Retail Times — UK Retail News
NFU Mutual
ADVERTISEMENT
  • HOME
  • ABOUT
    • CONTACT & Press release submit page
    • ADVERTISING
  • PRODUCTS
  • TECH
  • DATA
    • Reports
    • Research
  • RETAILER
    • Manufacturer
    • Wholesaler
  • PEOPLE
  • SUSTAINABILITY
    • Fairtrade
    • Packaging
  • SERVICES
    • Events
    • Awards
    • Logistics
  • COMMENT
    • In My Opinion
    • Featured Article
    • Why It Works
  • RETAIL CATEGORIES
No Result
View All Result
Retail Times — UK Retail News
No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • ABOUT
    • CONTACT & Press release submit page
    • ADVERTISING
  • PRODUCTS
  • TECH
  • DATA
    • Reports
    • Research
  • RETAILER
    • Manufacturer
    • Wholesaler
  • PEOPLE
  • SUSTAINABILITY
    • Fairtrade
    • Packaging
  • SERVICES
    • Events
    • Awards
    • Logistics
  • COMMENT
    • In My Opinion
    • Featured Article
    • Why It Works
  • RETAIL CATEGORIES
Retail Times — UK Retail News
No Result
View All Result
Home Retail News Data

Retail loyalty hits a crossroads as customer expectations outpace programme evolution

by Fiona Briggs
July 9, 2025
in Data
Reading Time: 2 mins read

Retail loyaltyLoyalty remains a strategic priority for retailers, but traditional approaches are no longer enough. That’s according to the findings of ‘How to Keep Hold of Your Customers’, a new global study released today by dunnhumby, the global leader in AI and customer data science.

Drawing on insights from senior retail leaders across Europe and North America, in-depth interviews with Ashwin Prasad (Tesco UK CEO), Bryan Roberts (IGD) and Marek Świderski (Synerise), as well as insights from thousands of grocery shoppers, ‘How to Keep Hold of Your Customers’ points to an industry in flux. As shoppers demand relevance and recognition, retailers are rethinking the very foundations of loyalty, what it means today, and how their programmes must evolve to meet expectations in the years ahead.

Some of the study’s key findings include:

  • Customer retention remains the top concern. For many retailers, price sensitivity and limited insight into “less loyal” shoppers are seen as some of the biggest issues.
  • Traditional approaches are losing effectiveness. Faced with the prospect of budget cuts, retailers would cut generic rebates and coupons, choosing to protect their personalisation efforts instead.
  • Shoppers agree that loyalty needs to evolve. Basic discounts are no longer enough. Today’s shoppers are looking for exclusive offers and rewards that match their own needs and values. Relevance is non-negotiable.
  • Effective loyalty programmes drive business performance. Retailers that excel enjoy a deeper emotional connection with customers, see stronger commercial performance, and tend to boast a higher CAGR than their competitors.
  • Retailers are looking beyond grocery for inspiration. Beauty and lifestyle brands are commonly cited as innovation inspirations.

Three strategic priorities for retailers

As well as exploring current approaches to loyalty, ‘How to Keep Hold of Your Customers’ also identifies three future focal points for retailers. From tackling the threat of loyalty programme homogenisation to developing the capabilities required for meaningful personalisation, the study contains a wealth of advice for those looking to position themselves effectively for the next phase of loyalty and personalisation.

Ben Snowman, global head of loyalty and personalisation, dunnhumby, says: “Loyalty isn’t broken, but it does need to change. Shoppers now expect more than ever in terms of relevance and personalisation, and that requires retailers to ask some difficult questions about their own approach. As technology makes it easier for retailers to deliver true 1:1 personalisation, they’ll need to work smarter than ever to stand out.”

The report includes perspectives on loyalty and personalisation from a range of industry names, including Ashwin Prasad, UK CEO, Tesco, who says: “Loyalty is about all the little things, every single day, every interaction and showing customers that we’re listening, we care, and we’re reliable. At Tesco we bring loyalty back to what really matters: serving customers better. Loyalty and personalisation aren’t abstract — they’re about earning respect by being useful, relevant, and fair.”

