Customers in the US, on average, have 10 loyalty cards in their wallet, and nearly two thirds of American consumers don't think being loyal to a brand is important, according to 'Living Loyal', a study of loyalty across North American brands by customer engagement agency The Marketing Store.
However, the key to loyalty may be as simple as the age-old art of storytelling, the study found. Specifically, the research uncovered some interesting data about emotional loyalty and what it means to be loyal to a brand.
Surprisingly there does seem to be a dramatic predisposition toward brand loyalty - that is, a willingness to engage relationally with a brand - among two out of six customer segments identified.
The three major findings of the study included:
Conducted by The Marketing Store in partnership with IPSOS, the study researched over 1500 US consumers between the ages of 18 and 65 and focused on consumers' participation in loyalty programmes across five travel and retail categories (those being airlines, hotels, retail/women's apparel, supermarkets, and retail/sporting goods) to help identify the key drivers of emotional brand loyalty, and how loyalty initiatives impact wallet allocation.
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