The Secret to Building Brand Devotion is Not a Loyalty Program. Here's What Customer's Really Want.The idea of consumer loyalty has been around for centuries. But with a growing consumer appetite for privacy and control, it may be time to rethink the traditional brand relationship.

ByAndrew Reid

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

If you ask a lot of business leaders, they'll tell you that there's nothing more important thanloyalty. A loyal customer returns to you again and again — because you're delivering on abrand promiseand giving people what they want.

Of course, this virtuous circle needs a little grease sometimes — which is why theloyalty program(providing a "reward" for loyal patronage) was invented. It's a transactional concept that goes back to Ancient Egypt, where pharaohsrewarded conscripted workers and enslaved peoplewith "tokens" for their work and temple time. In the age of Big Data, consumer rewards (free "stuff" or access) often come in exchange for personal data.

But consumers are increasinglyunenthusiasticabout this tradeoff. They're rejecting the idea that brand loyalty means giving up control of their data. Digital native Gen Zs, in particular, demand transparency and honesty from brands above all else, even if they also expect personalization.

Just look at the splashy ads that Applehas been airing on TV— showing a young woman walking into the middle of an auction where her personal data (email entrails, drugstore purchases) is about to be sold to the highest bidder. She pulls out her iPhone and, with the click of a button, she flips the privacy setting to (poof!) make the auction disappear.

In 2022, control over data — and transparency over how it's handled — is a concept that sells. And more than ever, customers want a voice in the brand relationship — and to know that their voice is being heard.

Related:How to Create Authentic Relationships and Build Customer Trust

Move beyond loyalty and build devotees

The Apple ad is rooted in a reality that the brand has recognized for years: The most important thing in thecustomer relationshipis not loyalty butenthusiasm. If customers really love you — and not just tolerate you for the sake of a few points, credits or tokens — they will pay that extra $200 or $300,especiallyif they feel like they (and their data) are being treated with respect.

These consumers as described in a study byForresteras "devotees":

  1. Spend more money with their favored brands.
  2. Keep their business with these brands.
  3. Forgive them when they mess up.
  4. Pay a premium price for their products/services.
  5. Go out of their way to work with them.

This is different from a "loyal" customer in significant ways, described as someone who is staying with a brand for the benefits — until something better comes along. And in this era of customers burned by rising prices and service shortcomings — there's less willingness to "pay a premium" for a product or to "forgive" brands when they screw up.

We're starting to see this shakeout happen in the streaming world.According to a recentWall Street Journalreport, 19% of subscribers of premium services (including Netflix, Hulu, AppleTV+, HBO Max and Disney+) "canceled three or more subscriptions in the two years up to June (2022)... up from 6% in the two-year stretch ended in June 2020." For all the data that streamers are collecting — and the many algorithm-informed shows they're producing — they haven't been successful at building a devoted customer base. According to the aforementioned study, 100% of "devotee" customers are willing to pay a premium price for the brands they love — but only 11% of non-devotee customers are willing to do the same.

Related:Creative Ways to Delight Your Customers and Make Them Loyal to Your Brand

Wrap your arms around your best customers

To achieve this level ofdevotion,你需要超越传统的概念loyalty and stop treating customers as mere data points. AsAna Andjelic wrote inHarvard Business Reviewin 2021, "Loyalty programs — that effectively bribe people into buying more of your products — are lazy. In the modern aspiration economy, people develop true brand affinity only when it gives them a sense of community."

So how do you give consumers that sense of community? For luxury products, Andjelic explains, it might take the form of exclusive experiences such as an invitation to the Château de Saran — an estate that's part of the Moët & Chandon powerhouse brand where you can't pay to stay but have to be invited.

You can also build that sense of community in the virtual world — for far less money — by convening a select panel of brand enthusiasts, who are consulted on everything from new offerings to tailored brand services.

研究平台,利用手机instance, brands can regularly "check in" with customers and survey their needs. They can make their best customers feel part of their vital marketing processes and glean insights that help craft new brand messages or deliver new products or services.

Whether it's a brand ambassador program, an online insight community or an exclusive château in the French countryside, peoplewantto be active participants with their favorite brands. They will eagerly reach out to provide feedback, both good and bad. So find ongoing ways to engage with them — and show them that their voice is being heard and is driving action at the company.

Brands still need data to serve customers effectively. But in this era of increasinggovernmentregulationof data usage — and growing consumer concern about privacy — brands need to be transparent about what they're collecting and give consumers good reasons to let them into their private lives. The era of "creeping" consumers — and calling that loyalty — is over.

Wavy Line
Andrew Reid

Entrepreneur Leadership Network Contributor

Founder and CEO, Rival Technologies

Andrew Reid is the founder and CEO ofRival Technologies. Based in Vancouver, Rival's platform enables companies to create mobile communities they can engage for insights. Reid also founded Vision Critical and is a YPO member.

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