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Customer loyalty strategy: how to build a system that keeps the right customers for the long haul

Updated: May 13, 2025 Published: May 9, 2025
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At its core, a customer loyalty strategy just means a plan to earn, maintain, and grow loyalty in ways that support long-term business goals — not just repeat purchases.

Most articles about customer loyalty are just lists of tactics. Send a thank-you email. Offer a discount. Run a referral program. And that’s all fine. But if you want loyalty to drive real growth, you need more than a bag of tricks. You need a system.

So that’s what we’re talking about today: what big-picture processes can you put in place that grow and maintain customer loyalty. From the practical stuff — “implement a loyalty program” — to the more abstract — “understand the different kinds of loyalty”.

“Retention” and “loyalty” are closely related, but not quite the same

People often use “retention strategy” and “loyalty strategy” interchangeably. But they’re not the same.

Retention is a metric. It tracks whether customers keep coming back over time, and how often they disappear. It’s about repeat behavior: purchases made, churn avoided, subscriptions renewed.

Loyalty is broader. It can (and usually does) include retention, but also covers how customers feel about your brand — whether they trust you, advocate for you, and prefer you over the competition.

You can retain customers without true loyalty. Think discount-oriented shoppers who come back for sales, or subscribers who stay because cancelling feels like a hassle. That’s not always a bad thing, but it’s fragile.

Loyalty is more resilient. It can include emotional connection, values alignment, or habit, not just behavior. A loyal customer could shop less often, but when they do, they spend big, leave reviews, and bring friends.

The best strategies aim for both high retention and strong loyalty.

In this article, we want to talk about strategies for building proper, dyed-in-the-wool loyalty.

And, like any strategy, it starts with knowing what you want to achieve.

Your loyalty strategy should start with your goals — what do you want to accomplish, and why?

Before you launch a loyalty program — or even pick a rewards mechanic — you need to define what success looks like. That means setting clear goals tied to business outcomes and revenue growth. But more than that, it means understanding what loyalty needs to do for your specific business model.

Start by asking:

  • What business challenge are we trying to solve?
  • Where are we losing value across the customer journey?
  • What behavior, if increased or improved, would make the biggest difference to revenue growth?

Common goals include:

  • increasing customer lifetime value (CLV), often by improving retention, order frequency, or average order value
  • reducing churn in vulnerable segments
  • encouraging adoption of new or underused products
  • shifting purchasing behavior toward more profitable SKUs: by spotlighting bundles, exclusives, or premium ranges
  • Growing advocacy and referrals: by turning loyalists into amplifiers

The right goal for you will depend on your category, margins, and customer behavior:

  • A direct-to-consumer pet food brand might notice a sharp drop-off after first delivery. Their goal: increase second-order conversion rate within 14 days.
  • A premium homeware brand might see strong retention but low average order value (AOV). Their goal: increase average basket size among the top 20% of buyers.
  • A beauty subscription box might be able to bring in new customers cheaply and have healthy profit margins, but they might see lots of their customers cancel within a month or two. Their goal: increase three-month stickiness among new signups.

The more specific the goal, the more clearly you can measure success, and the more useful your loyalty strategy becomes.

Structure: build systems that reward the right behavior

This is the engine room of your loyalty strategy. A program’s structure determines how loyalty is shaped, scaled, and sustained. 

If the structure’s wrong, you end up rewarding customers for being present, not profitable.

When planning your structure, think about:

Program type and reward logic

Your reward structure shapes the kind of loyalty you’re likely to build. Each model nudges customers toward different types of engagement.

  • Points-based programs drive frequency and average order value, but without caps or smart rules, they risk training customers to shop only for discounts.
  • Tiered programs can be aspirational, but they need to feel achievable. Nobody’s going to engage if they’ve got no hope of reaching the next tier.
  • Paid programs like Amazon Prime work well when the perceived value is clear, but they can backfire if benefits aren’t strong (and regularly made stronger).
  • Values-based programs build long-term connection, but demand transparency and commitment. A token donation on checkout won’t cut it.

