Module 4, Assignment 1: Instructions & Submission rmt366
AK47
State of the Industry Research Series :
Customer Loyalty in Retail
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Table of Contents
Executive Summary 3
Customer Loyalty in Retail 6
Research Findings 12
Recommendations 25
The Retail Honor Board: Best Practices from Leading Retailers 27
Exhibit 1: Features and Benefits Comparison of Loyalty Programs of Top Retailers 29
Exhibit 2: EKN Loyalty Program Assessment Framework 33
Exhibit 3: Customer Segmentation 39
Exhibit 4: Loyalty Solution Vendor Landscape 42
Executive Summary
Edgell Knowledge Network 4 Executive Summary
Over the years, as consumers realized the economic benefit of participating in a loyalty program, they signed up with more and more programs. Today, an average American household holds membership with 18 loy- alty programs1. They are loyal to everyone, and by being so they are loyal to no one.
On the other hand, Apple is a prime example of a retailer who has built a strong emotional connection with its large base of loyal customers through product leadership, a unique retail experience and a consistent cross-channel delivery of the Apple brand promise. Apple does not offer a loyalty program.
Agreed, not every retailer enjoys Apple’s product leadership, and certain formats are built to compete on price. Yet, customer loyalty programs require close inspection - why they exist, what value they deliver to the consumers and retailers, and how.
Edgell Knowledge Network conducted an industry survey of 60+ retailers to benchmark the current state of loyalty programs in the retail industry. This report presents the survey findings, highlights the key takeaways and offers prescriptive insights including a new framework for customer loyalty in the retail industry. Key findings include:
• There is a disconnect between retailers’ perception of the top drivers of customer loyalty and their top strategies to improve their loyalty programs
• Customers of retailers who offer a loyalty program are no more loyal than those of retailers who do not offer one
• Retailers have multiple systems for customer engagement, regardless of whether they offer a loy- alty program or not
• Retailers expect there to be a significant increase in revenue contribution from members enrolled in their loyalty program over the next 3 years. They are also gearing up for the next wave of technol- ogy platform upgrades.
The template that most of today’s customer loyalty programs follow was designed in the early 1980s. It was a time when the consumers’ spending power was increasing but they had limited choices. It was a simpler time focused on rewarding repeat transactions with an economic reward – discounts.
Since then, the framework has evolved in response to changing consumer behavior and retailers’ expansion into new channels. Consumers now have the ability to earn, track and redeem rewards across a variety of channels, and retailers are able to better utilize the data they collect through their program, as well as other sources, to deliver targeted offers based on consumer preferences and behavior.
However, the loyalty program has remained one-dimen- sional, still focused on delivering transactional economic value to the consumer. For retailers, growth into new channels has been accompanied by new technology sys- tems, often of varying size, scope and integration with ex- isting systems. Look under the hood of a retail loyalty or customer engagement program and you’re likely to find a patchwork of systems cobbled together to get the job done.
Loyalty is an emotional concept, while loyalty programs are transactional in nature.
1 The 2011 COLLOQUY Loyalty Census
State of the Industry Research Series: Customer Loyalty in Retail5 Executive Summary
• Activity and frequency continue to be the measures of program effectiveness further highlighting their transactional nature. Strategic influence or emotion measures such as Net Promoter Score (NPS) see low adoption.
A new vision for loyalty programs emerges from the findings and EKN’s interviews with retail executives - the loyalty program as a customer-facing version of the retailer’s cross-channel engagement strategy. EKN’s Loyalty Program Assessment Framework, included in this report, provides a template for a holistic customer engagement and loyalty program.
Loyalty is ultimately an emotional concept. To truly foster customer loyalty, loyalty programs will need to expand in their scope and ambition from rewarding frequent activity with a monetary reward, to being the vehicle through which the retailer can build a rewarding personal relationship with the customer.
The similarity of the benefits offered, program structure, and how and where customers can redeem “points” is indicative of the commoditization of the retail customer loyalty program.
Now, to measure and reward loyalty as a product of a customer’s frequency, quality, context, emotion and profitability of engagement with them across channels, retailers need new metrics, and the ability to segment customers based on the above parameters. EKN’s Cus- tomer Segmentation Framework illustrates a segmenta- tion approach and offers a starting off point to retailers.
The report also includes a detailed Loyalty Solution Pro- vider Vendor Landscape that lists the top vendors in this area along with the spectrum of services they provide, and a Retail Honor Board that highlights Best Practices from leading retailers.
Edgell Knowledge Network 6
Customer Loyalty in Retail
State of the Industry Research Series: Customer Loyalty in Retail7
Retailers’ customer rewards programs are designed to maximize long-term patronage from customers. Originally focused on rewarding repeat purchases, generating intimate knowledge about customers, and influencing customer behavior, retailers’ rewards programs have traditionally been supported by a variety of technology applications including Customer Relationship Management (CRM) software.
Consumer behavior and preferences have changed dramatically over the last decade, driven by new eco- nomic realities, increased computing power in mobile phones, ease of Internet access, the emergence of social media and the growing consumer adoption of ecommerce. However, the strategies and incentives of retailers’ rewards programs remain anchored in origins more than a quarter of a century old.
EKN’s State of the Industry report on retailers’ customer rewards programs provides a benchmark of retail- ers’ assessment of the effectiveness of their rewards programs, and offers specific insights into how retailers can build upon existing investments to plug gaps in strategies, processes and technologies.
Why cross-channel customer engagement is the next frontier of retail differentiation
It is increasingly difficult for retailers to differentiate themselves from competitors on the traditional param- eters of price, location, assortment and store experience.
• With brand manufacturers having expanded their distribution of offerings to more retailers to max- imize sales, and with consumers increasingly accessing products directly via the Internet, the level of product exclusivity has diminished over the years. The proliferation of private label products in certain categories points to a race to the bottom of the brand-value pyramid.
• With the emergence of ecommerce and the expansion of the retail real estate footprint over the last two decades, store location alone does not deliver the kind of differentiation to retailers that it once did.
• Discount retailers like Walmart have put pressure on prices across a variety of categories, the Inter- net has made pricing and inventory transparent to consumers, and advances in mobile technology now allow them to price-defect at the moment of truth.
• Retailers like Apple and IKEA are able to tightly integrate their assortments with the overall store ex- perience to create a meaningful differentiation and stickiness in the minds of consumers. However, for the most part, budget cuts and a drive towards extreme standardization has meant experience based differentiation remains a challenge for most retailers.
On the other hand, consumer behavior has changed dramatically over the past decade. The pace of change has only accelerated over the last 3 years with the emergence of social media and increased adoption of smartphones and tablets.
• The worst recession in 75 years has meant consumers are more value conscious now than ever before. It is difficult for the average consumer to justify the brand premium associated with their favorite product or favorite retailer, if the same product is available elsewhere cheaper.
