AA Rewards - New Zealand's number two coalition loyalty program behind Fly Buys - has struck a partnership deal with innovative loyalty start up Smartfuel. The deal means that AA Rewards points will disappear and the currency and rewards in the AA program will become accumulating fuel discounts. AA Rewards members (and non-Members - see below) will now accumulate cents/litre discounts at AA Reward's participating retailers. For instance a member might earn 3c/l at TelstraClear, 4c/l at Hammer Hardware and 10c/l at Take Note during the course of a week. This accumulates to a 17c/l discount when the member next fills up at BP or Caltex.
Non-members earn too
We first met Smartfuel early last year when they were building out a pilot of their program in Palmerston North. The program launched on Monday of this week. I spoke to Smartfuel's GM Ian Sutcliffe yesterday. He said that not only was the current AA Rewards base going to benefit from this deal but those not paying an annual AA membership would also benefit (though at a lower rate). This gives anyone the opportunity to participate.
Ian Sutcliffe of Smartfuel
Picture rights : MURRAY WILSON/Fairfax NZ
Richness, relevance
We know that members in the loyalty programs we operate improve their participation in the program in direct proportion to the increase in:
- The richness of the rewards being offered - the more you give back the more they'll spend with you, longer they'll stay a customer and more they'll recommend you
- The relevance of those rewards - the closer the rewards on offer are aligned with what they want, the harder they'll work to attain them.
Judging whether Smartfuel is rich enough or relevant enough may be missing the point though. Their addition to AA Rewards program is a catalyst that makes the AA Rewards program far more valuable to their existing members and their existing retailers.
Education of the customer base
One of the big issues that Smartfuel is addressing is the education of customers into the accumulating portion of the program. Kiwis are used to collecting cents/litre offers from their supermarkets but not in rolling them together over 3 or 4 grocery visits into a single larger discount for their next petrol purchase.