Even more important is how you assign rewards:

  • Are points tied to margin-rich products or all purchases?
  • Are referrals rewarded equally, or are high-value referrals treated differently?
  • Do you recognize non-purchase behaviors, like writing reviews, sharing content, or attending events?

If you don’t calculate these things right, your reward logic might encourage the wrong behaviors — or miss the most valuable ones altogether.

Behavioral incentives

Not all loyalty is created equal. To grow profitably, you need to drive the kinds of customer behavior that align with your margins, product economics, and growth model.

For many brands, that might mean:

  • shifting more volume to high-margin SKUs
  • getting customers to try a new product line
  • encouraging subscription adoption
  • deepening engagement with community or content

A loyalty program is your tool for guiding these behaviors. But to use it properly, you need to:

  • identify what behaviors actually move revenue or reduce cost
  • quantify the impact of those behaviors
  • build incentives that make it easy — and worthwhile — for customers to act

For example, if upselling to bundles increases AOV by 40%, you could offer a bonus tier unlocked only by multi-item purchases. Or, if referrals drive highly profitable customers, you give out more reward points than you would for a typical purchase.

Critically, behavioral incentives should evolve. A loyalty program that helped you scale to 10,000 customers may not serve you at 100,000, especially if unit economics or churn patterns shift.

Segmentation and targeting

Some customers offer more value to your brand than others. And different customers have different motivations. Treating them the same is an easy way to waste money and dilute loyalty ROI.

So you need to get smart with your segmentation.

True segmentation isn’t just about frequency or spend. It’s about the:

  • customer lifecycle stage
  • product mix and profitability
  • acquisition source
  • support usage and servicing cost
  • referral likelihood

For example:

  • customers who buy premium products but order infrequently may be great candidates for tiered perks or early access.
  • high-frequency buyers of low-margin items might need nudges toward bundling or cross-sells.
  • new customers may respond better to onboarding milestones than broad discounts.

Done well, segmentation helps you:

  • run smarter campaigns (e.g., extra points for lapsed customers with high past AOV)
  • minimize over-rewarding (e.g., don’t keep giving 10% off to someone who already buys every month)
  • test and adapt (e.g., offer different perks to cohorts and compare lifetime value over time)

Effective loyalty strategy isn’t just about giving. It’s about giving selectively and strategically.

Ease of use and customer experience

If your loyalty program is confusing, clunky, or slow to deliver gratification, customers won’t use it. 

Worse, they might walk away frustrated, especially if they feel they’ve earned something and can’t access it.

In particular, avoid:

  • poor visibility into how many points your customers have, what those points mean, and how close they are to a reward
  • complex rules that require digging through fine print
  • disjointed redemption experiences (e.g., having to log into a separate system or app)

Strong UX principles for loyalty programs include:

  • embedded progress cues: Let customers see exactly how far they are from a goal, just like Fitbit does for steps
  • seamless redemption: Enable 1-click use of points or vouchers at checkout
  • mobile-first access: Especially in ecommerce, the app or mobile site should prioritize loyalty at every touchpoint
  • confirmation and reward loops: When a reward is unlocked, celebrate it — even small moments matter for perceived value

When your loyalty program feels rewarding and easy to use, loyalty builds faster and feels better for both sides, and you get higher redemption rates.

Operational scalability

As customer loyalty increases its impact on your revenue growth, things get more complex. Behind the scenes, your structure needs to be robust enough to support long-term growth of the program, and flexible enough to evolve when your goals, margins, or customer base change. 

That’s where many loyalty programs break down. They’re built for launch, but not for iteration.

Common problems include:

  • Technical rigidity: If you hard-code rewards logic or build your loyalty program on inflexible architecture, it becomes difficult to update or personalize.
  • Lack of reporting depth: Without granular cohort and redemption data, you can’t see which parts of your program are working — or why margins are shrinking.

Manual admin and segmentation: If marketing teams are running promotions through spreadsheets and guesswork, it’s hard make the right choices about what to scale next, and how.

How to fix it:

A scalable structure allows you to run smarter campaigns, identify weak spots, and adapt quickly. Without it, loyalty becomes a maintenance burden rather than a strategic asset.

