A Closer Look at Starbucks Rewards Program Redesign

Changes are coming to Starbucks Rewards. On April 16, Starbucks Rewards will be expanding its reward structure to five levels. A few other changes will be made to the program too. Will these changes make this leading loyalty program even better? What might be motivating these changes? How will the changes affect the program and its members? In this post, I attempt to dissect these changes and offer my assessment of the new Starbucks Rewards program design.

What Changes Exactly?

The biggest change to the program is the addition of more reward thresholds. Instead of a single reward threshold of 125 stars, it will feature five levels of rewards ranging from 25 to 400 stars. The new program will also erase the current difference between a Gold member and a base member, allowing both to enjoy the same set of benefits. The table below compares the current vs. the new program structure.

Starbucks Rewards Logo
Current
From April 16, 2019
Earning Stars2 stars per $ spent2 stars per $ spent (unchanged)
Reward LevelsA single level, at 125 starsFive levels, at 25, 50, 150, 200, and 400 stars
Reward ItemsA free food or drink item, excluding alcoholic beverages and multi-serve food and beverage items25 stars: free drink customization (e.g., extra shot, flavor, etc.);
50 stars: a free hot brewed coffee or tea, or a free bakery item;
150 stars: a free handcrafted drink, hot breakfast, or parfait;
200 stars: a free lunch sandwich, protein box, or salad;
400 stars: a free select merchandise (e.g., gift) or at-home coffee.
Membership Tier StructureGreen and gold. Gold is qualified by earning 300 stars in a 12-month period.Single tier
Base Tier Benefits
  • A birthday reward
  • Free in-store refills of hot or iced brewed coffee and tea
  • Early or extended access to some promotions and offers
  • Personalized offers and coupons
  • Can NOT redeem stars for free rewards until after reaching Gold level
Same as before, but now everyone has the same ability to redeem their earned stars for rewards. All members now also receive a monthly double-star day that used to be reserved for Gold members.
Gold Tier Benefits
  • All Green benefits
  • The ability to redeem every 125 stars earned for a free reward
  • A double-star day as selected by Starbucks
  • A personalized gold card
Not applicable, as there will no longer be a premium tier. Gold members do not lose any benefits. They just have to share them with everyone else.
Star Expiration6 months after the star is earned6 months after the star is earned (unchanged)

More Complex Reward Thresholds

The new design significantly expands the reward structure of the program from one to five levels. What could be driving this change?

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Research Focus: Who Benefits in a Coalition Loyalty Program?

Many loyalty programs do not stand alone. Frequent flyer programs and hotel loyalty programs take on partners such as other airlines, hotels, restaurants, banks, and retailers. Other programs, such as Fuel Rewards in the US and Air Miles in Canada, are by design a coalition of businesses that come together to share a common program currency and reward structure. For consumers, such coalition programs are great because they allow consumers to earn points faster through many different means. But what about the participating businesses? Is it worthwhile to be part of such a program? If you do, should you set a generous point earning and redemption policy? In today’s Research Focus feature, I find some answers in a recent Marketing Science Institute Working Paper (Report No. 19-101) by Professor Stourm and her colleagues.

What Did They Do?

The researchers looked at a credit card based coalition loyalty program in Europe. In the program, card holders earn points by shopping at various partner businesses. Each participating business decides its own reward ratios, from less than 1% up to 3%. When a preset reward threshold is reached, consumers are automatically issued a reward voucher that they can use toward future purchases. Participating businesses can choose whether they accept reward vouchers or not. Accepting reward vouchers comes at a short-term cost as the program operator reimburses only 90% of the values of the vouchers.

In their analyses, the researchers focused their attention on one particular European city. They studied 1,636 consumers that used their card at least once across 40 partner stores located in the city. The research team was interested in finding out whether offering rewards created positive or negative impact among these partner stores, what businesses benefited, and how point devaluation as a result of an overall program policy change affected the landscape.

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Pointers on Behavioral Segmentation

Behavioral segmentation is the practice of segmenting your customers based on what they do. I wrote previously about the basics of behavioral segmentation. During the last year, I’ve been putting it into practice through a customer segmentation project with a CASC business partner. Today I’d like to share with you some of the lessons I’ve learned through that experience.

NOT Just an Analytics Exercise

Behavioral segmentation has the advantage of revealing segments of similarly behaved consumers that you may not have thought of previously. It requires a lot of data crunching. There is no doubt about that. However, it is important to remember that behavioral segmentation is not entirely an exercise in numbers. If data crunching is all that you do, you risk creating segments that either are based on artificial or fake relationships or are not very actionable from a target marketing perspective.

Successful behavioral segmentation should be a collaborative exercise between your analytics team and those who have a good grasp of your business and your customers. The latter are most likely found in your marketing or sales department. The process of behavioral segmentation should be developed as an iterative process that goes back and forth between analytics and marketing. The analytics team should start by understanding from the marketing team the purpose of the segmentation exercise, the observed behaviors at hand, and the capability of marketing to implement behavioral segmentation insights. Based on this initial information, the analytics team can produce an initial set of behavioral segments based on customer data.

This initial segmentation scheme should be presented to the marketing team both to make sense of the results and to see if meaningful actions can be taken to target each segment. The input from the marketing team is then fed back to the next round of data crunching to adjust the segmentation focus and approach. This process is repeated until both sides are satisfied with a meaningful set of segments to be implemented in practice.

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