What's the easiest way to ensure your best customers come back to you over and over again?
Make them part of a loyalty programme.
The concept is simple really: being a member earns them loyalty points and the more loyalty points they earn, the more rewards they unlock.
The rewards could be in the form of giving them special benefits (no-queue payment/priority delivery, free parking), giving them first dibs, and most exciting of all, offering a range of freebies and special discounts.
So, why is it that only 25-30 per cent of shoppers in India actually opt for a loyalty programme and even among those that do only about 15 per cent actively use them (source: industry estimates)?
"The whole process is complicated -- right from filling up the forms to redeeming your points against rewards," says a retail consultant based in Delhi.
"Above all, as a shopper, do you really want to carry 12 separate cards every time you go shopping?
"We are also using primitive technology to collate data and not really looking at consumer convenience as a priority area," adds the consultant.
This is not to say that loyalty programmes are unadvisable or useless.
Not at all, as many of the experts that The Strategist spoke to said.
Those in the business will tell you that a right kind of loyalty programme can help on several fronts -- in building customer loyalty, increasing brand value, allowing companies to understand the purchasing behaviour of consumers and thereby contributing to the financial health of the brand in a significant manner.
Caroline Papadatos, senior vice-president, LoyaltyOne, says, "Loyalty programmes are an effective device for identifying the best customers and moving them through the stages of customer engagement by giving them rewards, recognition and relevant communications."
That's the crux really -- relevance.
If the idea behind a loyalty programme is to encourage the continued patronage of customers, it has to be designed with the consumer at the centre.
So, the starting point has to be simplicity and transparency.
The first task of the brand is to set down the rewards and the way to earn them clearly, no strings attached, and the next step is to make the process of getting those rewards easy.
Just think of the way your local sabjiwala operates -- how he throws in some free dhania/mirchi or an extra nimbu for his best customers.
Not everyone thinks loyalty programmes work though.
Take Walmart, for instance, which is all set to open retail outlets in India over the next year-and-a-half.
Unlike other US supermarket chains like Kroger, Safeway, and SuperVal, Walmart does not run any loyalty programmes for its consumers.
According to a senior employee who did not want to be identified, Walmart believes "real loyalty lies in the offerings of low prices".
According to this employee, "It's going to be a similar route in India. We won't look at loyalty programme just yet for the Indian market. Instead, we will look at offering products at a competitive price."
Who's got it right
The modern-day loyalty programme takes off from the frequent-flier mile programme introduced by American Airlines in 1981 to reward repeat customers and build brand loyalty.
Since then sectors that have used customer loyalty programmes to their advantage have been hospitality, credit cards, airline and retail, according to Siddharth S Singh, director, fellow programme in management and associate professor of marketing, Indian School of Business (ISB), Hyderabad, who has also published a detailed research note, Customer Loyalty Programmes: Are They Profitable? (Management Science, Volume 54, No 6).
Sinha sees a great opportunity for loyalty programmes in the retail sector in India as more and more international players enter the market.
Ashok MS, chief operating officer, Accentiv, India, a leading operator in providing rewards and loyalty solutions (it has clients like Van Heusen, Louis Philippe, Tommy Hilfiger, Indian Oil, to name some), says that loyalty programmes do well in sectors that by their very nature record high transactions.
So, he adds, hospitality, credit cards, retail and airlines are potential sectors where such programmes do well. "In India, even the petroleum sector has tremendous potential in devising attractive loyalty programmes," says Ashok.
ISB's Singh says, "Eventually, I see loyalty programmes providing a complete view of a customer.
"This includes their interaction with the company and other behaviour such as on the social media. New metrics will come up that allow a firm to evaluate a customer better.
"The concept of customer value itself would become multidimensional and companies would learn to identify and exploit their relationship with customers along these different dimensions for various benefits." (Read interview with Siddharth S Singh, director, fellow programme in management and associate professor of marketing, ISB, on page 4)
So, what is the recipe for a good loyalty programme?
How does it evolve?
We will use three example -- two of India's biggest retailers and a private airline -- to demonstrate how it can be put to work effectively.
Take Future Group, for instance, which has a host of brands under its umbrella, including Pantaloons, Big Bazaar, Food Bazaar, Central, HomeTown, eZone, Brand Factory and Future Bazaar. Pawan Sarda, chief marketing officer, Future Group, says India has always had the tradition of 'loyalty programmes' especially when traditional family jewellers and neighbourhood 'dukaandaars' (shop owners), so to speak, created a loyal base of generations of customers.
So, in his view, effective loyalty programmes should come naturally to us.
In Sarda's view, successful loyalty programmes are those that constantly evolve based on needs of the customer and the responses of the competition; there's no room for complacency given that it's a tool that effectively decodes customer purchasing behaviour.
Future Group has taken great pains to devise a consumer friendly programme when it found that while consumers knew its different brands they did not know all these belonged to the same group.
Last year, Future Group and Payback, one of India's largest and Europe's most successful multi-partner loyalty programmes, entered a strategic tie-up to bring out a dedicated, single, loyalty card, that could be used for the company's various brands.
The 'one-card-several-benefits' concept now allowed the company to have 'crisper' consumer insight and a better personality engagement.
In just 10 months since the PayBack programme began, the company has got 8 million customers.
Every week since then, the group has added more than a lakh consumers to its loyalty programmes.
According to September 2012 data of the company, almost 45 per cent of the group level billing has come through customers engaged in the loyalty programme.
For Pantaloons, specifically, 70 per cent of the billing comes from loyalty programme customers.
How does Pantaloons