In response to our post on Loyalty Cards, Steve Gray has added the following insights:
- There is inherent value in the loyalty programme itself - millions of consumers like collecting points (Clubcard, Boots, Nectar etc) and go out of their way to do so. The programmes more than wash their face for the retailers who deploy them
- They also create a valuable asset for their owners : Nectar was sold for around £450m, if ever Tesco sold Clubcard (as opposed to dunnhumby) it would be worth something similar or more
- There is, as you say, additional value from the data - it can be used to deliver a more personalised shopping experience (via range, promotions and personalised offers)
- Currently, supplier-partners aren't really able to help retailers to "build a comprehensive picture" as they tend not to have any useful data on individuals (supplier data tends to be anonymised research from small sample groups). This might change as brands start to invest more in direct to shopper programmes, more retailers enable digital coupon redemption and sales tracking other than via their closed loop programmes
1 comment:
Many thanks for your insightful comments, Steve.
Some add-ons:
Additional value of data: perhaps an option might be to 'sub-contract' analysis and optimisation of data to trusted supplier-partners (a la Category management?).
Joint-build of comprehensive picture: Could more advanced suppliers consider fair-sharing direct-to-shopper insights with trusted retailer-partners?
The key is more sharing to mutual - and even consumer- benefit!
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