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Loyalty schemes must keep pace with mobile

For more than a decade, retail­ers have looked to strength­en rela­tion­ships with their cus­tomers through loy­al­ty pro­grammes. But these schemes tend to reward long-term cus­tomers and, because they are based on col­lect­ing points, work best for planned pur­chas­es, such as a flight.

Despite their suc­cess, con­ven­tion­al loy­al­ty schemes find them­selves increas­ing­ly at odds with today’s smart­phone-cen­tric cus­tomers and a world of “in the moment” pur­chas­es. Accord­ing to the IMRG Capgem­i­ni e‑Retail Sales Index, UK m‑commerce sales – pur­chas­es on tablets and smart­phones – grew by 57 per cent between June 2014 and June 2015.

This is forc­ing retail­ers to move to mobile-based loy­al­ty schemes, both to cap­ture those new cus­tomers and to pre­serve the invest­ments in their cost­ly loy­al­ty data­bas­es.

Mov­ing loy­al­ty schemes to smart­phones is the obvi­ous next step, as it means cus­tomers have access to the brand or retailer’s lat­est deals and their scheme mem­ber­ship wher­ev­er they are

Keeping up with competitors

Fail­ure to keep up with the trend for mobile shop­ping, as well as con­sumers’ use of social media and mobile sites to plan and research pur­chas­es, risks dri­ving cus­tomers to the com­pe­ti­tion.

Fail­ing to inte­grate exist­ing loy­al­ty schemes with mobile apps means fore­go­ing the valu­able stream of data, from fash­ion pref­er­ences to trav­el pat­terns, cap­tured by cus­tomers’ smart­phones.

Percentage of UK retailers offering mobile services

And con­sumers are not just using mobile devices when they are out and about. Research by the MEF, an indus­try group, found 14 per cent of smart­phone users shopped on their device while watch­ing TV.

Mov­ing loy­al­ty schemes to smart­phones and wrist­bands is the obvi­ous next step, as it means cus­tomers have access to the brand or retailer’s lat­est deals and their scheme mem­ber­ship wher­ev­er they are.

Targeting consumers in real time

“A mobile app allows you to per­son­alise [the expe­ri­ence] and to tar­get the con­sumer in real time, rather than send­ing out paper coupons a few weeks lat­er,” says Ben Perkins, head of con­sumer busi­ness research at con­sult­ing firm Deloitte.

Nor is it only con­sumer retail that is mov­ing to smart­phones as busi­ness-to-busi­ness (B2B) trans­ac­tions, espe­cial­ly those for small and medi­um-sized enter­pris­es, are fol­low­ing suit.

Accord­ing to Alan Kavanagh, a plas­ter­er work­ing in south-west Lon­don and Sur­rey, hav­ing his sup­pli­ers’ loy­al­ty and trade dis­count cards on his smart­phone lets him check the best deals on a job, with­out hav­ing to hunt around for phys­i­cal loy­al­ty cards or print off vouch­ers and coupons.

Retail­ers, though, are still try­ing to dis­cov­er the best way to put loy­al­ty pro­grammes into cus­tomers’ hands. Mobile-based loy­al­ty schemes range from the very sim­ple to the com­plex, ful­ly fea­tured app.

Tesco’s ear­ly Club­card app, for devices such as the Black­Ber­ry, sim­ply copied the company’s exist­ing loy­al­ty card bar­code on to the phone’s screen; now the app lets mem­bers track their points too.

Star­bucks Rewards app lets cus­tomers col­lect points with pur­chas­es, sends pro­mo­tions and, crit­i­cal­ly, also acts as a pay­ment ser­vice in store.

Flying key info to customers

Dublin Air­port, which served 21.7 mil­lion trav­ellers in 2014, has devel­oped an app that inte­grates a host of the airport’s back-end sys­tems, includ­ing gate and depar­ture, and even weath­er, infor­ma­tion. The app gives pas­sen­gers free access to the airport’s wi-fi, with­out the need to log in, and per­son­alised maps show­ing trav­ellers the best way to the gate.

For the air­port, though, mov­ing to a mobile app was a log­i­cal next step, espe­cial­ly for fre­quent fliers. “Car park­ing, fast track secu­ri­ty pass­es and lounge access are avail­able on the Dublin Air­port web­site and Dublin Air­port apps, and there has been a notice­able shift to m‑commerce,” says John Sis­son, com­mer­cial prod­uct devel­op­ment man­ag­er at air­port oper­a­tor DAA. “Cus­tomers can set up an account with their details on their first vis­it. They don’t have to re-enter their details and are then enti­tled to offers and pro­mo­tions.”

Even though an airport’s cus­tomers are, to a degree, “cap­tive”, Dublin’s expe­ri­ence mir­rors those of both con­sumer and B2B retail­ers. The app itself is most­ly about con­ve­nience, but it pro­vides com­mer­cial rev­enue through added-val­ue ser­vices, such as lounge access, and a way for the air­port to stay in touch with its cus­tomers.

Making life easier

“Often mobile apps pro­vide a func­tion­al expe­ri­ence which has lit­tle to do with rewards, but makes some­thing eas­i­er, such as flight check-in,” says Alex Smith-Bing­ham, UK head of dig­i­tal, con­sumer prod­ucts and retail, at Capgem­i­ni, a tech­nol­o­gy con­sult­ing firm. “But you can use it to encour­age con­sumers to do more with you.”

Although the poten­tial to mar­ry brand apps and loy­al­ty pro­grammes is huge, there are both prac­ti­cal and tech­ni­cal hur­dles to over­come.

“I’d say that for now the impact of mobile apps on loy­al­ty schemes is rel­a­tive­ly lim­it­ed,” says Thomas Hus­son, a vice pres­i­dent at research firm For­rester. “We’re only scratch­ing the sur­face of what’s going to come next. Brand­ed app users are more like­ly to be loy­al cus­tomers, but few con­sumers use brand­ed apps on a reg­u­lar basis.”

Understanding mobile users

One chal­lenge is under­stand­ing the need to tar­get offers and fea­tures in an appro­pri­ate way. A trav­eller might be inter­est­ed in a pro­mo­tion­al link for a hotel when search­ing for a flight, but that same ad would be annoy­ing if they are using the app to check in.

“Mobile is excit­ing because of its impulse nature and you have much more con­trol than you have with a mail­er,” says Capgemini’s Mr Bing­ham-Smith. “But then, every­one has a let­ter­box.”

And, despite the sta­tis­tics show­ing a rapid growth in mobile com­merce, by no means every­one has a smart­phone or wants to use a retail­er or brand’s app.

Trav­el apps are pop­u­lar because ser­vices such as check-in and elec­tron­ic board­ing pass­es offer an imme­di­ate ben­e­fit to the pas­sen­ger. To encour­age app usage, retail­ers need to think beyond sim­ple pro­mo­tions, and look at inte­grat­ing tech­nolo­gies, includ­ing mobile pay­ments and loca­tion aware­ness, so the app knows if you are at home, at work or trav­el­ling.

“The mas­sive increase in mobile pay­ments offers a real point of dif­fer­en­ti­a­tion for mobile loy­al­ty,” says Deloitte’s Mr Perkins. “You can make a pro­mo­tion instant and con­text rel­e­vant, and not just based on pre­vi­ous pur­chas­ing behav­iour.”