• The number of Internet users has doubled in the last 5 years and stands at approximately 2.5 billion worldwide. In the United States, 77% of the population was online in 20102. For certain consumer
2 Internet World Stats
Edgell Knowledge Network 8
segments, such as the Millennials (born after 1982), the Internet is not high technology; it is a utility, like power, water and gas.
• For decades, retailers have enjoyed the benefits of information asymmetry. Before the Internet made it possible, consumers did not have transparent access to pricing, inventory and customer experiences. Now, with the model turned on its head, consumers walk into a store armed with more information than the store associate. And, social media has created new channels of conver- sation within consumers, where they share their likes, dislikes, desires and experiences. Whereas traditional retailer-to-consumer communication strategies rely on mass communication and au- tomation, consumer-to-consumer and consumer-to-retailer communication has become human, personal and contextual.
• Further, smartphones have untethered the Internet and social media from personal computers, and put them, literally, in the hands of the consumer. Smartphones have further enhanced the con- nectedness between consumers by being location aware. In the United States, 94% of adults aged 18 – 44 own a mobile device. 1 in 2 mobile phones in the US are now smartphones3.
All of the above points to a simple truth – the “good old days” are over and they are never coming back. The consumer is no longer either in the store or online, either researching a product or buying one, either value conscious or brand sensitive. She is all of it, at the same time.
Retailers won’t win her loyalty following their traditional engagement models. They’ll need to serve her equally in stores, online, on social media, and on the mobile phone; they’ll need to offer value and emotional gratification; they’ll need to listen as much as talk; and they’ll need to connect with their consumers as indi- viduals.
In other words, in an environment where they can’t differentiate on traditional parameters, to build cus- tomer loyalty retailers need to deliver a truly integrated cross-channel experience. As the customer-facing avatar of retailers’ customer engagement strategies, loyalty programs should be the language of this cross- channel experience. Today, retail loyalty programs are guilty of being expense accounts for discounts and promotions. Done right, they can create the sticky differentiation retailers are striving for.
The commoditization of loyalty programs
While they are central to retailers’ ability to create differentiation; loyalty programs are themselves victims of extreme standardization and commoditization.
The past decade has seen the number of loyalty programs in retail grow exponentially. At the same time, it has become increasingly difficult to tell one program from the other due to the sameness of their scope, structure, focus and benefits.
• The number of loyalty memberships in the US is 2.1 billion, exceeding 2 billion for the first time4
• In 2011 the average US household was enrolled in more than 18 loyalty programs, an increase of 28.5% over 20095
• Approximately $48 billion is issued in reward points and miles annually, of which 33% goes unre- deemed6
3 Steadyrain 4 The 2011 COLLOQUY Loyalty Census 5 ibid 6 ibid
State of the Industry Research Series: Customer Loyalty in Retail9
• 81% of loyalty members don’t know the program benefits, or how and when they will receive re- wards7
From the above facts and the research findings presented in the next section of this report, it is clear that (a) participation in a loyalty program doesn’t make a customer loyal, and (b) loyalty programs are not effective in fostering loyal behavior. Why?
Loyalty Programs ≠ Customer Loyalty
For starters, most retailers’ loyalty programs are designed to offer discounts and coupons to customers based on frequent activity. Exhibit 1 at the end of this report offers a detailed look at the features and bene- fits of various loyalty programs offered by some of the top US retailers. The similarity of the benefits offered, program structure, and how and where customers can redeem “points” is indicative of the commoditization of the retail customer loyalty program. When customers are loyal to everyone (as indicated by membership in 18 programs on average8), they are not loyal to anyone.
Loyalty is an emotional concept, while loyalty programs are transactional in nature. Therein lies the biggest disconnect between the outcome retailers intend for their loyalty programs to deliver and the way in which they go about achieving it. Refer the framework for customer loyalty via cross channel customer engage- ment included in this report for EKN’s point of view on how softer, intangible and emotional aspects can be included in retailers’ approach towards loyalty programs.
An archaic past, an uncertain future
Frequent flier programs in the airline industry offer an interesting insight into the future of retail loyalty programs. On the one hand they offer members benefits beyond miles redemption, such as check-in con- venience, increased baggage allowance, speedier security checks, cabin upgrades and more. Along with the status recognition offered by the frequent flier tiers (silver, gold, platinum etc.), retailers stand to improve customer engagement by offering similar benefits in the retail context through their programs.
On the other hand, airline programs also offer retailers a glimpse into their program’s bleak future unless the underlying currency is changed from being transaction based to relationship based. Airlines have had to come up with convoluted rules regarding miles expiration, redemption, blackout dates and other restric- tions in order to manage the cost and risk associated with the many billion unredeemed miles that lie on their books.
In the 1970s, a series of recessions decreased sales of S&H Shield Stamps and the stamp programs of their competitors1. The value of the rewards declined substantially during the same period, requiring either far more stamps to get a worthwhile item or spending money for an item that was barely discounted from the price at regular stores, creating a general downward spiral as fewer and fewer people saw them as worth the trouble. By 1981, the Green Stamps were dead.
One can argue that customer loyalty programs today face a similar dilemma as the Green Stamps – become more valuable to the customer or become irrelevant. More alarmingly, they may share the same fate if they remain focused on only offering value via discounts and promotions.
7 ACI Worldwide Study 8 The 2011 COLLOQUY Loyalty Census
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Re-connecting with the individual customer
In the not so distant past, and even today in bazaars in various countries, the retailer-customer relationship was one of intimate knowledge, trust and personal service. While today’s consumer has a wider assortment and more channels to shop from, the personal relationship with the retailer is more often than not, missing.
Gains in information technology have made the collection and analysis of customer data easier and more cost-effective. This is important because the success of a loyalty program depends on the use of customer data to personalize the relationship between retailers and customers and move beyond a mere transac- tion. The richness of data that is available in the best loyalty programs, when used in a customer-focused way, can create great value not just for the retailer but most importantly for the customer as well.
The basic premise of a loyalty program is to reward customers for repeat purchases and encourage continued loyalty by providing targets at which various benefits and rewards are “unlocked”. As customers move through this engagement spectrum, retailers learn more about these customers and are able to offer non-monetary ways to satisfy their needs. Via this continued engagement, retailers are also able to move from a one-to-many (groups of customers) relationship to a one-to-one (individual customer) relationship with the customer. In that sense, loyalty programs are a way for retailers to reconnect with their customers as individuals.
“Advanced analytics, and how retailers are able to use data to create a social profile of their key customers, will define the next frontier of loyalty programs in the retail in- dustry.”
- SVP at leading apparel retailer
1793 1896 1929 1960s
A U.S. merchant starts giving out copper tokens which can be collected by
the consumer and ex- changed for items in the
store.
Sperry & Hutchinson be- gins offering Green Shield Stamps. Merchants offer
stamps as a reward for pur- chases, shoppers redeem a book of stamps through the Green Stamps store or
catalogue.
In 1929, Betty Crocker issues coupons that can
be used to redeem for pre- miums like free flatware. Later the Betty Crocker
points program produces a popular reward catalog
from which customers can pick rewards using their
points.
