Amanda Cromhout 14 min

Blind Loyalty. Challenge with Aaron Dauphinee


Identify the challenges and opportunities of retail loyalty programs in this insightful interview with Aaron Dauphinee. Learn about the importance of data privacy, managing customer expectations, and the innovative ways companies like Nike are engaging their customers.



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Hi there, I'm Amanda Cromhoe from Truth. Welcome to the Blind Laugherty

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Challenge. 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 Laugherty

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Trust

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and my book called Blind Laugherty, 101 Laugherty Concepts Radically Simplified

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. All

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profits from the book go towards the trust. We hope you enjoy the Blind Laug

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herty Challenge.

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So again we are here on the Blind Laugherty Challenge and next to me is Erin D

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auphinny,

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Chief Marketing Officer of the Wise Marketier Group. Needs absolutely no

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introduction, but

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Erin, welcome to the Blind Laugherty Challenge. Hi, thanks, Venna. I appreciate

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you having

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me on today. Yeah, I'm really excited. You're no stranger to podcast or webin

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ars, so I think

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this is going to be super easy for you. So let's see if we can make it a little

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bit tricky.

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Don't go too tricky. I've had a talk already.

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So in chapter 72 I actually quote the Wise Marketier in retail beauty loyalty

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programs.

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So in your opinion, which retail industry do you think is most receptive, most

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responsive

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to loyalty? So the retail obviously spans a number of

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spectrums in terms of how you define it and I think that's sometimes part of

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the issue

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with our industry is as we get into these sub-segments and we don't realize

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actually

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retail is any time a customer is coming into a particular place or even the e-

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commerce

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coming online to make a purchase in exchange of some sort. And so with that in

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mind, I

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mean the one that's really coming into play for me, I mean health and beauty is

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one that

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you mentioned of being a good from a specialty retailer perspective. I actually

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think that

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some of the clothing retail and peril are doing well, particularly with the

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direct-to-consumer

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models that are coming into play. I think that's really changed the way in

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which retail

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is thought of and that's a bit of a hybrid if you will between e-commerce and

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brick

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and mortar. But the direct-to-consumer is like the

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Nike's and the Adidas of the world like that. I think a footwear as well

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because I'm a bit

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of a runner. They've really come into play in terms of utilizing the

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information that

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they've been collecting on their consumer programs. One of the examples that I

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touted

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back when I did with along with other colleagues at Bond Brand loyalty when we

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were doing the

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Lotu report was Nike and the Nike program in terms of the different types of

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interactions

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that they've created as experiences for the customers based upon the

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information they're

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using. And I always like using their West Hollywood store location example

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where they've

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taken the information in a geofence around that particular location and said,

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here let's

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collect all the data on all the people that we have in our profile and only

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keep the SKUs

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down to a SKU level, the color, the type, the fit, you know, the exact product

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in the

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store that is going to service the on a replenish or new products for that

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particular group

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set and make it very bespoke and customized to West Hollywood. The other part

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of that

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is West Hollywood very hard to find parking. So you know what we should do? We

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should

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have them allow them to order and advance on a replenish, have a garage door

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open,

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they drive in, we hand them the actual product and they drive back the store

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from a convenience

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and perspective. So utilizing information in a way that actually creates these

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experiences

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of ease and convenience and savings in time in a retail environment that

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typically isn't

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that strong oftentimes in terms of the traditional loyalty mechanics that come

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into play from

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a program perspective. I love those. You should actually, they should have a

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refreshment statement

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so they get their members to run in. Yeah, no, for sure. I mean, it's actually

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the New

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York store. I'll let me keep on Nike as an example. The New York store has a

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fifth floor

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on top of four other floors which is dedicated to the the the loyalty program

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users and in

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instance in New York, if you're running during your lunch hour, you can order

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ahead, have

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all of your products in a locker run into the store, do a quick try on, grab

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those that

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you want, those that you don't, you leave and you literally walk out of the

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store because

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you've already paid online and you're not waiting in line. So I mean, they

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obviously

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can't replicate that in all the stores but that is certainly as a marquee store

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a certain

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way to literally run the store and run out with the products that you need.

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Love it. Love

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it. Love it. Love it. Wonderful. So my second question, if you could have, if

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you had to

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name one thing, what is the most difficult thing about launching a loyalty

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program?

