Data Collection Pushing Loyal Customers Away: Study

Posted on by Chief Marketer Staff

Loyal retail consumers are jumping ship, saying retailers are asking for too much personal information to participate in loyalty programs.

The number of shoppers who said they were long-term loyal customers dropped to 77.2% this year, compared to 83.8% in 2005, according to a report by the NRF Foundation, the non-profit education and research arm of the National Retail Federation.

The study found that shoppers were willing to give retailers their name (89.8%), e-mail address (78.1%), street address (60.7%) and past transactions (46.8%). Consumers were least likely to allow retailers to track weight (14.4%), income (12.5%), job title (12.1%), employer (10.9%) and net worth (8.2%).

“Retailers looking to create loyalty will need to walk a fine line between specializing their services to customers and invading their privacy,” said Kathy Mance, NRF Foundation VP, in a statement. “The more trust and goodwill a retailer builds, the more likely it is they will have a long-term loyal customer base.”

When it comes to reaching new customers this year, television (31.7%) has replaced direct mail (21%) as the best way to get shoppers to try a new retailer. Word of mouth (17.7%) remains influential, but underestimated, the study found.

As for ineffective ad methods, only 3.5% of consumers found Internet advertising effective in influence their choice of retailer. Ads before a movie got a 2.3% response, product placement 1.8% and radio 0.4%.

“While the fading of the 30-second spot is underway on Madison Avenue, retail consumers clearly still see TV as the most effective way to choose a new retailer,” said Gary A. Williams, managing officer of research for Adjoined Consulting, which co-developed the study with the NRF Foundation. “Traditional advertising isn’t going away anytime soon, but is more likely to morph into the integrated channel approach consumers already desire when making a purchase.”

The multi-channel shopping approach is appreciated by consumers who want to shop and buy seamlessly across numerous channels, such as the brick-and-mortar and online stores as well as the catalog. The majority of consumers (70.2%) use a combination of all three shopping channels compared to stores only (17.5%) or online only (2.9%). Of those consumers that choose physical locations, indoor malls (36%) were the preferred option, followed by stand alone (28.4%) and strip malls (14.5%).

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