The green stamps reach the height of their popu-
larity, including being launched in the UK
1970s 1981 2006
A series of economic reces- sions impacts the value
of the stamps, creating a downward spiral
No longer profitable, Sperry & Hutchinson is sold by its founders. The same year, American Airlines launches its frequent flier program, one that eventually becomes the template for all other loyalty programs, including in retail. By 1984 most major airlines launch competing programs.
Hilton is the first hotel to launch its program in January 1984.
The Betty Cocker Catalog goes out of business.
Customers are asked to re- deem all points by Decem-
ber 15, 2006.
2010
A new beginning: Card Linked Offers gain traction, offering an alternative to the traditional paper and POS
coupons.
The life and death of the traditional discounting based loyalty scheme
Edgell Knowledge Network 12
One of the retail executives who provided feedback on this report makes an astute observation, “How does the goal of increasing part-time retail associates affect a retailer’s ability to execute a one to one relationship? At end of day, customers are not deemed expendable but employees are.”
Research Findings
State of the Industry Research Series: Customer Loyalty in Retail13
Respondent Profile Survey respondent distribution by retail format (Figures are percentage of total respondents)
Survey respondent distribution by annual revenue (Figures are percentage of total respondents)
Survey respondent distribution based on whether a loyalty program is offered (Figures are percentage of total respondents)
42%
58%
Retailers who do not offer a loyalty program
Retailers who offer a loyalty program
30% 18%
16% 6%
12%
6%
6%
6% Apparel
Sporting Goods & Hobby
Grocery & Food
General Merchandise
Convenience
Health & Personal Care
Online
Specialty other
31%
22%18%
13%
16%
Less than $100 million
$100 million - $499 million
$500 million - $999 million
$1 billion - $4.999 billion
$5 billion and more
Edgell Knowledge Network 14
Retailers focused on hygiene and transactional drivers of customer loyal- ty; engagement parameters such as social media and cross-channel pres- ence rank low Drivers of customer loyalty, relative importance (Figures are percentage of total respondents)
Most important driver Important driver Somewhat important driver Least important driver
0
100
Personalized offers
Social media
engagement
Cross channel
presence
Brand sensitivity
Price sensitivity
Store experience
Customer service
Product choice
Product availability
2%
13%
28%
57%
3%
15%
37%
45%
6%
24%
33%
37%
5%
29%
47%
19%
17%
28%
48%
7%
10%
43%
39%
8%
22%
55%
20%
3%
2%
46%
52%
1% 7%
54%
38%
(2.46) (2.05)(2.45)(2.81) (3.00)(3.24)(3.4)(3.28)(3.49)Meanscore
Retailers’ assessment of drivers of loyalty vs. top strategies for improving loyalty programs (Figures are percentage of respondents who offer a loyalty program)
Cr os
s ch
an ne
l p re
se nc
e
Pe rs
on al
iz ed
o ffe
rs
Br an
d se
ns iti
vi ty
Pr ic
e se
ns iti
vi ty
St or
e ex
pe rie
nc e
Pr od
uc t c
ho ic
e
Cu st
om er
s er
vi ce
Pr od
uc t a
va ila
bi lit
y
So ci
al m
ed ia
e ng
ag em
en t0
60 56%
44%
49%
36%
19%
33%
12%
3%6%
Provide free shipping on online orders
Introduce tier based membership
Special service based on membership
Increase budget for rewards
Introduce new rewards
Cross channel integration
Social media engagement
More personalized offers
68%
40%
64%
38%
24%
28%
20%
16%
0 70
% respondent rated driver as most important
Top drivers of loyalty Top strategies to improve loyalty program effectiveness
State of the Industry Research Series: Customer Loyalty in Retail15
EKN asked respondents to rate the drivers of customer loyalty from least important to most important.
• Respondents rated customer service (57%), product availability (52%) and store experience (45%) as the most important factors
• Social media engagement (22%), cross channel presence (17%) and personalized offers (10%) were considered least important
In a follow-up question, respondents were asked to identify the top strategies to build customer loyalty.
• Personalized offers (68%), social media engagement (64%) and cross channel integration (40%) emerged as the top choices
The disconnect between retailers’ assessment of what drives customer loyalty and the strategies they be- lieve work best in terms of customer engagement could not be starker. The 3 top strategies match up with the 3 least important factors impacting customer loyalty.
In EKN’s view, 2 of the top 3 drivers of customer loyalty identified by the respondent base, product avail- ability and customer service, are the basic tenets of retailing, or table stakes. The focus needs to shift to the personal, local and emotional context of customer engagement, which is why it is surprising to see the respondents rate personalized promotions, social media engagement and cross channel presence so low. Differentiating the store experience is also an important, and often overlooked, driver of customer loyalty.
The ability for retailers to get unique or low volume items to consumers in an acceptable timeframe will continue to be important. Speed and low/no delivery cost will still be a key because convenience and a great shopping experience contribute to loyalty.
Edgell Knowledge Network 16
Current retailer loyalty programs emerge as ineffective towards their goal of creating more loyal customers Survey respondent distribution based on how long their loyalty program has been offered (Figures are percentage of total respondents)
14%
24%
11%
51%
Less than 1 year
1 - 3 years
3 - 5 years
More than 5 years
Average percentage share of wallet for considering a customer loyal, comparison between retailers who offer a loyalty program and those who don’t (Figures are percentage of total respondents)
0
10
20
30
40
50 47%
38%
Retailers who offer a loyalty program
Retailers who do not offer a loyalty program
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35
19%
14%
24%
24%
17%
16%
10%
14%
30%
32%
Less than 25%
Between 25% - 49%
Between 50% - 74%
75% and more
I don’t know
All retailers All retailers offering customer loyalty program
Average % share of wallet for considering loyal
State of the Industry Research Series: Customer Loyalty in Retail17
Percentage of customers considered loyal, comparison between retailers who offer a loyalty program and those who don’t (Figures are percentage of customers considered loyal by total respondents)
0
35
Retailers who do not offer a loyalty program
Retailers who offer a loyalty program
33%
30%
Respondents were asked a series of inter-related questions to gauge the effectiveness of current customer loyalty programs.
• Both groups of respondents, those who offer a loyalty program and those who do not, have dif- ferent benchmarks for who they consider a loyal customer. Retailers who offer a loyalty program expect to have an average 47% of the customer’s wallet share to consider him or her loyal. The benchmark for retailers who do not offer a loyalty program is lower at 38%.
• However, there is little difference in the proportion of their total customer base both sets of retail- ers consider loyal by the above measure. 30% for retailers who offer a loyalty program, and 33% for retailers who do not. Interestingly, retailers who offer a loyalty program responded that 45% of their customers are enrolled in their loyalty program, which means retailers do not consider at least a third of their program members loyal.
• Of the respondents who offer a customer loyalty program, 62% have offered it for more than 3 years, and 24% have for 1-3 years.
