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Tuesday 5 January 2016

Essay: Chapter Four - Feedback

I had someone else read through this chapter and give feedback, this allowed me to push myself and get large amount of feedback about my quality of writing which is a big insecurity. They made comments in red and I then altered and added more writing based on the comments. The highlighted section is new text added to the chapter since the first draft. This is how I worked throughout the writing process. This methodology keeps my writing, sourcing and progress clear.This was a great help and allowed be to get back on track.

Words: 1878

Customer Loyalty

History of customer loyalty, how did loyalty schemes come about? Why id it needed?
Brand loyalty is the result of consistent positive experience, satisfaction and perceived value of an experience. We have established supermarkets as all encompassing brands, with detailed structures, methods and intents and as a result have to maintain customer loyalty, brand loyalty, in order to maximise revenue. Today, supermarkets amass the highest level of consumer loyalty followed by mobile networks and banks. There are numerous techniques employed by these brands to develop a strong loyalty. JoAnna Brandi identifies that 'Quality standards needs to be specific so customers know what to expect. Make your core service consistent, and then surround that service with things that will surprise customers.' Quality standards take a huge role when it comes to a retailer’s ability to deliver successful customer service and by extension a stronger overall brand.
To be able to not only aid but track a customers loyalty behaviour, supermarkets began to introduce loyalty schemes and programmes, the leader of which is the loyalty card.'Customer loyalty programmes build up real relationships based on a value-orientated benefit package' (Butscher 2002 p.3). One main way for supermarkets to monitor their consumers loyalty is through the use of points schemes and loyalty cards, aptly named. Finance reporter Kevin Peachey clarifies that 'Loyalty points, or trading stamps, have been around for decades. The modern-day loyalty card was born in 1995 with the hugely successful Tesco Clubcard.'
Examples of techniques, Clubcards, vouchers, etc, are they all doing the same thing? Do some work better than others?
'Before Clubcard, Tesco was stuck as the UK's second-ranking supermarket. Today, not only is it the UK's largest grocer, it is one of the world’s most successful internet supermarket...and arguably one of the worlds most successful exponents of what the jargon terms Customer Relationship Management.' (Humby et al. 2008 p.3) 
What was it about the Clubcard that made them top dogs?
Loyalty cards have clearly been a massive success for brands to entice customers to spend exclusively in their stores.
In 2002, following the rapid success of Clubcard, Stephen A. Butscher customer loyalty strategist, predicted the increase of such loyalty schemes.
'Customer loyalty have become a more and more important component of many companies' marketing activities. The importance will certainly increase over the next few years creating an even larger wave of new programmes than we have seen recently' (p.3)
Why are they so popular?
The concept of the loyalty card works via simple trade. By using one, the consumers consents to retailer access to useful data i.e. age, time of shop, what goods purchase, frequency of purchase etc. This information not only helps them to better analyse their demographic but also is invaluable when it comes to maximising revenue, promotion and distribution (Peachy 2015). As technology has developed the cards have become rich sources of data for the companies that offer them. Stores reap financial and strategic benefits from using the cards to find out what customers are buying (Arnett 2013). By having a loyalty card, supermarkets build up demographic profiles and collect data about their consumers’ loyalty habits, including what you buy, how much you buy and how much you spend. Online they can change what you see when you log in to buy, to better find the products their data suggest you will buy and in-store will use their data to make decisions about what to sell.
Supermarkets can also use this to see what you are not buying, (As seen on Watchdog) buying dog treats from them on your loyalty card but found not buying dog food will have supermarkets send you vouchers to encourage you to buy dog food also at that supermarket.
However, there are many arguments against the use of loyalty cards with Butscher (2002) also citing:
'It is possible, but not very probable, that a customer loyalty programme...will lead to a lifelong relationship with its customers. First, most customers cannot not be allotted to a single clearly defined target group. Today's 'nomad' customers either belong to several target groups simultaneously or continually move from one group to the other. (p.48) 
Is customer loyalty a real a thing, we only shop at Sainsburys cause it’s the closest?With the growing diversity for shoppers loyalty is an aspect that is harder and harder to for brands to grasp, as a result of outside factors such as the recession, employment, wages and inflation of goods. Consumers no longer shop at one place but choose different stores to suit their many different needs. (which is what supermarkets were made for so you would only have to go to one place to do all your shopping, are you saying that people are moving away from this?)Customers are becoming harder and harder to box into only one demographic, therefore making it more difficult for brands to cater to them. Butscher also specifies how lack of loyalty stems from reward incentives:
'Most customer loyalty programmes offer primary financially (hard) benefits. In essence, they provide price discounts - and discounts are the last thing that creates loyalty among customers. Customers who buy your product or service merely because of it's price will not continue to do so if they fine a better price elsewhere. The only way to create long term customer loyalty is to establish a true relationship with your customers which is based not on financial incentives, but on emotion, trust and partnerships.' (Butscher, 2001, p.3) Explain in more detail how they do this, it’s hard to assume there is financial incentives involved
 As a continuing thread throughout this essay, it has been found that time and time again, price is ultimately the deciding factor for today’s consumers, hence why loyalty schemes as a tool don't have the same impact as they once did. Maybe recap how it’s been a tool? Their demise has been predicted for a long time, even from as early as 1999. A news story from the BBC website in 1999 headlined ‘Loyalty cards losing appeal’. It reported that researchers had found "a third of people preferred low prices to points or other incentives".
 Conversely, some academics argue that the end loyalty cards would mean the end of a rich collection of data that can be used to benefit society. These cards are able to provide detailed information on spending habits, that have the ability to highlight the difference between what people say they do and their actual behaviour (Peachy 2015). Director of the Consumer Data Research Centre Professor Mark Birkin (2015), from the University of Leeds, held this argument in the for the benefit of health and nutrition. He explained how the consumption patterns revealed by loyalty cards are incredibly helpful showing how truthful consumers are about their eating habits, healthy and unhealthy Looking at the bigger picture, the same way cities consider building roads based upon travel patterns, cities may think about environment protection based on the amount of recyclable packaging being bought. The data these schemes collect, chances are, will help to inform such decisions giving loyalty cards the potential to impact larger social issues (Peachey 2015).
 
