loyalty card - meaning and definition. What is loyalty card
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What (who) is loyalty card - definition

CUSTOMER LOYALTY PROGRAM OR LOYALTY CARD
Affinity program; Frequent-renter; Loyalty card; Loyalty programme; Loyalty program cashback; Rewards program; Member rewards; Loyalty cards; Loyalty card program; Rewards programs; Club points; Loyalty Program; Customer card; Loyalty reward card; Loyalty reward; Loyalty reward cards; Loyalty programs; Customer loyalty program; Fuel Reward Programs; Priority Club; Reward points; Reward programs; Club card; Rewards card; Priority club; Point (loyalty program); Loyalty discount; Loyalty scheme; Loyalty points
  • Various loyalty cards

loyalty card         
(loyalty cards)
A loyalty card is a plastic card that some shops give to regular customers. Each time the customer buys something from the shop, points are electronically stored on their card and can be exchanged later for goods or services.
N-COUNT
loyalty card         
¦ noun Brit. a card issued by a retailer to its customers, on which credits are accumulated for future discounts every time a transaction is recorded.
Loyalty program         
A loyalty program is a marketing strategy designed to encourage customers to continue to shop at or use the services of a business associated with the program. Today, such programs cover most types of commerce, each having varying features and rewards schemes, including in banking, entertainment, hospitality, retailing and travel.

Wikipedia

Loyalty program

A loyalty program is a marketing strategy designed to encourage customers to continue to shop at or use the services of a business associated with the program. Today, such programs cover most types of commerce, each having varying features and rewards schemes, including in banking, entertainment, hospitality, retailing and travel. The market approach has shifted from product-centric to a customer-centric one due to a highly competitive market and a wide array of services offered to customers, therefore, it's important that marketing strategies prioritize growing a sustainable business and increasing customer satisfaction.

A loyalty program typically involves the operator of a particular program set up an account for a customer of a business associated with the scheme, and then issue to the customer a loyalty card (variously called rewards card, points card, advantage card, club card, or some other name) which may be a plastic or paper card, visually similar to a credit card, that identifies the cardholder as a participant in the program. Cards may have a barcode or magstripe to more easily allow for scanning, although some are chip cards or proximity cards.

By presenting a card, customers typically receive either a discount on the current purchase or an allotment of points that they can use for future purchases. Hence, the card is the visible means of implementing a type of what economists call a two-part tariff. Application forms for cards usually entail agreements by the store concerning customer privacy, typically non-disclosure (by the store) of non-aggregate data about customers. The store uses aggregate data internally (and sometimes externally) as part of its marketing research. Over time the data can reveal, for example, a given customer's favorite brand of beer, or whether they are a vegetarian. Where a customer has provided sufficient identifying information, the loyalty card may also be used to access such information to expedite verification during receipt of cheques or dispensing medical prescription preparations, or for other membership privileges such as access to an airport lounge using a frequent-flyer card. In recent years, businesses now offer these loyalty cards in the form of a loyalty app, which means users are less likely to lose their cards. Almost all major casino chains also have loyalty cards, which offer members tier credits, reward credits, comps, and other perks based on card members' "theo" from gambling, various demographic data, and spend patterns on various purchases at the casino, within the casino network, and with the casino's partners. Examples of such programs include Caesars Rewards (formerly called Total Rewards) and MGM Resorts International's Mlife.

Loyalty programs have been described as a form of centralized virtual currency, one with unidirectional cash flow, since reward points can be exchanged into a good or service but not into cash.

Examples of use of loyalty card
1. Cosmetic surgery firm will offer ‘loyalty card‘ Look here too...
2. Criticism has been levelled at companies offering operations as prizes, and clinics offering loyalty card schemes.
3. In nearly a decade, 40 million have signed up for Harrah‘s Total Rewards loyalty card.
4. Police could be alerted instantly when a wanted person used a cash machine or supermarket loyalty card.
5. The report looked at more than 80 credit card and loyalty card reward schemes to come up with the findings.