The above findings beg a fundamental question – are retailers’ loyalty programs delivering the on the prom- ise of fostering customer loyalty?
“Loyalty programs need to move beyond credit for purchases to more engagement based rewards. We are looking to increase the type of non credit based rewards we offer, such as exclusive store events and custom products like T-shirts.”
- SVP at apparel retailer
Edgell Knowledge Network 18
Retailers haven’t figured out the right technology enablement platform for customer engagement Core loyalty technology system or platform of retailers who offer a loyalty program (Figures are percentage of total respondents)
14%
32%
50%
4%
SAAS or cloud based platform
Home grown system
Third party solution
Not aware
Core technology platform used for driving customer engagement by retailers who do not offer a loyalty pro- gram (Figures are percentage of total respondents)
52%
26%
22%
Multiple systems
Home grown systems
Third party solution
State of the Industry Research Series: Customer Loyalty in Retail19
Integration of different sources of data into customer analytics, retailers offering a customer loyalty program vs. retailers who don’t offer one (Figures are percentage of total respondents)
0 100
Market data (IRI, Nielsen)
Public data
Mobile
Social media
Online
Store (POS transaction data)
Loyalty (membership data) 100%
92%
91%
52% 64%
28% 55%
24% 41%
16% 27%
12% 36%
Retailers who offer a loyalty program Retailers who do not offer a loyalty program
Channels on which customers can earn, track and redeem loyalty points (Figures are percentage of total respondents)
93%
Brick & mortar store (POS) Online Mobile Social 0
20
40
60
80
100
56%
89%
67%
48% 44% 44%
30%
22% 26%
11% 7%
Earn
Track
Redeem
Edgell Knowledge Network 20
Technology enablement of customer engagement across channels is clearly fractured and fragmented. Tra- ditionally, this was considered the role of Customer Relationship Management technology. However, CRM solutions have not kept pace with the changing dynamic of how the value of a customer is measured; from being focused on transactions to being focused on the strength of relationship.
• Among retailers who offer a loyalty program:
° 32% use a homegrown system as the backbone of their loyalty program
° 50% use a third party solution. (Refer to the loyalty solution provider landscape included in this report for a detailed comparison of the major loyalty technology solution providers)
° 14% use a SAAS or cloud-based platform
• Among retailers who do not offer a loyalty program:
° 26% use a homegrown system to drive customer engagement
° 22% use a third party solution
° 52% use multiple systems
peers who do offer a loyalty program. Retailers who offer a loyalty program seem focused exclusively on the data the program itself generates. The real value of loyalty program data is in its integration with other sources such as store (POS), online, social and public data to form a richer profile of the customer.
The variance between which channels customers can earn, track and redeem points is an illustration of the fractured technology enablement. Not surprisingly, stores have the highest penetration, followed by online, mobile and social.
It is EKN’s contention that the battle for customer loy- alty begins with a better understanding of the customer through multi-dimensional customer analytics. In anoth- er surprising comparison, respondents in EKN’s survey who do not offer a loyalty program integrate more data into their customer analytics strategy compared to their
“Why is there a tendency to be insular with respect to analytics? Is it that we have so much data already? Is it that the cost to en- rich with outside data sources doesn’t seem worth the investment?”
- VP at Specialty Retailer
State of the Industry Research Series: Customer Loyalty in Retail21
Significant uptick in activity expected in the next 3 years Revenue contribution from customers enrolled in loyalty program, 2012-2015 trends (Figures are percentage of revenue contribution from customers)
0
100
60%
40%
55%
45%
49%
51%
42%
58%
Revenue from customers not enrolled in loyalty program
Revenue from customers enrolled in loyalty program
40% 58% 2012 2015
Revenue from customers enrolled in the loyalty program
Timeframe to upgrade current customer loyalty program technology platform (Figures are percentage of total respondents)
43%
21%
29%
7%
No plans
In the next 12 months
Between 1 year - 3 years
Not aware
Edgell Knowledge Network 22
Timeframe to launch a customer loyalty program by retailers not currently offering one (Figures are percentage of total respondents)
1 year - 3 years
Next 12 months
No immediate plans
44%
32%
24%
0
100
56%
24%
32%
44%
Timeframe to upgrade current customer engagement platform of retailers currently not offering a loyalty program (Figures are percentage of total respondents)
28%28%
44%
No plans
Next 12 months
1 year - 3 years
State of the Industry Research Series: Customer Loyalty in Retail23
Retailers expect the revenue contribution from customers enrolled in loyalty programs to grow substantially over the next 3 years, from 40% in 2012 to 58% in 2015. Even accounting for consolidation in retail as well as an overall increase in loyalty program memberships, this is a significant increase. While revenue contri- bution is not the most effective measure of customer loyalty (wallet share and profitability contribution are better measures), it points to the fact that retailers either expect a significant uptick in loyalty program mem- berships or an improvement in their ability to sell more to customers enrolled in their program during the next 3 years. This growth has to be supported with the appropriate investments in technology enablement.
• Of retailers who offer a loyalty program
° 1 in 2 plan to upgrade their loyalty program technology platform in the next 3 years
• Of retailers who do not offer a loyalty program:
° 56% plan to launch a program within the next 3 years, of whom 57% plan to do so within the next 12 months
° 72% plan to upgrade their current customer engagement platform
Loyalty technology solution providers should invest in building capability to plug the gaps that will drive this wave of technology activity.
Edgell Knowledge Network 24
Customer Lifetime Value ranks as top metric to measure loyalty program effectiveness. Surprisingly, share of wallet ranks low. No retailers use NPS. Top metrics to measure the effectiveness of loyalty program (Figures are percentage of total respondents)
0 50
50%
49%
47%
33%
31%
28%
20%
16%
12%
12%
4%
0%
Member vs non member spend
Recency, frequency, money (RFM) metrics
Member spend, as a % of total sales
Customer lifetime value (CLV)
Coupon redemption rates
Customer retention rates
Net promoter score (NPS)
Cost of new member acquisition
Share of wallet of customer
Cost of program as % of incremental member sales
Member vs non member margin
Cost of program as % of sales
Asking how retailers measure the effectiveness of their loyalty program or in other words, customer loyalty itself, is an important question. It points to the strategic goals of their loyalty program, as one can assume their strategies would be optimized to maximize their stated goals or measures.
• Although customer lifetime value (CLV) ranks as one of the top 3 metrics retailers use to measure customer loyalty, share of wallet ranks much lower than expected
• Other top metrics – member spend as a % of sales and RFM (recency, frequency, money) metrics – are basics for measuring activity, and do not point to effectiveness of the activity. Metrics such as member vs. non-member margin are harder to arrive at, and rank lower among the metrics retail- ers use
• Net Promoter Score (NPS) is a relatively new, and a hard to measure, metric. Associated invest- ments (integration with outside data, analytics, skilled statisticians) would be scru- tinized closely if it can not be linked directly to ROI. However, it is one that focuses on a combination of transactional and engagement parameters. It is revealing that none of the respondents in EKN’s survey use it. This may be due to the fact that our survey focused primarily on executives in the IT function, where awareness of NPS may be lower than in the marketing function. Otherwise, it points to the fact that customer loyalty is currently measured via transactional metrics; and emotional engagement is conspicuously absent from how retailers measure it. Refer to EKN’s loyalty program framework for EKN’s recommendations on measures that point to emotional engagement.
