Consumers Receptive to Restaurant Rewards Programs

January 21, 2013

This article is included in these additional categories:

Boomers & Older | Food & Restaurants | Promotions, Coupons & Co-op | Radio | Youth & Gen X

Loyalogy-Restaurant-Rewards-Programs-Jan2013Close to 2 in 3 consumers with household incomes of at least $75,000 would be more likely to recommend a restaurant to others if it offered an appealing rewards program, finds Loyalogy in a new study examining consumer attitudes to restaurant rewards programs. The study also reveals that consumers estimate that a rewards program would result in them increasing their visit rate to a restaurant by an average of 35%.

The report shows that while just 1 in 10 consumers have actually paid to become part of a restaurant rewards program, half would do so if they felt the value exchange was adequate. The vast majority of respondents said that they prefer a program with a “clearly-defined proposition in which they earn points for rewards” rather than one “built solely on periodic, surprise free items.”

Attitudes and usage of rewards programs likely differ by age, and there has been a fairly significant demographic shake-up in restaurant visits over the past 5 years, per details from an NPD Group study. That study finds that the 55+ crowd has increased its share of restaurant traffic by 6% points since 2008, while Millennials have dropped their share of traffic by a corresponding 6% points.

About the Data: The LoyaltyPulse study was conducted through an online survey of U.S. consumers between the ages of 25 and 65 with household incomes of $75,000 or more. The respondents were selected from an online research panel provided by The Sample Network.

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