Brands now need to focus more on the core customer experience before investing in conventional loyalty reward programmes, according to CRM and customer engagement agency Underwired, which here offers up 2014's key trends and forecasts for customer loyalty, and identifies what brands will need to do to keep their competitive edge.
The company has recently identified a shift in consumer attitudes toward loyalty programmes where customer experience is increasingly valued over traditional points-based schemes. In fact, recent research showed that 86% of UK adults own at least one loyalty card and 29% carry five or more.
A survey by Plastic Card Services found that British shoppers save an average of £100.32 each year using loyalty points - but they are still missing out on a combined £351 million worth of unused points annually. This, Underwired suggests, is an indication that the value seen in these rewards is dwindling.
Underwired believes that the brands that will lead the way will be those that put customer insight at the centre of their marketing activity, rather than putting loyalty programmes ahead of real customer loyalty-building strategies. Consequently, the company suggests a four-point strategy, as follows:
"As the airline industry discovered to its cost twenty years ago, consumers have come to regard traditional loyalty programmes as something of a 'hygiene factor' - one which is expensive for the brand owner to maintain and increasingly ineffectual in actually promoting loyalty," concluded Underwired's planning director, Tim Williams. "A smarter strategy is to focus on the key aspects of the customer experience that matter to most people. Consider where is the greatest risk for something to go wrong, and the greatest opportunity for something to go right. Act on this insight and you have created a highly effective loyalty programme that's also a platform for all your acquisition, retention, win-back, social media and advocacy strategies."
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