“Just as most public companies are fixated on quarterly earnings, loyalty programs are measured by short-term metrics. Not many retailers have the organization structure, incentive alignment, resources and the ability to demonstrate ROI for the longer-term investments required to deliver true lifetime value to the customer.”
VP at Specialty Retailer
State of the Industry Research Series: Customer Loyalty in Retail25
Recommendations
Edgell Knowledge Network 26
Loyalty programs need to evolve from rewarding transactional frequency with dis- counts to building mutually rewarding, holistic relationships through transactional as well as emotional fulfillment
EKN recommends retailers expand the scope of their loyalty program by ensuring their both cross channel customer engagement strategy and how they reward their customers are in lock step. In the most mature state, there is no need for a loyalty program separate from how the retailer engages with the customer across channels.
EKN’s Loyalty Program Assessment Framework in Exhibit 2 offers a jumping off point for retailers to deter- mine specific actions towards the goal of aligning loyalty programs more closely with true customer loyalty.
Strong analytics capabilities to build customer segments and measure the relevant be- haviors is more important than ever before
For loyalty programs to be truly representative of customer loyalty, new measures and metrics need to be defined. Given these will include measures for advocacy, strength of relationship and the value of custom- ers’ emotional connection with the retailer, they will be difficult to measure and track.
Also, as loyalty programs move from being frequency based to being engagement based, it will be criti- cally important for retailers to have a clear understanding of where their customers lie on an engagement spectrum. Retailers can begin by defining clear customer segments that capture the transactional economic value as well as the value of customer advocacy. The typical challenge has been the frequency of change of customer segments and the associated loss of historical data and context. It will continue to be difficult for retailers to sustain a meaningful relationship with the customer if the longer-term trends are lost in transla- tion.
EKN’s Customer Segmentation Framework in Exhibit 3 provides retailers a point from which to develop their own segments.
Cross-channel excellence requires organization structure re-alignment
In EKN’s survey, retailers identified improved cross-channel integration as one of the top 3 strategies to build customer loyalty. In EKN’s own view, cross-channel customer engagement and customer loyalty programs are two sides of the same coin.
For all the importance that is attached to cross-channel customer engagement, one thing is certain - there is no single, or even clear, definition in the retail industry of who is responsible for the one thing that everyone agrees is critical to success – customer experience. This highlights an important, but oft-ignored question - how are retailers organized to tackle cross-channel, and how should they be?
Establishing a position such as this is never easy, and may require navigating a minefield of internal political equations. Addressing this question is as important, if not more, as the technical hullabaloo that typically surrounds cross-channel dialogue in retail. In the near future, we see the appointment of a strong role re- sponsible for cross-channel experience. This can be a strong differentiator for retailers, especially those who move early.
State of the Industry Research Series: Customer Loyalty in Retail27
The Retail Honor Board: Best Practices from Leading Retailers
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Retailer Best Practice
Category Detail
Emotional connection
Petsmart’s groomers build strong relationships with their pets, and by asso- ciation with pet owners. Petsmart will send a card on the pet’s birthday invit- ing them to pick out their special treat, kept ready for them at the nearest store. Groomers are on most pet owners’ speed dials, and kept informed of major developments in the pet’s life, including their passing away.
Secret sauce: Groomers work on commission and therefore incented to be the best friend they can be to the pet and pet owner.
Gamification
Bath & Body Works has recently implemented a chance-based coupon dis- covery game in a few of their stores. In a pinball-like game, customers drop a coin into a machine and watch it earn them one of many possible dis- counts. More important than offering the discount, the overall experience converts an otherwise linear store experience into one filled with surprises.
Secret sauce: Store associates, including those at the POS register, are well trained and direct customers to the game to ensure everyone walks out feeling like they won / earned something today.
Shopping convenience and in-store activity based mobile
coupons
Stop & Shop recently launched its ScanIt! mobile scan and bag solution, al- lowing customers to use their smartphones as a mobile POS. While there are some features missing which are sure to be released soon, the overall program is a good first step towards the type of cross channel integration that will offer customers value.
Secret sauce: Ahold is now able to gather valuable data on their customer’s baskets, and make personalized offers in real time based on what is in their cart.
Non monetary value to the customer
Patagonia, an eco-friendly outdoor apparel company, realized that their customer needed more than just points and discounts from a loyalty pro- gram. Late last year, the company implemented its Common Threads Initia- tive. In it, they partnered with eBay to help customers to resell their highly durable Patagonia clothing online through the company website.
Secret sauce: Patagonia identified a cause its customers cared for and in- vested in building out an execution framework for it.
Non monetary value to the customer
Nordstrom’s loyalty program is widely recognized as one of the most effec- tive in the retail industry. A large part of the reason is its tiered approach to member benefits and a continued investment in creating non monetary benefits that members value, such as custom shopping parties, unlimited complimentary alterations and tickets to in-store fashion shows.
Secret sauce: In line with its brand value, Nordstrom has created a pro- gram that members attach status value to. There is inherent social context to being a level 3 or 4 Nordstrom Fashion Rewards member.