 
Lifestyle brands
A huge factor within customer loyalty is the notion of lifestyle (or perceived lifestyle) and is one of the master concepts within marketing.
'Lifestyle would describe - or better, prescribe - a set of practices that give meaning and identity. The building blocks of lifestyles [are] individual brands that, consumed en masse, [will] form a stylish assemblage.' (Kornberger, 2009 p.192) 
 A ‘lifestyle’ defines people by what they consume. Products possess potentialities and are symbolic resources that people use to build their lifestyle. For all their pervasiveness, supermarkets have provenance and are huge perpetuators of this. Whereas class used to be about position, it is now about lifestyle. More detail, do you mean from working class to middle class, and explain what you mean by lifestyle, do you mean specifically about food or every part of someone lifestyle, you could bring social media into this, with people photography everything including food?In terms of the origins of such hierarchies all these brands come from somewhere, they have a heartland. Southern brands traditionally have more middle class acceptance, these are Waitrose (London), Sainsbury’s (London) and Tesco (home counties – counties surrounding London). However, traditional northern brands are those found to have more working class appeal: ASDA (Leeds) and Morrisons (Bradford). While today, these brands can be found virtually anywhere; the geography and class systems have had a huge hand in the makeup of their customer bases today.
'In the past, social structure and status was established through one's position in the production of things; you are what you produce. Lifestyles on the other hand, are based on peoples consumption patterns.' (Kornberger, 2009, p.192)
The professor for human geography from Sheffield University, Peter Jackson, conducted a three-year study into supermarket loyalty and social class, said: 
"What's clear from our research is that people just don't see those ranges that 'aren't for them'. In Sainsbury's, for example, some people will walk past the 'Taste the Difference' ranges to the budget ranges. They won't even see the ones that aren't targeted at them. And vice versa." 
 This shows the clear success of such particular branding choices and positioning.
Maybe link this back to class and why its ‘not for them’?Supermarkets are able to position themselves through subjective factors such as the pleasantness of the store, or how its decor, music, quality of products, exclusivity of products, design elements and affiliations, (many of which are strategies explored throughout this essay) chime with one's own self-image (Jefferies 2004). All of which can be just as important and as objective factors like price and convenience (all of which Jackson brackets under "cultural capital").
Using the NRS social grading system - (system of demographic classification used in the UK):
 
A - (Upper middle class) higher managerial, administrative or professional
B - (Middle class) Intermediate managerial, administrative or professional
C1 - (Lower middle class) supervisory or clerical and junior managerial, administrative or professional 
C2 - (Skilled working class) skilled manual workers
D - (working class) semi-skilled and unskilled manual workers
E - non-working casual or lowest grade workers, pensioners, and others who depend on the welfare state for their income
 
