Amanda Cromhout 9 min

Blind Loyalty Challenge with Rendani Mauda


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.