The switch to using reward points means customers directly benefit when they order more and more often. Noodle & Co also gamifies its loyalty program with tiers and additional benefits that can be unlocked.
But the most significant aspect of the program’s transformation is mental, going from serving up random benefits to a system “based on personalized [and] targeted offers to individual guests,” Hagen said.
Good point
Noodle & Company isn’t the first quick-serve chain to make this same transition when it comes to loyalty marketing. Chipotle once had random free burritos for customers who drew the lucky foil (the burrito wrapper). Since the pandemic began, it’s invested heavily in a rewards-based loyalty app.
Points-based rewards don’t just offer a cleaner value prop to loyal customers, but also represent a valuable shift for the business, Hagen said, because the loyalty program generates a multipurpose first-party data set. If Noodle is testing new items on its menu, for example, the loyalty program is the best way to measure success because it’s a group of known individuals who have given consent for their data to be used for analytics and other purposes.
Although in some ways it’s easier to get people to sign up for a “surprise and delight”-style loyalty program, the rewards aren’t as good for the company.
A program that isn’t personalized doesn’t need to be anchored by an authenticated real-world identity, such as a phone number and email. Someone can just show up, sign up and receive the bennies. A points-based (aka, data-based) loyalty program, on the other hand, requires shuffling customers through an app install process.
But once a company lands a new member, it’s got an anchored profile to which it can append all sorts of other data, including online advertising identity data and purchase data.
Test and learn
Noodle & Company’s renewed focus on its loyalty program coincides with a marketing strategy that involved moving into multiple new media channels.
App-install acquisition marketing is an unsurprising one, since Noodle now has an app of its own and is hungry for installs. But it’s also recently added CTV and TikTok and plans to test data-driven out-of-home media offerings for the first time this year, Hagen said.
The company’s expansion into channels like CTV and TikTok is directly tied to its loyalty program revamp. Although they aren’t particularly strong traffic drivers for the program, Hagen said, tracking and analyzing reward members is the main way Noodle & Company can “understand different segments and personas to target within portable media spaces,” Hagen said.
In plain English: Its rewards members are the core data set Noodle uses to create lookalike audiences based on behaviors or demographics it’s targeting.
But its appetite for testing is not just on media. The chain has also added and evaluated many new vendors centered around its loyalty and first-party data program. For instance, Noodle & Co added the marketing personalization vendor Movable Ink, which helps with creating lookalike audiences. Another new vendor is Branch, the mobile deep linking and analytics service.
The loyalty program is only becoming more central to Noodle’s marketing strategy as signal loss becomes a bigger challenge for the industry overall. Other data sources, such as online advertising or outside data vendors that use emails to match anonymous profiles, are more and more often “masked by privacy proxies,” he said.
Apple’s AppTrackingTransparency (ATT) framework, for instance, blocks many emails that otherwise could be used for syncing so Noodle & Co would know that a subscriber to one news site or another app is a match to its known customer. Those connections are less common now, because Apple doesn’t allow cross-app or app-to-web tracking. But with a larger first-party data set – and more customers opting in to allow tracking through the loyalty program – the linkages can return.
A first-party data set is like a spiderweb. It doesn’t need to cover everything but, at some point, the web reaches a critical mass and flies start getting stuck.
Noodle & Co is now in the process of testing more potential vendors for media analytics without third-party cookies, Hagen said, which is the next big change on the horizon after ATT.
“These changes absolutely affect our day to day already,” he said of the pending deprecation of third-party cookies in Chrome and Google Android’s coming restrictions on ad tracking.
“It’s a huge part of why we’re focused on first-party data and driving up the reward member population,” Hagen said. “We know the value of that data.”
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April 18, 2022 at 08:55PM
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Noodle & Company On Its Growing Appetite For Loyalty Program Data - AdExchanger
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