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About launching the program. Interesting. So I come from a background of

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planning and

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analysis and the strategy side of the loyalty operations and mechanics of it.

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And for us,

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it was always the getting the the sponsor or the the actual brand to be

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convinced that

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you should be honest. So I'm talking about a coalition perspective to some

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degree. But

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what I'm talking about is getting your your estimates and the and the planning

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assumptions

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correct. Like that's the most challenging part because you go into the

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executive with

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this case that comes into play and says, Hey, we think we're going to get lifts

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and shifts

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of X and Y over period and we're going to get this big bump in year one, right?

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And then

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it's a question of all, but what about year two and year three? Oh, we're going

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to get,

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you know, same types of step changes over the period and the answer is no, it's

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more

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like a lawn curve curve actually, right? Like you get that big bump in the

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first year

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and go from there. And so I think one of the biggest challenges is making sure

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that the

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marketing communications and that initial foray is a realistic representation

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of what

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the consumer can expect on an ongoing basis because we tend to overload the

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onboarding

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experience in the acquisition side. And then we lever off and we and we don't

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have that

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same level of touch and and interest in the customer to some degree. And that's

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just because

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the program's trying to get this incremental element of sales that that's in

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play. And

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that's why you're putting the program in place. So I think, you know, to if I

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could sum it

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down into a quick sentence, the biggest challenge in initially launching a

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program is setting

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realistic expectations about what it is that you're going to have in terms of

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customer

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behavioral change. And then what's that that change on an ongoing basis? So

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what's realistic

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about it and setting those guidelines early. And it often starts with the

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initial assumptions

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that you put into your business plan. Amazing. Great. Love that answer. I often

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chat at,

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you know, workshops and so on when we're talking about loyalty and I said, the

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work starts

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after you've launched like it's hard enough to get to launch. But it's like an

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e-commerce

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store. You can't launch it and forget about it. It's every day of your life

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like you have

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to run. Yeah. And for those on the strategy side, I'm planning like you kind of

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fingers

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cross that you're going to assumptions, right? Because it is a bit of art and

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science at the

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end of the day. And and what one you what you experienced with one program, you

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will not

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experience with the other necessarily at least completely accurately to 100%.

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There might

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be variations in shades and degrees of it. But but otherwise sometimes and

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sometimes holistically

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something completely other the way because a macro impact has come into play,

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you know,

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gosh forbid we talk about the pandemic again. But that was something that you

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just couldn't

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foresee. And so that certainly would have had impact on anyone who was

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launching a program

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in late 2019 or early 2020. Yeah, of course, of course. Okay. My last question.

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So chapter

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84 of blind allty talks about data privacy. Okay. Do you think organizations

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are doing

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enough to make consumers feel comfortable with this? I think that that varies

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by which

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geography you're in and location you're in. I'm very much think about Europe as

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a kind

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of the the torch bear in Canada here. We have strong privacy and always have

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had strong

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privacy legislation and Europeans kind of came over the top and and built it

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and went

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even further. And I do like that they pushed to the point where the customer

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was the center

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of the piece of legislation, you know, I have the right to be forgotten and you

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have to

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do something about that. I think it some people think that it's a bit over

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bearing in terms

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of the economics that come into play. And that's maybe fair. But at the end of

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the day, that's

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around protecting the consumer and the ability to have choice and flexibility.

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And I think

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that's pretty savvy in terms of how that's structured and someone from the

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industry playing

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both sides of that coin from a consumer side as well as what's the impact, you

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know, to

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the businesses that have to operate in Europe. Then you flow through to the

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wild wild west

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as I call it to south me in the United States and and it's still a a opt in

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right? It's not

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it's it or sorry, it's an opt out of mentality. Yeah, opt out mentality. And

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then just north

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of the border, you've got opt in. And so, you know, you have this kind of as a

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global operator.

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I think that's a big challenge. And so the, you know, I think there's a mixed

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message here.

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Some are doing it very, very well. And that's a function of the legislation and

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the environments

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that they're operating in. And others are just not taking it to the forefront,

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particularly if

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you're using the United States example, if you're only operating the United

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States, the question

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would be, why should I? And tell consumers start to give me a reason to do it.