State of the Industry Research Series: Customer Loyalty in Retail29
Exhibit 1: Features and Benefits Comparison of Loyalty Programs of Top Retailers9
9 Retailer Website
Edgell Knowledge Network 30
Kroger Loyalty program: Kroger Plus Rewards (with Plus Card) Earn: 1 point on $1 spent, 50 bonus points for each prescription at Kroger pharmacies, 2 points on $1 spent (offer on items advertised every week), 10 bonus points for bringing own shopping bags Benefits: $5 certificate for first 500 points, $1 certificate for each additional 100 points, 3 month mailings of rewards, Resets end of the year Mobile application/other benefits: Mobile application - Kroger co. and benefits of the mobile ap- plication includes weekly ads, view rewards programs participated and also see savings to date as well as club point history, coupons, shopping list
Safeway Loyalty program: Safeway Club (with Club Card) Earn: 1 point on $1 spent on grocery & pharmacy, 2 points on $1 spent with prepaid gift card Benefits: 10/20/50/100 cents per gallon off on 100/200/500/1000 points respectively in single fill up at Safeway station, Fund school of choice via eScrip program, Help families save for college via Unpromise program Mobile application/other benefits: Mobile application – ‘just for U’, benefits of the mobile applica- tion includes personalized deals based upon individual’s shopping history updated weekly , digital coupons with updations each week, Safeway weekly Club Card specials on items bought regularly by shopper, personalized shopping list on a mobile device or on the ‘Just for U’ website
Publix Loyalty Program: None. But have multiple clubs to drive segment based engagement Held off a loyalty card program but executed a pilot program to give customer digital discounts at checkout via their phone no. Have a number of customer clubs - Wine Guide, Publix Baby Club®, Publix Preschool Pals®, Publix FamilyStyle® Magazine, Publix Paws® and Publix Upromise Program
Target Loyalty Program: Red Card Program (with RedCard) Benefits: No membership fee, additional 5% off on total bill, free shipping on orders at Target.com with no minimum order size and 30 extra days for return, donate 1% of Red Card purchase to eligi- ble K-12 school, additional certificate of 5% off a day along with usual Red card benefit with 5 eligible prescriptions filled at Target pharmacy Mobile application/other benefits: Online/ mobile mode of membership management, mobile application benefits include shopping, adding to cart and checking out, using ‘TargetLists’ to keep track of the things one needs, getting today’s deals right on mobile, checking out sale items and adding them to list right from the ad, finding the nearest Target store, using phone’s camera to get prices and checking availability, adding to shopping lists, and text alerts sending the ‘REDcard’ credit account updates directly to mobile phone
Walmart Loyalty Program: None
Gr oc
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an di
se Table: Retail’s focus on activity frequency and the sameness of benefits focused on offering discounts
State of the Industry Research Series: Customer Loyalty in Retail31
Macy’s Loyalty Program: Star Rewards Earn: Cards are color coded to represent customer’s historical spending levels starting with red, gold, platinum, and elite classifying them into tiers, accumulating from spends at select Macy’s stores, accumulating from spends at Macys.com, and shopping any 5 days annually to avail rewards Benefits: Frequent buyer benefit for hosiery and intimate apparel and other benefits exclusively for premium tiers include merchandise reward certificates representing escalating % of purchases, free services e.g. gift wrap, delivery, basic alterations, exclusive offers, coupons & events, and free returns by mail on macys.com purchases My Macy’s Rewards Cards Benefits: Shop any 5 days annually to avail rewards such as 2%/3%/4% off with Macy’s American Express® Card at select Macy’s stores and Macys.com, 1% rewards with Macy’s American Express® Card outside Macy’s, and monthly coupons & savings passes for fashion & home Mobile application/other benefits: Credit statements to show rewards and benefits, tracking and monitoring online on Macys.com, and mobile application for android and iPhone. Bloomingdale’s (Part of Macy’s Inc.) loyalty program is Loyalist and its few benefits include $25 re- ward card for 5000 points, reward card can be redeemed on all merchandise.
Nordstrom Loyalty Program: Nordstrom Fashion Rewards® (with Nordstrom Debit/Credit Card) Earn: classified into four tiers basis annual spend till $1,999, annual spend $2000-$4,999, annual spend $5000-$9999, and annual spend above $10000. Spend $100 with new Nordstrom Card on the day of opening it, 2 points for $1 spent on Nordstrom debit/credit card, more points earned during bonus points events on each dollar spent, and lastly 1/2/3/4 personal triple points day basis membership tier and prior appointment. Benefits: Basis the membership tier, benefits include in full or partially as follows:
20$ bonus Nordstrom note, $20 Nordstrom note on 2000 points, upto $400 complimentary altera- tions, complimentary standard shipping for in-store purchase (upto $11 per transaction), concierge services, early access to anniversary sale, invitation to private holiday shopping party (10 points per $1 spent), access to purchase style experiences, and private shopping party at Nordstrom store. Mobile application/other benefits: Mobile application for iPhone and android with benefits includ- ing letting you shop via department or brand, sharing products on sites like Facebook and Twitter or adding it to shopping lists, viewing upcoming in-store events, and scanning any merchandise bar codes to get price/product information and product availability.
D ep
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CVS Loyalty Program: ExtraCare (with the ExtraCare® Card) Earn: ExtraBucks Rewards issued quarterly Benefits: Free to join, 2% cash back in ExtraBucks Rewards from everyday purchase, $1 ExtraBucks Rewards for every 2 prescriptions, personalized coupons available online, on receipt at ExtraCare coupon centre, savings with subscription to ExtraCare emails ($4 off on $20 coupon bonus offer upon registration of new emails) Mobile application/other benefits: Mobile application – myCVS available for iPhone, android, blackberry, and windows with benefits like flexibility of managing, refilling and viewing prescrip- tions, redeeming savings & rewards with Send to Card® and My Mobile Card, browsing and buying on mobile or seeing what deals await in individual’s favourite CVS/pharmacy store, uploading pho- tos from camera roll or account and also get free same day pick up and lastly finding a nearby clinic or checking the services.
Walgreens Loyalty Program: Balance Rewards (Also, Duane Reade’s FlexRewards program points has convert- ed itself into Balance Rewards) Earn: 500 points for prescription and immunization, 10 points per mile walked with ‘Walk with Wal- greens’ program, earning points in-store and online, and finally item specific points earned Benefits: $5/$10/$20/$35/$50 redemption instantly for 5k/10k/18k/30k/40k points, sale prices ex- clusively for members, pharmacy chat with RX experts free for members, and personal health infor- mation captured via health services not linked to account without member consent Mobile application/other benefits: Mobile application - Walgreens Mobile, enrolling using the mobile app, enrolling by scanning the program QR code found on signs in-store, endless rewards with points not lapsing till customer active once in 6 months and redeems atleast in 3 years, points instantly earned or redeemed, and referral to exclusive sale prices in weekly ad and offer locator when logged-in online
Rite Aid Loyalty Program: Wellness+ (with Wellness+ card) Earn: 3 member tier and +UP rewards to be automatically loaded to the Wellness+ card’ Benefits: 1 wellness reward of gym membership, magazine subscription or health screening with 500 points Mobile application/other benefits: Mobile application - ‘Rite Aid’, redeeming +UP rewards by scan- ning card at check out, online management of account
Ph ar
m ac
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State of the Industry Research Series: Customer Loyalty in Retail33
Exhibit 2: EKN Loyalty Program Assessment Framework
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The EKN Loyalty Program Assessment Framework is a tool to help retailers benchmark and differentiate their loyalty programs.
Phase 1: Frequency Discounter These loyalty programs are basically frequency programs focused on customer retention. The program provides undifferentiated financial benefits where the same offers are provided across the spectrum of customers irrespective of their value to the store. They are also undifferentiated in that similar retailers are able to provide similar benefits for customer participation. The primary offers provided are discounts that are based on products, categories or customer spending thresholds.
Phase 2: Expanded Earn & Burn These loyalty programs are focused on driving RFM metrics and increasing consumer spends. The retailer has a growing appreciation of the value of customer data, and the program utilizes basic customer segmen- tation. The benefits are still largely financial in nature but there are efforts to provide real time earning and burning of points at the POS, online and on the mobile.
Phase 3: Personalized Customer Engagement These loyalty programs are personalized programs that use customer data and preferences to customize the program at a micro-segment or individual level. The program offers a wide range of rewards from finan- cial incentives to special services and exclusive products. Retailers use advanced metrics like share of wallet and Net Promoter Score (NPS) to measure efficacy of the program. Customers have the ability to earn, burn and track their rewards across all channels. The program enables a two-way communication using tradi- tional and social media for certain functions such as marketing and customer service.
