loyalty card
Wikipedia
loyalty card
In marketing generally and in retailing more specificly, a loyalty card, rewards card, points card, or club card is a plastic card, visually similar to a credit card or debit card, that identifies the card holder as a member in a commercial incentives programme. In the United Kingdom it is typically called a loyalty card, in Canada a rewards card or a points card, and in the US either a discount card, a club card or a rewards card. Cards typically have a barcode or magstripe that can be easily scanned, and some are even chip cards. Small keyring cards are often used as well.
A retail establishment or a retail group may issue a loyalty card to a consumer who can then use it as a form of identification when dealing with that retailer. By presenting the card, the purchaser is typically entitled to either a discount on the current purchase, or an allotment of points that can be used for future purchases. Hence, the card is the visible means of implementing a type of what economists call a two-part tariff.
Air Miles Card.
The card issuer requests or requires customers seeking the issuance of a loyalty card to provide a usually minimal amount of identifying or demographic data, such as name and address. Application forms usually entail agreements by the store concerning customer privacy, typically non-disclosure (by the store) of non-aggregate data about customers. The store - one might expect - uses aggregate data internally (and sometimes externally) as part of its marketing research.
Critics see the lower prices as bribes to manipulate customer loyalty and purchasing decisions, or as a case of infrequent-spenders subsidising frequent-spenders. Others worry about the commercial use of the personal data collected as part of the programmes. It is also possible that consumer purchases are tracked and analyzed toward more efficient marketing and advertising.
Loyalty cards in the UK
Many UK retailers have adopted a loyalty card system. The trend towards adoption, however, received a setback in the UK in 2001 when the chain supermarket Safeway (UK) abandoned its ABC loyalty card, stating that it preferred the ability to offer lower prices as a customer incentive rather than a points-based cash rebate. Sainsburys, a rival supermarket, have abandoned their Reward points system in favour of a new card, the Nectar loyalty card, which they issue in conjunction with a number of partners including the petrol suppliers BP, the department store chain Debenhams, and Barclaycard.
Boots, the chain of high street chemists, has a loyalty card which stores the points on a microchip. This has considerable advantages to the retailer from the point of view of data processing, since calculation and allocation of points becomes decentralised to the point of sale (the points-accounting processes can impose extreme demands on centralised computing resources).
Points cards in Canada
HBC Rewards Card.
A similar system in Canada has the retailer providing a points card to the consumer. Each purchase at the establishment provides a point total to their account, which can later be redeemed for special rewards or store merchandise. Prominent examples include HBC Rewards from the Hudson's Bay Company, and Optimum from Shoppers Drug Mart, and Air Miles from the Loyalty Group which is used by many companies including the Hudson's Bay Company. The Loblaws grocery chains have PC Points available to those who use the Loblaws financial services (President's Choice Financial) for in-store purchases. See also Canadian Tire Money. |