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And fortunately,

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there are some states that are coming in with the legislations shortly that

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will start to help to

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protect consumers and the privacy. But as a flag bearer for the industry, you

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know, wise marketing

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will be a little academy, we always hone on the side of always protect the

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consumer first. I mean,

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that is that really is the one banner that we need to have as multi marketers

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is to say we need to

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do better and to be on the, on the further right, if you will, in terms of

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right side of the proper

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side or the correct side, if you will, of privacy and not try to dangle in and

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walk that fine line.

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I don't think it's, I don't think it's a wise decision for us.

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It's so funny that you described the US as the world world world west because

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when I first

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came to South Africa 20 years ago, I used to describe the data environment here

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as the absolute

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world world west. And now it's, it's, it's completely tightened up and mirrors

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GDPR. So

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it's extremely structured and good for the consumer. But I never expected

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someone to describe the US

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as the world world. So yeah, in terms of privacy, that certainly is just be and

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it's changing. I

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get there's a positive here, like I'm not trying to be demolishing in terms of

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that. That's just the

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reality is, is it hasn't caught up and there hasn't been enough push, but it's

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starting to sway and

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and what will be good, I think for us as low to marketers is when all regions

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sort of get to that,

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that high level of standard of protecting the consumer. The reality is we're

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just not there.

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And I think those that are frustrated the most about it are those that are

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global operators because

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they are operating in certain markets where their competitors don't need to

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adhere to those things.

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And they need to because they take the higher road and they operate to that

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global standard.

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Yeah, you're wonderful. Great. Thank you, Erin. Fantastic. So you know my last

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question is who

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can I speak to next? That's the only predictable question in this interview.

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Yeah, and I had a hard time coming up with this because there's just such a

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great depth of talent

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and I'm going to be selfish and promote some Canadians if that's all right

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because it's a

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wonderful question for loyalty. And if you don't mind, I'm going to give you

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three and you can pick

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and choose like here's my top three or at least I shouldn't say top three

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because when people will

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get upset but certainly top three that have had influence and that I respect

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and admire as colleagues

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and have grown up within the loyalty industry over the years in Canada. The

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first is Gison Hahn

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who is actually at Cognitive Technologies right now. She's a Chief Strategy

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Officer there.

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But what I love about Gison is that we grew up at the Airmal's Camping or Camp

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Partomy and she was

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then shipped off to Brazil to work with Roberto Chate down to do the DOTS

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Coalition Rewards

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program. She came back and led the financial institution, the Bank of Montreal

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at Airmal's

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again here in Canada and then has migrated on into a great role at Cognitive

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Chief Strategy

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Officer and they do focus a lot right now on AI and able in terms of the

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loyalty programs that are

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in place. The second and I'll keep on the women trend because we do support

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women in loyalty 100%

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here at the Wise Market is Megan O'Neill who's a former colleague of mine at

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Bond Brand loyalty

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and she stepped in when I left the organization on the Bond report, the Lulte

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Report, the largest

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consumer global study that's out there. It's the most longitudinal study that

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exists. I highly

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recommend it for everybody and she stepped in and I also grew up with her

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previous organizations as

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well including Airmals and so just a real the depth and the quality and the st

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uteness of how

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she understands the marketplace and can take practical loyalty design

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principles and put them

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into place for brands is just amazing. So I speak highly of her and then last

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but not least rounding

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out the three is Matthew Seagram who is a good friend of mine and colleague as

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well through many

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years who started putting financial products services out of the Valley

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services onto the

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loyalty programs then from his Aimea days with me removed into taking on a role

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to build out

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the scene loyalty program which is our theatre program here along with one of

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the major banks

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Scotia Bank to now what is I would say the best and most effective coalition

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program that exists

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in Canada particularly from a lifestyle business and it includes our second

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largest

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grocer now as well too so so Matthew's pretty impressive and then he's just

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recently taken

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a role to move to the second largest credit union Meridian Bank and he's the

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chief digital

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officer there and so I'm just excited to see what he can do next to change the

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banking industry

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just like he did in terms of retail and entertainment in Canada.

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Wow amazing goodness I feel like it's my birthday I get three for one.

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Yeah it's a big one right and you're picking three with hard there's a whole

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long list as well too

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that the follow-up so I mean it's selfishly take all three can't wait to speak

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to just one of the

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three you let alone all three so Erin you're absolutely superstar really

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interesting responses

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I knew it would be so no surprises but thank you so so much. I appreciate

13:59

Amanda thanks so much and be

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well.