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To succeed in Web3, brands must understand that the future of loyalty is not about locking customers into closed systems. It’s about making them free, free to own their data, control their rewards, and interact with brands on their own terms. Loyalty programs have never been more popular, but they’ve never seemed more outdated. As the inflation crisis subsides, customers continue to trade their personal information for deals, gaining access at “normal” prices while non-members pay extra.
This tactic, although counterintuitive, works. According to Antavo Global Customer Loyalty Report 202367.7% of companies plan to increase their investments in loyalty programs to retain customers in the face of inflation. And 79% of U.S. consumers have taken the bait and are spending more with brands that offer loyalty benefits, Statista reports.
Yet this rush to loyalty has revealed that traditional loyalty programs are losing relevance. But a solution is on the horizon. Blockchain technology has emerged as a potentially radical alternative to the tried-and-true loyalty programs that many brands retain.
Walled gardens and limited use cases
Anecdotally, traditional loyalty programs operate in walled gardens where customer data is siled and rewards are limited to specific use cases. To thrive, these models have long relied on third-party cookies and opaque data practices.
However, as privacy regulations tighten and cookies are phased out, these models are quickly losing viability. The result? Loyalty ineffectiveness due to unused points, shallow engagement, and fragmented data. Additionally, thanks to increasingly frequent data breaches, consumers are becoming increasingly cautious about how their data is collected and used, with many opting out of loyalty programs altogether.
In the digital age, traditional loyalty frameworks have started to break down. Today’s customers no longer have to be locked into closed systems, and brands can no longer take customer buy-in for granted. Instead, brands must convincingly explain why sharing personal information is worth a customer’s engagement.
That’s where blockchain comes in. Because while traditional loyalty programs are like store gift cards that can only be used in one place, blockchain-based loyalty is like cash: fungible and usable almost anywhere without revealing the customer’s identity.
In this framework, smart contracts ensure transparency, while user-owned wallets return control to consumers, redefining the value exchange between brands and their customers.
Revamp loyalty one block at a time
Imagine a loyalty program that runs seamlessly in the background, powered by blockchain but invisible to the user. Shoppers earn tokens for their purchases and interactions, redeemable for discounts, experiences, or even tradeable with others. Unlike traditional points, these tokens are completely owned by the consumer and stored securely in a digital wallet.
Dynamic NFTs offer a glimpse into the future of on-chain loyalty. These customizable, tokenized assets scale with user engagement: think NFT badges that unlock exclusive products or benefits, like Lululemon Rewards allowing you to earn a free month of personal training at your gym. These dynamic tokens can be adapted to the customer experience. By leveraging AI, brands can add security measures such as verifiable credentials to help create personalized experiences.
Now, with verifiable credentials in this framework, users can share only the information they want, while brands can use modular on-chain tools to create personalized loyalty experiences tailored to individual preferences. The result is a loyalty program that is less intrusive, more authentic and more engaging than traditional means.
Although we are still very early in discovering these potential benefits, the idea of technological abstraction has been one of the main drivers of this paradigm. Some have even compared this development to the rise of cloud computing (like Amazon Web Services), where consumers don’t see the technology they’re interacting with, but simply the optimal user experience it creates.
Sign up for the future of loyalty
As cookies disappear and data privacy concerns rise, a growing number of brands are now asking a crucial question: “How can we make loyalty programs so compelling that users actively choose to participate in them?” ?
The answer lies in creating experiences that are truly valuable to customers. Gone are the days of buy 10, get 1 free. These traditional incentives (which don’t really feel like incentives anymore) can now be replaced with on-chain rewards like collectibles, leaderboards, or token-gated experiences.
Brands still need to exercise caution when entering this new paradigm. Superficial attempts to put products on-chain have failed spectacularly on Web3. After years of refinement, the general consensus is that simply tokenizing existing loyalty programs without rethinking the value propositions is a recipe for experiments to fail.
As blockchain technology evolves, brands that embrace this paradigm will thrive, unlocking transformative rewards not only for their customers but also for themselves.