Feedback and improvement: keep your program alive

Great loyalty programs aren’t static. What delighted customers six months ago might be taken for granted today. Product lines evolve, margins shift, customer expectations rise. Loyalty strategies need to adapt.

Iteration isn’t a bonus. It’s the work.

How to measure customer loyalty

You can’t iterate without measurement. The right metrics will depend on your goals, but strong programs usually track a mix of behavior, satisfaction, and profitability:

  • Repeat purchase rate: Are existing customers coming back?
  • Customer lifetime value (CLV): Is loyalty translating into revenue growth over time?
  • Redemption rate: Are customers using their points or rewards? High redemption means high engagement — and can signal over- or under-incentivization.
  • Churn rate: Where and when are customers dropping off?
  • Net Promoter Score (NPS): Are customers satisfied enough to refer others?
  • Referral conversion rate: Are those referrals turning into new business?

Engagement with loyalty touchpoints: Are customers opening loyalty emails, clicking reminders, and checking point balances?

Build a feedback loop

To evolve your loyalty program effectively, you need a steady stream of insight, not just broad survey results once a year. A proper feedback loop blends real-time behavioral data with direct customer input to note what’s working and what’s wearing out.

Start with structured data:

  • Segmented NPS and CSAT scores: Slice by tenure, loyalty tier, and recency of purchase to uncover patterns. A sharp drop in CSAT (customer satisfaction) from new shoppers might suggest onboarding issues. A dip in NPS from your best spenders could signal waning perceived value.
  • Rates of engagement with rewards: Which rewards are being redeemed? Which are ignored? Which result in follow-up purchases?

Customer journey drop-off points: Are customers enrolling in your program but never redeeming? Are app users not checking their points balances?

Then layer in qualitative insight:

  • Mini-surveys triggered in-program: Ask short, targeted questions using pop-ups on the website or app, right after a reward is redeemed or a tier is hit.
  • Support tickets tagged to loyalty themes: Are customers confused about how to earn points? Are perks arriving late?
  • Community and review mining: Watch for recurring praise or frustration on social platforms and product reviews.

Refresh rewards and structure regularly

Stagnation is a loyalty killer. When rewards don’t change or perks feel recycled, customers disengage. They may still buy, but they stop caring. That’s why a successful loyalty strategy includes a calendar for structural refresh and reward rotation.

How to stay fresh:

  • Review redemption patterns quarterly: Are certain rewards being ignored? Are your best customers maxing out and then coasting?
  • Introduce seasonal bonuses: Tie perks to holidays, product launches, or customer anniversaries to reignite attention.
  • Add dynamic reward layers: Test surprise-and-delight bonuses or tier boosts based on milestones or unprompted referrals.

To make sure these changes are additive — rather than confusing — communicate them clearly. Use loyalty dashboards, in-app prompts, and follow-up emails to highlight what’s new and why it matters.

Example: A wellness brand finds customers drop off after three months. They launch a milestone bonus box, delivered automatically after a fourth month of continued subscription, exclusively for members of their subscription loyalty tier. Not only does this push customers over the churn threshold, it reinforces the value of sticking around.

Monitor signals of decline

If you wait until sales decline to refresh your loyalty program, it’s already too late. The earliest signs show up in engagement and micro-behaviors, but only if you know what to look for.

Start by identifying baseline metrics by segment:

  • Redemption rate over time
  • Email open and click-through rates for loyalty campaigns
  • Logins or app visits (if loyalty is app-based)
  • Time between purchases for repeat buyers
  • Drop-off from enrollment to first reward

Then look for deviations:

  • A drop in reward redemptions among high-spending customers could mean they’ve stopped seeing the value of being part of the loyalty program
  • Falling open rates from previously engaged members could indicate fatigue — or content irrelevance
  • Slower repurchase intervals could mean you’re no longer top of mind

How to act:

  • Set up alerts when KPIs drop more than a certain threshold
  • Schedule monthly reviews segmented by behavior and tenure
  • Re-engage slipping cohorts with personalized messages or time-sensitive offers

Types of customer loyalty — and why they matter

Not all loyalty looks the same. Some customers stay because of the perks. Others stay because of who you are.

Understanding different types of loyalty helps you build better strategies and better loyalty programs.