Phase 4: Bi-Directional Customer Engagement In addition to offering the benefits of all earlier phases, these loyalty programs are invisibly integrated across all business functions and processes of the retailer. The loyalty program is no longer only a mechanism to reward customers or to gather data about them. It is integral to the retailer’s engagement with the customer, including as a framework for co-creation of products, concepts and marketing messages with the customer.
State of the Industry Research Series: Customer Loyalty in Retail35
Frequency Discounter
Expanded Earn & Burn
Personalized Customer
Engagement
Bi-Directional Customer
Engagement Core Objectives Customer retention Increased spend Increased
engagement True customer
advocacy
Metrics • Customer spends
• Points budget
• Retention rates
• Member Vs Non member spend, comparision
• Coupon redemp- tion rates
In addition to the phase 1 metrics:
• Recency, frequen- cy, money (RFM) metrics
• Member vs. Non- member margin
• Cost of program, as % of total sales
• Cost of new mem- ber acquisition
In addition to the phase 2 metrics:
• Customer lifetime value (CLV)
• Cost of program, as % of incremen- tal member sales
• Share of wallet of customer
• Net promoter score (NPS)
In addition to phase 3 metrics:
• Customized loyalty index
Cross-Channel Presence
• Earn: POS
• Burn: POS
• Track: POS
• Asynchronus integration
• Earn: POS, Web, Mobile
• Burn: POS, Web, Mobile
• Track: POS, Web, Mobile
• Asynchronus integration
• Earn: POS, Web, Mobile, Social
• Burn: POS, Web, Mobile, Social
• Track: POS, Web, Moble
• Synchronus integration
• Earn: POS, Web, Mobile, Social
• Burn: POS, Web, Mobile, Social
• Track: POS, Web, Moble
• Synchronus integration
Rewards & promotional schemes
• One size fits all. Undifferentiated rewards across all customers
• Customer segement based
• Personalized at the individual or micro-segement level
• Gamification
• Personalized and context based
Edgell Knowledge Network 36
Frequency Discounter
Expanded Earn & Burn
Personalized Customer
Engagement
Bi-Directional Customer
Engagement Rewards: Financial/ Price
• Standardized discounts – points, % off coupons based
• Discounts based on trade spend and customer spending threasholds
• Present/future disbursal of rewards
In addition to the phase 1:
• Tier/Segment –Spend based discounts
• Product affinity based discounts
In addition to the phase 2:
• Social activity based discounts
• Share and gift points
• Payment network benefits
In addition to the phase 3:
• Context based coupons i.e based on in-store shopping list
Rewards: Service/ Events
• Access to exclusive events for premium tiers of membership
• Complimentary services extended by store i.e Free home delivery, extended hours, customization/ alteration/ concierge service
• Personalized greeting in-store. i.e greeting your pet by it’s name
• Support to social causes close to the customer
In addition to the phase 3:
• Guest help define new services and events important to them
Rewards: Product • Exclusive product line-up/range for premium tier members initially
• Early access of offerings during sale for members only
In addition to the phase 3:
• Inputs into the the assortment –pick a product
• Crowdsourcing of ideas
State of the Industry Research Series: Customer Loyalty in Retail37
Frequency Discounter
Expanded Earn & Burn
Personalized Customer
Engagement
Bi-Directional Customer
Engagement Feedback Loop • No formal
feedback collection by the retailer
• Contact Center
• Comment cards
• Sporadic feedback collection
• Contact Center
• Chat
• Comment cards
• Formal Voice of Customer (VoC) program in place
• Personalized communication from the retailer
• Contact Center
• Chat
• Comment cards
• Mobile-Real time
• Social media
In addition to the phase 3:
• Customer council
• Customer days
Segmentation • Basic segementation
• Personalized
• Micro Segmentation
• Segments are reviewed periodically
• Dynamic profile and context based segmentation
Data sources • POS transaction history
• Customer membership profile
In addition to the phase 1:
• Public data
In addition to the phase 2:
• Syndicate research
• Online logs
• VoC surveys
In addition to the phase 3:
• Unstructured data sources like activities and engagement levels on social networking sites, blogs
Analytics capabilities
• Basic • Basic • Complex analytics • Predictive analytics
• Big Data analytics
Edgell Knowledge Network 38
Frequency Discounter
Expanded Earn & Burn
Personalized Customer
Engagement
Bi-Directional Customer
Engagement Customer Advocacy • No provision to
measure customer advocacy levels
• Absence of store activities and drivers to generate customer advocacy
• Misconception that a loyalty program itself brings in customer advocacy
In addition of Phase 1
• Basic presence on social networking sites (Facebook, Twitter)
In addition to Phase 2
• Provision to measure customer advocacy levels via surveys, social media like networking sites and blogs
• Plans and strategies to sharpen the loyalty program activities with other customer engagement activities to bring in differentiation in store
• Periodic Voice of Customer (VoC) surveys
• Social networking straetgy to engage advocates
In addition of Phase 3
• Customer council
• Strategies and systematic use of customer cohorts
State of the Industry Research Series: Customer Loyalty in Retail39
Exhibit 3: Customer Segmentation
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EKN has developed a framework that discusses the underlying principle of the overall value derived from an individual customer.
EKN Loyalty Value Matrix
High emotional connection
Low emotional connection
High transactional
economic value
Low transactional
economic value
The framework depicts the existing relationship between two variables, both of which are of significant im- portance to the retailer.
Economic Value: Retailers can classify each of their customers based on their transaction value into low value, medium value, or high value customers. The dollar amount of what constitutes a low, medium or high value customer will differ based on the format and retailer.
Customer Advocacy: Basis their emotional connect with the retailer, customers can be categorized as fol- lows:
i. Advocates: Customers who are happy with the overall customer experience and are vocal advocates of the retailer. These are usually a very small percentage of the entire customer base.
ii. Satisfied & Loyal: Customers who are happy with the overall customer experience but aren’t as vocal in sharing their opinion.
Overall value to retailer
Transactional economic value
Value brought through customer
advocacy+ =
State of the Industry Research Series: Customer Loyalty in Retail41
iii. Apathetic Deal Hunter: Customers who are satisfied with the overall customer experience but are indifferent towards any specific brand or retailer. They on the look out for the best deal and most likely to price defect. These customers usually make up the majority of a retailer’s customer base.
iv. Unhappy Customers: Customers who are dissatisfied with the overall customer experience and will switch their business to another competing retailer.
Overall value to the retailer
Low transactional economic value
Medium transactional economic value
High transactional economic value
Advocate 0% 2% 1% Satisfied & Loyal 1% 1% 3% Apathetic Deal Hunter 20% 45% 10% Unhappy 5% 10% 2%
Highly positive Positive Neutral Negative
(Figures show above are for illustrative purpose only)
The chart (with data for illustrative purpose only) above maps the relationship level of the customer with the retailer across the transactional economic value and can be interpreted as below.