Verdict Research found that Waitrose has the highest proportion of shoppers from the professional social classes A and B (47%), followed by Sainsbury's (34%), Marks & Spencer (22%), Tesco (21%) and at the lowest end of the market, former Netto's 72% of shoppers were blue-collar Ds or Es and with Lidl (54%).
The argument against structuring themselves to appeal to certain classes is that it reinforces class ghettoes.Explain class ghettoes. Consumers already living in an affluent area are treated to 'essential Waitrose sugar free Indian tonic water and lime' while those in a deprived postcode are left with just 'tonic water'. This is really interesting, you could add another example or say more on it.
This is seen upon the time when Waitrose indulged themselves in subtle social engineering. Upon launching it's essentials line in 2009, almost all products were exactly the same as their higher-range only re-packaged in basic white tins and boxes. It was designed to shift customer’s perceptions that Waitrose was just for the wealthy. Even if shoppers were not aware of this sleight of hand, it is worth wondering about whether there was embarrassment from the upper class about purchasing these cheap-looking products (Wallop 2013).
Maybe comment on how even though they have branched out to the poor people, just by reputation it still feels luxury to buy from there and then go on to say on the other hand they have been putting stuff in Tescos bags to not look like snobs, and maybe suggest why they would do it, why would they feel embarrassed enough to do that? The commercial director for Waitrose found the opposite saying "We have found some customers putting their Waitrose goods in Tesco bags, because they are nervous that their neighbours will think they are decadent for shopping at Waitrose." The prices in Waitrose are known to be costly. However, their value range has made shopping there far more legitimate in this climate that it otherwise would have been. Waitrose's engineering was the most potent signal of social mobility.
"In the latter quarter of the twentieth century this role was provided by Mark & Spencer, when to shop at M&S was to declare yourself part of the aspirational middle class...Waitrose’s gain has been M&S’s loss as the former has replaced the latter as the totem of aspiration – to shop at Waitrose today, even from the essentials range, its to declare that your family is moving upwards undaunted by the economic crisis that surrounds us. (Manchipp 2014)
Public perception of a brand is everything and with it, 'snobbery' is a powerful social force, but also a powerful commercial one. and perhaps should not been seen as completely negative. Being judged for how you spend your money, rather than how you earn it, can be perceived as progress of some sort.
Explain the progress, and what could you argue against this? Is there things that could be perceive not as progress? What would the counter argument for the perception be?

 

Bibliography

Books

BRANDI, J (2001) Building Customer Loyalty: 21 Essential Elements in Action. Texas: The Walk The Talk Company

BUTSCHE, S (2002) Customer Loyalty Programmes and Clubs. Gower Publishing Ltd. Aldershot: Gower Publishing Ltd.

HUMBY, C, HUNT, T and PHILLIPS T (2008) Scoring Points: How Tesco Continues to Win Customer. Loyalty London: Kogan Page Publishers

KORNBERGER, M (2010) Brand Society: How Brands Transform Management and Lifestyle. London: Cambridge University Press

 

Websites

MANCHIPP, S (2014) Supermarket success – it’s a question of class ADLITERATE [Online] Available from http://www.adliterate.com/2014/01/supermarket-success-its-a-question-of-class/

UK GEOGRAPHICS (2014) Social Grade A, B, C1, C2, D, E [Online] Available from http://www.ukgeographics.co.uk/blog/social-grade-a-b-c1-c2-d-e [Accessed 21st December 2015]

 

Articles

PEACHEY, K (2015) Shoppers with reward cards see little point in loyalty BBC NEWS [Online] Available from http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-32036916 [Accessed 21st December 2015]

FERGUSON, D (2013) How supermarkets get your data – and what they do with it THE GUARDIAN [Online] Available from http://www.theguardian.com/money/2013/jun/08/supermarkets-get-your-data [Accessed 19th December 2015]

ARNETT, G (2013) Are loyalty cards really worth it? THE GUARDIAN [Online] Available from http://www.theguardian.com/news/datablog/2013/oct/31/are-loyalty-cards-really-worth-it [Accessed 18th December 2015]

JEFFERIES, S (2004) ‘What your Supermarket says about you.” THE GUARDIAN [Online] Available from: http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2004/mar/12/foodanddrink.shopping [Accessed 21st December 2015]

WALLOP, H (2013) How supermarkets prop up our class system. THE TELEGRAPH  [Online] Available from: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/foodanddrink/9808015/How-supermarkets-prop-up-our-class-system.html [Accessed 21st December 2015]

 

Archives

BBC NEWS (1999)  Loyalty cards loosing appeal. [Online] Available from http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/the_company_file/481921.stm [Accessed 19th December 2015]

 

Research

AIMIA [Online] Available from: http://www.aimia.com/en/capabilities/consumers/customer-loyalty-management.html [Accessed 21st December 2015]

VERDICT [Online] Available from: http://www.verdictretail.com/ [Accessed 21st December 2015]