Incentivized loyalty

Customers stay because they’re rewarded. Points, discounts, free gifts: if you stop offering them, the loyalty might disappear.

This is the easiest kind of loyalty to build. But it’s also the least durable.

Useful for: driving short-term sales and increasing purchase frequency.

What to watch: it can become transactional and fragile if not balanced with deeper forms of loyalty.

Habitual loyalty

Customers come back out of habit. They know your product. They trust it. Reordering is easier than switching.

Habitual loyalty can build because you have an effective customer experience. But it can also just be the result of inertia, which is a big risk.

Useful for: low-effort retention, especially in categories like consumables, personal care, or subscriptions.

What to watch: if the product or experience slips, customers may churn quickly.

Emotional loyalty

This is the strongest kind. Customers feel a connection. They believe in your brand. They defend you, even when you mess up.

Useful for: long-term advocacy and high-margin loyalty.

What to watch: emotional loyalty takes longer to build — and often requires values alignment.

Ethical or values-based loyalty

Customers stay because your values align with theirs. Sustainability, fairness, activism — loyalty is tied to identity.

Useful for: standing out in crowded or commoditized markets.

What to watch: values have to be authentic and visible, not just part of the tagline. If it’s fake, it can backfire.

Case studies: what real loyalty strategies look like

Sephora: tiered loyalty as brand experience

Sephora’s Beauty Insider is one of the best loyalty programs around. It combines transactional perks with emotional benefits and brand exclusivity. Members climb through tiers — Insider, VIB, and Rouge — unlocking increasingly valuable rewards as they go.

What makes this strategic:

  • Tiers encourage spend escalation. The next tier feels close enough to justify one more purchase.
  • Rewards (like birthday gifts or early access to products) build emotional attachment.
  • Community incentives (e.g. events and reviews) foster social proof and peer advocacy.

Result: Sephora’s loyalty members account for up to 80% of revenue, according to internal reports.

Amazon: paid loyalty to reduce friction and increase stickiness

Amazon Prime isn’t just a bundle of perks — it’s a friction-reduction strategy designed to make Amazon the default for everything. By charging upfront, it creates a sunk cost mindset — and reorients customer behavior around convenience, not just price.

What makes this strategic:

  • It removes decision points. Customers stop price-checking and go straight to Amazon.
  • It creates ecosystem lock-in through services like Prime Video and Music.
  • It supports retention by continuously adding value over time (e.g. faster delivery, early access, exclusive deals).
  • It means Amazon doesn’t have to compete only on price — very powerful in the kind of commoditized ecommerce markets in which Amazon operates.
  • It creates a pre-existing audience when Amazon moves into other markets — think of Prime Video.

Result: Prime members spend an average of $1,400 per year compared to $600 for non-members

Starbucks: loyalty built into the customer journey

Starbucks Rewards doesn’t sit on the side. It’s integrated into how customers pay, order, and engage with the brand. The app combines rewards, ordering, payment, and personalization in a single flow.

What makes this strategic:

  • It drives habitual behavior — users get Stars for every purchase, building toward free drinks.
  • It integrates ordering into the app, reducing queues and increasing app use.
  • It allows Starbucks to personalize offers and suggest relevant upsells.

Result: Starbucks Rewards members generate about 41% of US revenue.

Patagonia: values-based loyalty through mission

Patagonia’s loyalty strategy is built on brand mission, not transactions. They don’t run a formal rewards program. Instead, they cultivate emotional and values-based loyalty by consistently living their brand purpose.

What makes this strategic:

  • They reinforce sustainability through repair programs, resale platforms, and donation commitments.
  • They use storytelling and activism to build an identity customers want to belong to.
  • Their brand decisions — like donating company ownership to fight climate change — deepen emotional investment.

Result: Patagonia is consistently ranked as one of the most trusted brands in the US.

Customer loyalty is key to profitable growth — and a good rewards program is the key to customer loyalty

Without loyal customers, there’s a risk you get locked into a cycle of expensive customer acquisition and low profit margins. Great customer loyalty starts with a great loyalty program.

If you think a loyalty program could help your ecommerce business growth, book a demo.