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Recent Dialogue

More on the Decline and Fall of Frequent Flyer Mile Values

Tuesday, 19 August 2008
Our thoughts on the devluation of frequent flyer miles is echoed in an article from The New York Times.

By Invitation Only

Tuesday, 12 August 2008
Unpublished loyalty programs and exclusive customer benefits are examples of effective customer marketing strategies that allow brands to more meaningfully connect with customers.

Frontier Does it Right

Tuesday, 12 August 2008
Frontier Airlines provides a good and timely example of an airline communicating with its customers.

More Frequent Flyer Program News

Thursday, 7 August 2008
American Airlines announced some changes to AAdvantage following a review similar to Delta's. Frequent flyer programs are changing, some more and better than others.

The Opportunity for Integrating PR and Customer Communications

Monday, 4 August 2008
Delta's recent SkyMiles changes, announced to the press and not to SkyMiles members, illustrates how far companies still need to go in thinking about customers first.

Do the Math: The Continuing Decline In The Value Of Frequent Flyer Miles

Saturday, 2 August 2008
The changes being made to frequent flyer programs such as Delta SkyMiles are devaluing frequent flyer miles.

Saying Thank You to Customers

Monday, 23 June 2008
Saying thank you to customers is one thing. Getting customers to thank you is something entirely different, and a much more noble endeavor in terms of loyalty marketing.

"Loyalty Is Expensive"

Sunday, 27 April 2008
Loyalty is not expensive if you consider that you can directly measure its impact on revenue and profitability.

"At Least Kiss Me When You Do That!"

Wednesday, 20 February 2008
As readers of this blogue know, last year I qualified for Platinum Medallion (elite) status in Delta Air Lines SkyMiles for the first time.  Being a bit of a loyalty "geek" (as you might expect), I knew the exact flight on which&n

The Emperor Now Has Clothes

Sunday, 17 February 2008
Introducing Comp Customers, a better metric for tracking retailer performance.

Customer Loyalty Resolutions for 2008

Thursday, 10 January 2008
Customer Loyalty Marketing Resultions for 2008 from rDialogue, a loyalty and relationship marketing boutique.

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Breakage is Bad

posted Thursday, 6 September 2007
 

Points-based reward programs are still seen by many as the paradigm for a loyalty "program". However, with more and more points-based loyalty programs in the marketplace, it's clear that many are not profitable and few are entirely effective. 

 

While well designed and well executed points-based programs exist, many are built to be "successful" if the program can get a lot of participants who are earning points but not redeeming many rewards.  This is called breakage

 

Where breakage has been a conscious part of the design, companies, and their loyalty providers believe that they are "saving" expense and increasing the profitability of their program by issuing a lot of points (or miles) that do not get redeemed,

 

Traditionally, loyalty and incentive providers literally sold points to clients for use in their programs.  The clients pay when points are issued, and then the issuing company holds the liability for all redemption that occurs using those points.

 

Breakage creates a false economy.  If a program provider sells points on an issuance basis, they make less money when those points are redeemed. The result is that they are less likely to promote the program and increase its success, because it increases the program provider's promotional budget and reduces their profit on the program. (There are instances in the incentive industry where companies have even been known to not answer their phones in order to avoid redemption activity).

 

More importantly, if program participants (aka customers) are not redeeming their earned points, they are clearly not seeing or benefiting from the value in the program proposition.  Thus, there is no reward for their "loyalty" and even worse, these customers may feel disenfranchised by the program sponsor because of that lack of value.

 

Instead of a breakage model, it is smarter to design a program that uses a currency, like points or miles, to drive new behavior from customers (assuming a currency/rewards-based program is the right strategy).  Increasing revenue from those customers grows the business organically.  It increases their perceived value from the brand when they redeem rewards.  When this happens everybody wins - the customer, the company, and its stakeholders.

 

As more and more companies develop and implement programs, let's hope they increasingly recognize the true and proper balance where both the customer and the company win.

 

 

 

 

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1. Jonathan Treiber left...
Wednesday, 26 September 2007 9:53 pm :: http://www.oncardblog.com

This is a great post and very relevant. I'm a huge fan of loyalty programs that allow members to earn cash-back only for in-store merchandise. This keeps people coming back again and again because they see value in the cold hard cash and is way better and more cost effective for the retailer (Staples is my favorite) rather than give consumers indiscriminate 20% off coupons.