Trader Joe’s Loyalty Program Has Nothing To Do With Points Or Perks

Trader Joe’s Loyalty Program Has Nothing To Do With Points Or Perks

If you’ve shopped at a Trader Joe’s grocery store, you are familiar with their combination of high-quality products and a great customer experience delivered by friendly, helpful, knowledgeable employees, also known as teammates. The retailer has an incredibly loyal base of customers. Its loyalty program, if you want to call it that, has nothing to do with points or perks. There’s no loyalty card to punch. Its loyalty program is simply about creating enough value to turn a one-time customer into a loyal customer.

This type of loyalty is the envy of many retailers—and any other business with a formal “loyalty program.” It’s been my position that most loyalty programs aren’t really based on loyalty. They are marketing programs that drive repeat business. Often there are incentives such as points that accrue for free merchandise and discounts. Take the airlines, for example. Almost all have a frequent flier program that offers points/miles and perks to returning passengers. The more you fly, the closer you get to a free trip or a complimentary first-class upgrade. But what happens if the points and perks go away? Would the passenger still choose that airline? Or would they go with an airline that offers a lower price or a more convenient schedule?

True loyalty is about an emotional connection. The customer enjoys the experience, the products and the employees so much that they wouldn’t think of doing business elsewhere. And as a bonus, this level of loyalty makes price less relevant.

This is precisely what Trader Joe’s has done. Without the typical customer loyalty program, it has created an experience that drives repeat and loyal business. In a sense, it is a throwback to an era of simply taking care of the customer with a good, old-fashioned customer experience and product quality. Furthermore, they don’t participate in e-commerce and other shopping options that you might find at other grocery stores and retail outlets.

Is this type of loyalty sustainable? It’s worked in the past. It’s Trader Joe’s brand reputation. Will it take them into the future?

In a recent?RetailWire article, experts weighed in on the question, “Will the lack of e-commerce, a loyalty program or discounts found at other grocers become bigger liabilities for the chain down the road?”

Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData says, “The lack of e-commerce at Trader Joe’s may not be everyone’s preference. However, the proposition is so strong across so many attributes—value, quality, taste, uniqueness of offer—that most consumers are willing to overlook this and visit stores. This shows up in Trader Joe’s strong trading numbers over the past few years: it has gained market and shopper share.”

Bob Amster, principal at Retail Technology Group, says, “The store experience is the brand at Trader Joe’s. They are unequaled in their segment.”

George Anderson, editor-in-chief at RetailWire, weighs in with his comment, “Trader Joe’s rationale has been that it offers the lowest price possible to customers on a day-in and day-out basis and that added expenses such as loyalty programs will only drive prices up. The company counts on developing true loyalty with its customers, in the human sense, by offering products they value and backing them up with a no questions asked and no receipt required guarantee. It also excels at hiring people who are true brand ambassadors who customers value for their knowledge and willingness to help. If there was ever a retailer that didn’t need a loyalty program—Trader Joe’s is it.”

There are many more comments, and most of them reflect the views of the experts above.

Trader Joe’s is a benchmark of value that other retailers (not just grocers) should aspire to reach. They have good products, competitive pricing and incredible service. That keeps them in the game—and at the top of the game. And as for a loyalty program, Trader Joe’s already has one. It’s their customer experience. That’s what gets customers to say, “I’ll be back!”

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Shep Hyken?is a customer service and customer experience expert, keynote speaker, and New York Times, bestselling business author.?For information on Shep's virtual?training programs, go to?www.thecustomerfocus.com. Follow him on?Twitter.?

This article was originally published on?Forbes.com.

Check out Shep's latest research in his?Achieving Customer Amazement Study, Sponsored by Amazon Web Services, Inc.?

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Georgia Spencer

Let me introduce you to the olive oils and balsamic vinegars you didn’t know existed. I can lead you through a global adventure tasting the oils the world has to offer.

1 年

Crew members actually know how to bag groceries!!! Unheard of in conventional grocery stores. TJs doesn’t need self checkout. The clerks are the finest anywhere! Stores are stocked well and even during the fall months, most everyone has a smile on their face. And if they don’t, i give them one of mine! ??

Matthew H.

SOLIDWORKS Digital Communities Manager at Dassault Systèmes

1 年

Great write up, Shep and TJ's has the greatest model that is a win-win for all involved!

Kirt Manecke

Award-Winning Author: Social Skills & Career Readiness for Teen Success. Entrepreneurship. Customer Service. | Fundraising Consultant: Increasing Donations for Small Nonprofits | SmiletheBook.com | KirtManecke.com

1 年

I love Trader Joe’s because they run their store with the same type of personalized, friendly service that my team and I provided when I owned my specialty retail store. This type of customer service should just be the norm, but it’s always been the exception, which makes it a powerful differentiator for businesses to succeed. Thank you for posting!

Debbie Hart

Expert Customer Experience Management Training ? Mystery Shopping & Business Assessments ? Event Services

1 年

Love to hear positive stories about quality customer experience.

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