Retailers pitch for loyalty in tough times.
on April 16th, 2009 at 5:48 pmLOYALTY pays, even during a slowdown. At a time when consumer spending is on a decline, leading retail chains are either expanding or restructuring their loyalty programmes. The retailers expect such a strategy will help them increase footfalls, conversion level and ultimately drive their topline growth.
While the likes of Future Group, Shoppers Stop, Westside and Reliance Retail are driving the focus on customer relationship management (CRM), restaurant chains like Speciality Restaurants (SRPL) are also gung-ho on the same. “The CRM programmes are important for any retail chain and they work, especially during a recessionary trend. They give customers some comfort and ensure that they keep coming back again and again,” SRPL chairman and MD Anjan Chatterjee told ET.
SRPL’s loyalty programme currently has 70,000-odd customers within its folds, who account for 30-35% of their sales. “We are now planning a marketing blitz to penetrate into 70% of our target audience by July-August,” said Mr Chatterjee.
Within six months, Future Group is planning to roll out a single loyalty programme that spans across formats. The group is currently investing heavily on the IT backbone. Currently, the group’s Green Card loyalty programme at Pantaloons accounts for 55% of sales.
“As the first step towards a uniform loyalty scheme, we have rolled out a prepaidcum-loyalty card in Pune and Kolkata. We’ve clocked nearly Rs 15 crore business out of this. Eventually, we expect 70% of our sales from lifestyle formats to be generated from loyalty scheme customers,” said Future Group president-customer strategies Sandip Tarkas.
Interestingly, Reliance Retail already operates its ‘RelianceOne’ loyalty programme across formats with four million customers. “We see a significant percentage of our sales coming from our loyalty card holders,” said a Reliance Retail spokesperson.
Shoppers Stop has just launched a new loyalty scheme for its hypermarket ‘Hypercity’. “The loyalty programme is a long-term strategic initiative, which drives repeated purchases. We add nearly three lakh customers under loyalty every year,” said Shoppers Stop MD BS Nagesh. As of end-2008, the retailer had more than 11.8 lakh loyalty members.
Westside has relaxed the entry norms for its loyalty programme ‘Clubwest’ to cash in on the large footfalls the store is witnessing due to Nano bookings. Earlier, to become a silver member, one had to shop for Rs 2,000 on one occasion and register. “Now, a customer can enrol for the programme even by shopping for Rs 500 and subsequently get upgraded, if he completes Rs 2,000 billing within three months,” said Westside marketing-head Smeeta Neogi. The chain currently has over eight lakh members, who generate over 50% of sales.