operating his own consulting business for five years and authoring the influential book, "Retail's Last Mile: Why Online Shopping Will Exceed Our Wildest Predictions", Jonathan is now the Vice President for the Asia Pacific region at Eagle Eye, a SaaS technology company transforming marketing through real-time personalised performance marketing. In this role, he helps APAC businesses develop and implement world-leading digital marketing programs that drive customer acquisition, interaction and retention.

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