Posts tagged ‘ Online incentives ’

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

Fail often, fail better

Categories: eBusiness, Featured, Incentives

failoften

The low risk of incentives make it easier to fail often, and fail better.

People are conditioned to try and avoid failure, but this often prevents them taking chances. In looking to create a marketing promotion, too many companies avoid creating memorable and effective campaigns because the costs of implementing the campaign are so high that they can’t afford to get it wrong. “Not getting it wrong” is more important than “getting it right”, so the results are often just “kind of okay”. Or worse still, having invested so much money into a marketing campaign, more money is poured in, trying to turn a donkey into a racehorse. Economists call this a sunk cost fallacy.

The low cost of implementing an incentive campaign, using a system like iD-points, allows a company to try different approaches to drive sales. If one approach is not working, it’s easy to change the parameters, to move the goalposts, to create a different set of drivers and incentives, until an effective one is found. It’s possible to take a risk, get the feedback and measure the success, without incurring high sunk costs where the temptation is to keep plowing in more money. If something isn’t working, try another approach. Crucially, if the effectiveness of incentive activity starts to fall away, the parameters can be shifted and the activity refocused.

Incentives are the low risk marketing option.

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

The 80/20 rule.

Categories: eBusiness, Featured, Incentives, Motivation

80-20v2

A prospect recently said that a customer loyalty program was not needed because they got 80% of their revenue from 20% of their customers.

This company wasn’t unique – most small companies’ business also fits the 80/20 rule – also called the Pareto principle or the law of the vital few

Like any other small company, they get the majority of their income from a small number of regular customers to whom they probably have to give exceptional service for fear of losing them. There’s no requirement to run a loyalty incentive for those customers.

But that is exactly the point – how does a company engage with and increase it’s business with the other 80%?

How about an incentive for those customers that may buy occasionally? A customer loyalty incentive is something that could turn an intermittent client into a regular, valued customer.

Thursday, September 27th, 2007

Barclaycard launch new payment system

Categories: eBusiness, eCommerce, Incentives

barclaycard

Barclaycard have recently launched the OnePulse card which combines a credit card, cashless payment card and an Oyster card for contact-less payments including travel on London Transport.

You can find out more at Barclaycard’s faintly ridiculous Institute of Future Living.

We continue to track new formats for payments, which will trickle down to the incentives, creating new ways that they are distributed and redeemed.

As we have stated previously, the future of incentives is connected and mobile.