• 75% of all customers are Apathetic Deal Hunters • 3% of all customers are Advocates • 1% of all customers are high value Advocates • 5% of all customers are low value Unhappy Customers
Retailers need to do a do a periodic segmentation of their customer base to understand where their cus- tomer currently lie and how they are moving across bands with time. A root cause analysis of the factors effecting band movement will help them devise strategies to move the customer base to the most valuable top right quadrants of the EKN Loyalty Value Matrix. For example the retailer in the above example needs to understand why its high value customers are unhappy and what it can do to make them happy. By not doing anything it risks losing 12.5% of its high value customers.
(The total number of high value customers is 16% and 2% of the customer base is high value and unhappy so 12.5% (2/16) of the total high value customer base in unhappy).
Edgell Knowledge Network 42
Exhibit 4: Loyalty Solution Vendor Landscape
State of the Industry Research Series: Customer Loyalty in Retail43
Loyalty Program Vendor
Offerings
Clients
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Aimia
Pampers (P&G), Oracle, Etihad Airways, Microsoft, Commonwealth Bank, Delta Airlines, General Motors, Samsung, Merck & Co., Qtel, Virgin Australia, Hallmark, Ally Bank, Ulster Bank, Royal Bank of Scotland, Natwest, deVere Group, Scandinavian Airlines
Brierley + Partners
American Eagle Outfitters, Godiva Chocolatier, JCP Rewards, Sally Beauty, Bloomingdales, Golfnow, Sony, Jiffylube, The Container Store, Hard Rock Cafe, Men’s Wearhouse, Sony BMG Music Entertainment, Merill Lynch, StubHub, Heathrow Express, The TJX Companies, Foot- locker.com, Hertz Corp., NFL.com, Tractor Supply Co., GameStop, Hilton HHonors, Pizza Hut, Money- Gram
Dunhumby Coca Cola, General Mills, Kimberly Clark, Kroger, Macys.com, P&G, Panera Bread, PepsiCo
Epicor Pike Nurseries, PostNet, Cole Haan, Famous Footwear, Foot Locker
Epsilon
Best Buy, Charter Communica- tions, General Motors, Kiplinger, La Quinta, Staples, Kraft Foods, Wal- greens, PepsiCo, Hilton
IBM
Infosys Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank, Cummins, Det Norske Veritas
JDA
BCBG Max Azria, The Saigon Union of Trading Co-operatives, Ollie’s Bargain Outlet, Mobile Fabrics, Chanel, Shopper’s Stop
Edgell Knowledge Network 44
Loyalty Program Vendor
Offerings
Clients
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Se rv
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Kobie Marketing
Verizon, AMC Theatres, Bank of America, Fairpoint Communica- tions, BJ’s, Hawaiian Airlines, Lu- cas Film Ltd, RBC Bank, Sweat Eq- uity Network, Melitta, T.G.I.Friday’s, Comcast, KForce, MXT Card Servic- es, PGT, Advanta, Royal Carribean International, Sea World, Grohe, Avery, Busch Gardens, Frontier, LodgeNet Entertainment
Maritz Giftango Corporation
NCR
Ahold USA, Speedway, Tom & Ed- die’s, RARE Hospitality Internation- al, The Stop & Shop Supermarket Company, Gas City, Landry’s Res- taurants
Oracle Deutsche Bank, Caterpillar, Honey- well International, Citrix Systems, Alsaka Airlines
Retalix Loyalty Carrefour, Delhaize, Wesco, Coles, Golf & Co., Polgat, Sprint
SAP Lego Group, Porsche, Oklahoma Publishing Company, Dow Corn- ing, Aquent
SAS
Carlson Rezidor Hotel Group, Har- rah’s Entertainment, Foxwoods, Endesa, Aeroplan, Indigo Books & Music, SGM Distribution
TCS Clients not disclosed due to confi- dentiality
Tibco Loyalty Lab
Virgin America, US Cellular, Phar- maca, Thrivent Financial Bank, Nine West, Sports Authority, The North Face, 1-800-flowers.com
Premium Sponsor
About TCS Tata Consultancy Services is an IT services, consulting and business solutions organization that delivers real results to global business, ensuring a level of certainty no other firm can match. TCS offers a consulting-led, integrated portfolio of IT and IT-enabled infrastructure, engineering and assurance services. This is delivered through its unique Global Network Delivery ModelTM, recognized as the benchmark of excellence in software development. A part of the Tata Group, India’s largest industrial conglomerate, TCS has a global footprint and is listed on the National Stock Exchange and Bombay Stock Exchange in India.
TCS’ Retail Industry Solutions Unit TCS is a strategic partner to eight of the top 10 US and five of the top 10 UK Retailers, and helps retailers build deeper and stronger customer relationships, reduce cost and increase efficiency through its integrated IT, BPO and Infra- structure services and Retail Industry Solutions.
To learn more, visit www.tcs.com/Retail or email us at [email protected]
Supporting Sponsors
About SAP Headquartered in Walldorf, Germany, SAP is the market leader in enterprise applications software in terms of soft- wareand software-related services revenue. Founded in 1972, SAP has a rich history of innovation and growth asan in- dustry leader. SAP applications and services enable more than 197,000 customers worldwide in more than 120coun- tries to operate profitably, adapt continuously, and grow sustainably. With annual revenue (IFRS) of €14.2 billion,SAP has more than 55,500 employees located in more than 130 countries worldwide. SAP is listed on severalexchanges, including the Frankfurt stock exchange and NYSE, under the symbol “SAP.”
About NCR NCR Corporation is a global technology company and leader in self- and assisted-service solutions, NCR’s software, hardware, consulting and support services help organizations in retail, financial, travel and hospitality in more than 100 countries.
NCR leads the way in a new world of retail interactions, offering converged retailing — c-tailing™— which enables a personalized experience for each consumer, regardless of where they interact. Our enterprise-level solutions allow retailers to learn about their consumers with every interaction, facilitate unlimited loyalty programs and create per- sonalized, consistent offers at any available touchpoint – whether in-store, online or mobile.
For more information email [email protected] or visit www.ncr.com.
About Edgell Knowledge Network Our research agenda is developed using inputs from the end user community and the end user community exten- sively reviews the research before it is published. This ensures that we inject a healthy dose of pragmatism into the research and recommendations. This includes input of what research topics to pursue, incorporating heavy practi- tioner input – via interviews etc., and ensuring that the bend of research takeaways are oriented towards a real-world, practical application of insights with community sign-off.
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EKN does not make any warranties, express or implied, including, without limitation, those of merchantability and fit- ness for a particular purpose. The information and opinions in research reports constitute judgments as at the date indicated and are subject to change without notice. The information provided is not intended as financial or invest- ment advice and should not be relied upon as such. The information is not a substitute for independent professional advice before making any investment decisions.