The company told press and investors on a conference call this morning that the changes to its loyalty rewards plan for U.S., Canada, and Puerto Rico will start in April, again, as predicted, based on feedback from members.
“The move will provide opportunities for our customers to earn more rewards each time they visit,” chief strategy officer Matt Ryan said.
It’ll also serve to speed things up, which will make customers and baristas alike happy, he explained. As the system stands now, about 1% of customers were pulling a move called “transaction splitting,” which works exactly how it sounds — rewards members would ask to purchase items in separate transactions, so they could earn a reward point for each one.
That leads to some dissatisfaction in the process, Ryan noted, as it can extend the transaction time, which can be “challenging to other customers and baristas.”
This new system will remove that distraction, he says.
Another aspect of the program that we reported on last week was also confirmed: Starbucks will remove the “Welcome” member status tier, and instead, any new member will automatically achieve Green level status.
This is a win-win for customers and for Starbucks, Ryan points out, because customers still have to spend about the same amount of real money to reach a reward. Currently, program customers get a star for every transaction, which at Gold Level averages about $5 per star. They then earn a reward at 12 stars, or after spending around $60. Under the new system, the threshold to earn a reward is raised to 125 stars, but you can earn that many by again, spending about $60 and receiving two stars per dollar spent.
Ryan says it’s important because these changes in other companies are used as a way to reduce the value of the reward, while Starbucks, he says, is not using the change to weaken its reward system.
As an added incentive, in mid-April, any customer making a transaction at the first level will reach Gold member status for a full year. And anyone making a transaction at the Gold level will get it extended for a years, so that “anyone on the way to Gold will get there,” Ryan notes.
Members won’t lose any value when the program switches over in April, Starbucks confirms: each individual star in your account will convert to 11 stars, a slight adjustment up in the customer’s favor, Ryan said.
Customers with questions can visit http://ift.tt/1SXbvWC, which, unlike last Friday, is now a working site.
Was this helpful? We’re a non-profit! You can get more stories like this in our twice weekly ad-free newsletter! Click here to sign up.
by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist
No comments:
Post a Comment