Retailers can download the report today to benchmark their loyalty strategy and access practical guidance: dunnhumby.com/resources/reports/loyalty-personalisation/en/customer-loyalty-personalisation-strategies/

Share This Article

Similar News Articles:

  1. New survey reveals: UK consumers call on AI to save “broken” customer service, as businesses fail to deliver on customer expectations The results of a new survey into the customer service industry have been released, revealing a growing call from UK...
  2. New research reveals the majority of retail brands expect increased investment into customer loyalty A new survey by digital products leader, Apadmi, has found the majority (67%) of businesses expect investment in digital loyalty to...
Tags: Retail loyalty
ADVERTISEMENT

Related Posts

Two thirds of shoppers want to use agentic AI, but control, security and transparency concerns slow uptake

June 23, 2026

Commerce (Nasdaq: CMRC), a data-centric provider of an open, AI-driven commerce ecosystem that enables businesses...

New research reveals AI shopping backlash and the hidden ‘Growth Tax’ holding retailers back

June 23, 2026

A widening gap between the promise of AI-driven ecommerce and the reality of legacy retail...

Snapchat and Mindscope reveal how audiences are ditching public performance for more private connection

June 23, 2026

Snapchat and Mindscope today unveil Reset Velocity™, a new proprietary behavioural research model designed to...

Iced coffee sales set to boom during UK heatwave

June 23, 2026

With temperatures rising across the UK this week, transaction data from Square, the global payments...

Worldpanel by Numerator: record May temperatures drive summer spending as grocery sales rise by 2.4%

June 23, 2026

Take-home sales at the grocers increased by 2.4% in the four weeks to 14 June...

NIQ: supermarket growth cools after end of May heatwave while World Cup fever drives surge in online and promotional spending

June 23, 2026

Total Till sales at UK supermarkets rose (+4.6%) in the four weeks ending 13th June,...

Load More

🗞️ Trending Retail News

  • Wild,

    Emma Raducanu, global ambassador for Wild, launches her own scent with the brand

    2 shares
    Share 1 Tweet 1
  • Waitrose becomes the first supermarket to move to free range cream

    34 shares
    Share 14 Tweet 9
  • Astrid & Miyu announces the launch of new Lucky Charm collection

    33 shares
    Share 13 Tweet 8
  • July rain causes Brits to choose hearty roasts over barbecues, Ocado Retail reports

    34 shares
    Share 14 Tweet 9
  • Retail sales rebound in June, boosted by warm weather and events, latest figures from the ONS reveal

    33 shares
    Share 13 Tweet 8
  • SRSLY Low Carb adds tangy sweet pickle to range

    33 shares
    Share 13 Tweet 8

FEATURED ARTICLES

Securing The Future of Retail

Securing the future of retail through seamless omnichannel integration

March 23, 2026
appealing to the new emotional economics of festive shopping

Smug-face and FOMO: appealing to the new emotional economics of festive shopping

October 27, 2025
Journey to AI: build strong foundations for retail success

Journey to AI: build strong foundations for retail success

September 2, 2025
eTail Uk 2026 eTail Uk 2026 eTail Uk 2026
ADVERTISEMENT
retail crime protection retail crime protection
ADVERTISEMENT
nfu mutual nfu mutual
ADVERTISEMENT

Find the Story You Need

No Result
View All Result
  • Home Page
  • Editorial – Contact
  • Advertising
  • Copyright
  • Privacy & Cookie Policy
  • Retailer News
  • Products
  • Data
  • Technology
  • Events
  • People
  • Comment
  • Sustainability
  • Awards
  • Research
No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • Featured Articles
  • Retail News Categories
  • About us
  • Advertising
  • Contact / Press release submit page
  • Privacy policy