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Which is exactly why I changed our cards last November to have $3 freebie limit. Having separate cards for drip, versus espresso based, versus blended etc. too complicated IMO. Still allows a $1.75 small cup pour over drinker to have an espresso beverage now and then, but the max free is small latte, make it a small mocha and it'll cost 'em 40cents:-) Card does also apply for loose leaf teas, iced tea, chai lattes (my custom blend and concentrate brewed so better AND better price point than pre-packaged concentrates). They can use it towards an espresso or chai Frappe' but not towards a fruit smoothie, Ital' Soda, OJ etc.Could someone please explain how GIVING a regular medium drip coffee customer a large vanilla latte every other week qualifies as an "upsell"?
We used to do this, but found that very few changed their regular order... they just looked forward to their freebie and got the biggest thing they could on that day. Those that claim converting people over... what percentage would you say actually did this?
We've recently done away with our punch card "loyalty" system. I was on the front lines when it happened and I heard maybe, maybe three or four complaints that were more than a casual "bummer" We had done the math and figured we were giving away around 100 dollars worth of free drinks per day, that adds up. So we set up an email list and said we'll trade you a 16oz coffee or 2 bucks off your drink for your email. Now we can send out updates and special offers, for example, 2 dollar proper capps. We can also target things other than drinks, we've seen our whole bean sales go up since we started email promotions. I think the customers enjoy being in the loop, rather than just being a regular with a punch card.
I also agree with Jay, sometimes it's just good for business to practice random acts of kindness. We trust our baristi to do so within reason, sometimes we'll call one of the stores and say "pick your favorite customer this morning, make them something they don't usually get" This frames the product loss as what it is, a gift, rather than something that the customer is entitled to. Our coffee is worth what people pay, every time, not ten out of eleven times. Making them think that they have earned something by coming back is devaluing our product. Just give them the best coffee and service and they will have no desire to go anywhere else, thus loyalty is sustained.
I don't think we've lost a single customer because we quit punching cards.
We have a lolalty card and we do not moniter what they buy or what they get free we just think it is good customer service. I used to go to a coffee shop before I owned one and would use their card I always got a large latte when I was due my free drink they told me I got a small coffee for free. I didn't take the coffee and I never went back. We do have a few customers who play that game buy small coffee get large latte but on the flip side we have converted some coffee drinks to latte drinks on a daily basis. The more they try a latte the more they want a latte.
Can anyone actually show demonstrable results that really justify these cash outlays? Giving 10% or 25% away for free seems ridiculous since the Prime Rate is now below 4%. Driving down your prices to match those of the chains then giving away up to 25% of your revenue sounds crazy to me.
There are a ton of statistics out there on gift cards. One of our referral partners in the credit card industry (mercury payment) did a study on their customers last year and shared some of the results with me:
Stores using Gift Cards had a higher average monthly credit card volume (more sales): It was an average of $1,222 compared to $929 without gift cards.
Average monthly credit card volume was $41,882 vrs $30,336
I'd take this with a grain of salt - they work with a number of types of locations but I still think it shows a tiny bit of how this can help in stores. There are many other stats out there on this as well.
Jay Caragay said:Can anyone actually show demonstrable results that really justify these cash outlays? Giving 10% or 25% away for free seems ridiculous since the Prime Rate is now below 4%. Driving down your prices to match those of the chains then giving away up to 25% of your revenue sounds crazy to me.
Mike Spence said:There are a ton of statistics out there on gift cards. One of our referral partners in the credit card industry (mercury payment) did a study on their customers last year and shared some of the results with me:
Stores using Gift Cards had a higher average monthly credit card volume (more sales): It was an average of $1,222 compared to $929 without gift cards.
Average monthly credit card volume was $41,882 vrs $30,336
I'd take this with a grain of salt - they work with a number of types of locations but I still think it shows a tiny bit of how this can help in stores. There are many other stats out there on this as well.
Jay Caragay said:Can anyone actually show demonstrable results that really justify these cash outlays? Giving 10% or 25% away for free seems ridiculous since the Prime Rate is now below 4%. Driving down your prices to match those of the chains then giving away up to 25% of your revenue sounds crazy to me.
I think Jay (and others, like me) was looking for loyalty card data.
Interesting gift-card stat. My question is, what about the overall sales? If it was unchanged, that is a pretty bad deal - their CC fees went up by 30%. We're looking for ways to REDUCE our number of credit card transactions without changing overall revenue (i.e. migrate people to cash or gift card).
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