Rendani explores the impact of loyalty rewards in retail banking, noting significant gains in customer profitability. He also shares insights on innovative loyalty experiences, highlighting programs that promote non-transactional behaviors.
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Hi there, I'm Amanda Cromhoe from Truth. Welcome to the Blind Loyalty Challenge
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. We interview
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world experts in loyalty blindly. We're hoping to create insight, spontaneity
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and a lot of
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fun through the challenge. The challenge is about promoting the Blind Loyalty
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Trust and
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my book called Blind Loyalty, a 101 loyalty concept radically simplified. All
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profits from
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the book go towards the trust. We hope you enjoy the Blind Loyalty Challenge.
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So for today's Blind Loyalty Challenge, I'm sitting opposite Rendani Maoda and
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he's
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head of ABSA rewards for the ABSA group and we've known each other for many
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years in the
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South African industry. So it's such a pleasure to have you. Thanks, Rendani
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for coming on
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the Blind Loyalty Challenge. Thank you for having me. Looking forward to
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you today. I'm feeling good, excited. I'm really looking forward to the
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challenge.
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Okay, I'm going straight into it. This one I think is super easy because
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recently ABSA
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has dropped, not recently, like last year, you dropped your fee structure,
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which is quite
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a big thing for retail banking programs. So chapter 24 of Blind Loyalty talks
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about fees
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and subscriptions. So give me your views on fees in loyalty programs.
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Yeah, I think there's this big debate about it. I think my personal philosophy
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is you have
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to remove as many hurdles as possible for the customers to engage with your
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program.
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So fees could be one of those hurdles for getting customers to engage. So maybe
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biased, but I
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advocate for no fees, make it as simple as possible for customers to access
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your program.
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The upside, you get, if your program is good enough and the core product is
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good enough,
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it will be much bigger than the fees that you get from customers.
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I think Rindani, there's going to be a lot of people listening to that who are
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potentially
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going through that debate around are we reliant on the fee structure to make it
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a profitable
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program versus exactly what you've just said. That's lovely to hear, especially
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given you've
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just done that, not just, but have been through that process. Great. So chapter
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73, my second
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question, chapter 73 in blind Lordy is about retail banking rewards. So nothing
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that you're
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unfamiliar with, but do Lordy rewards really make a difference in the retail
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banking industry?
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Yeah, I've been asking this question a lot of times for both internally and
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externally
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as you expect. I think there's where retail banks have come from. They've kind
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of converged
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in terms of loyalty programs, right? It was very one retail bank doing it and
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then everybody
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had to do it as kind of a ticket to the game because customers asked for it. So
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that's
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one, but where teams make a difference in how effective the programs are, right
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? So you
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can make a program work for the greater bank. And I think with enough design
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thinking, thinking
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and meeting the customer where they're at and actually getting the customer to
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engage,
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there is lots of evidence that shows that the programs actually work. I think
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in our
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case, as I said, it's out there. Like, since we put the program together, we've
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seen increasing
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customer profitability, right? And that's in fact, customers engaged with you.
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They live
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a few more from a CX index. And then I think also you see the results from a
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bottom line
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perspective. So it's a win-win for both. But the program has to be right. It
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comes more
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than mirrors, right? In terms of what customers get, otherwise, people will
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just disengage.
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Totally. Absolutely. And my question wasn't biased, by the way. I wasn't
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leading it to
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be, "Oh, are they really making a difference?" So the industry, I'm super
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interested. And
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for you to say, you know, it's fact, we've seen a difference in profitability
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of customer
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base is incredible. So that's lovely to hear. All right. The last ones are more
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personal
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view on loyalty. So what would you say has been your most innovative loyalty
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experience?
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Most innovative. So I think I'm a big subscriber to loyalty programs, as I
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should.
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Yeah. So I think I'll answer this in a couple of ways. I really like the simple
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programs,
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right? So it may not be as innovative. But it may resonate with me, right? So I
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think
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like a program like Seattle gets one extra coffee. You love the coffee. That
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works for
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me. I think recently a program I've engaged with the most was a version actor
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that's
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gotten me back to the gym in terms of just pushing people to exercise 30
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minutes and
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twice a week get a free award, right? That's the one I've recently engaged with
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the most.
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But I think what I've seen outside South Africa, it's a program that I just
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forgot the name
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on the program now. But basically, it's like a community in terms of rating
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like places,
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like restaurants where you go eat, you can like new reviews. You can see how
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many people
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have been there and so on. And you get like rewards points for it, right? For
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actually
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helping the profile of the restaurant. So I think that's quite innovative. You
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get honest
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customer reviews for the establishments, which raises their profile. For the
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customer, I'm
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getting discounts of my meals and so on. And I get to find out about new places
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that I
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may not have known about. So that was really resonated with me.
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Yeah. And it's really tapping into that non transactional behavior, not just
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transactional.
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I loved what you said about Virgin. Like just think about what you just said.
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You said,
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it's got me back to Jim. I mean, that in its own right, all the Virgin Active
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Execives
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will be celebrating. And then you said, you know, twice a week and I get a
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small prize
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and my daughter's the same, right? So twice a week and you get a smoothie or a
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coffee or
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a biogen voucher or and it's such a simple concept. But out of your mouth, it's
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got me
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back to Jim, which is success. It's amazing.
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No, absolutely. And I love that it's instant, right? And I just know like, so
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it's an instant
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gratification. So that works perfectly for me.
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Amazing. Really great. Simple answers though, for me, as you said, it might not
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be the most
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innovative on paper, but it's having the biggest impact. So rather have the
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impact than innovation.
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So well, thank you. Thank you for sharing Rani. So who would you like me to
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interview
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for another blind loyalty challenge? Yeah, I think seeing that I'm a big fan of
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President Active, I'm going to nominate Kia Abbot for the next challenge.
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Okay, I know Kia from many years actually and I know she's at Virgin Active, so
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it's been
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absolutely a pleasure to chat to her. So awesome. Well, Kia, I hope you're
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listening. I'm going
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to find you soon and we'll chat you soon. Rindani, thank you so, so much.
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No, thank you.