Amanda Cromhout 15 min

Blind Loyalty Challenge with Dr. Nejib Ben Khedher


Dr. Nejib Ben Khedher, Senior Vice President of Emirates Skywards, talks about the evolution of loyalty programs towards lifestyle integration, emphasizing the crucial role of partnerships in enhancing member experiences.



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Hi there, I'm Amanda Cromhoe from Truth. Welcome to the Blind Loyalty Challenge

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. We interview

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world experts in loyalty blindly. We're hoping to create insight, spontaneity

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and a lot of

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fun through the challenge. The challenge is about promoting the Blind Loyalty

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Trust and

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my book called Blind Loyalty, 101 Loyalty Concepts Radically Simplified. All

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prophets from the book

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go towards the trust. We hope you enjoy the Blind Loyalty Challenge.

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So we have Blind Loyalty Challenges and then we have Blind Loyalty Challenges.

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So today I

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have absolute, the absolute pleasure of welcoming Dr. Nadi Benkader who needs

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no introduction

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whatsoever to the loyalty award. So before I give the full title for Nadi, I

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just wanted

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to congratulate you personally on your award as one of the global leaders in

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loyalty from

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the International Lawty Awards and of course Emirates for their divisional

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award of Best

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Middle Eastern Airlines. So you're coming with a couple of awards on your

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shoulders straight

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away. Thank you Amanda. That was more pressure on me now to behave. Yeah, yeah,

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exactly. So

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for those of you who don't know Dr. Nadi Benkader, he is the divisional senior

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vice president

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of Emirates Skywards. Now I have a particular fond interest for the Blind Loyal

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ty Challenge

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with Emirates because you're the company has mentioned so many times, Emirates

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Skywards

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in Blind Loyalty, my book. And you personally, I mentioned in chapter 34. So,

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and actually

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chapter 100 is the top 100 favorite loyalty programs from the Let's Talk Loyal

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ty Show

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from Paula Thomas's show. And Emirates Skywards is featured as the third

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favorite loyalty

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program amongst loyalty professionals. So, Bledbak, I could just spend the

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whole challenge

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talking about all your accolades. Well, thanks, thanks, Amanda. I mean, tribute

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also to Paula and everybody else who and yourself, offering platform also for

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all of us to speak

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about something we're very passionate about. And obviously, it's not about

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ourselves, it's

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also about our teams who are really doing a phenomenal job behind us to just

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make all

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of this happen. So I'm just the face of a great team behind me, who have worked

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extremely

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hard. They provide me with the content that brings me to talk to people like

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you. You

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know, and again, you know, the ranking that you had in the book really is

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something that

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we're very proud of here at Skywards because we're the top airline. So we felt

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really good

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about it, you know, just coming after Starbucks and Amazon. So it was good to

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see that. Yeah,

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without question, you definitely are the top airline. So, wonderful. So let's

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get straight

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into it. So chapter 23 of Blind Loyalty talks about partnerships. So I know

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Emirates is

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no newbie in the world of partnerships. So tell me, like, is it really worth

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all the

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efforts? Like, what is the power of partnerships in the airline industry?

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A good question, Amanda. And well, first of all, I would just add to the 10 P's

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and 11 P,

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which is partnerships.

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I'm going to convince you that it is important.

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I'm going to quote you on that.

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Yeah, the icing on the cake, right? Like the last three P's, you know, just

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have partnerships

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as well. So,

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OK, I need to stop the challenge. I think you've already won the challenge

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because I feel like

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you've read the book more than anyone else. So, thank you very much.

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By the way, I'm passing a thing book in terms of simplicity, but in terms of

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bringing all

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these concepts to everybody who works in the loyalty, but also somebody who's

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actually touching

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on loyalty, like our tech providers and everybody else and our marketeers who

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work side by side

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with us to provide them with a lot of these concepts, with a lot of simplicity.

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But at the same time, very comprehensive, you know, with all the concepts that

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you bring

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to life. You know, for those of us practitioners, I think it's also a

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validation of some of the

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things we were, again, passionate about. But maybe the 12 P is passions.

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We set off together.

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So, anyway, so just on the topic of partnership, because I, you know, when we

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decided to

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transform Skywars, if you will, and take it from just a frequent flyer program

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in 2015-2016

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into truly a lifestyle program, we couldn't do it with other partners, right?

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Like, I mean,

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we could not really provide that access to lifestyle both earn and burn and be

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in people's lives

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on an everyday basis. If it were not for some of the partners we brought into

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the program,

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whether it's retail partners, hotel partners to augment the travel journey for

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our members,

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you know, retail, or port retail partners like Dubai duty free as well, to

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again,

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make that experience the whole travel journey, a rewarding one as well. But

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also the airline

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partners who, you know, an international airline like ours, we need to be also

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very relevant in

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domestic markets and to be able to offer everybody an extension of the Emirates

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network above and

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beyond, you know, whether it's in the US, in Asia, or in Africa, I think it's

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important to have those

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partnerships. So, I think of them as part of building that ecosystem that I

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truly believe in,

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you know, again, you have to be very selective around who you bring into the

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program. They have to be,

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and I use this word, "accretive" to the program, so they're adding something to

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your membership. And,

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you know, you have to have the member in your mind, first and foremost, you

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know, we have,

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this is not about making money, this is about also, you know, driving

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engagement and getting

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partners, getting partners again to be an extension of you in some way or

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fashion.

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I think the key, what you've said there, like in the in Blind Lorty in chapter

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76, I touch on

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FFP and how it's evolved. I mean, I'm an old airline girl, I used to be

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traditional FFP airline

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executive and how the airlines have evolved so dramatically from in the loyalty

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space, from

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airline to lifestyle, exactly as you've just said, and hence the need of

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partnerships. And we touch

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on that in the book as well. Okay, so, I mean, as you just want me to add one

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thing on this FFP

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to lifestyle, I think it was for us a natural progression, if you will, if you

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think about

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MLMs, also is a lifestyle airline, if you will, you know, it's all about the

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experience. Also,

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it's not just a transactional, we're flying you from A to B, it's all about the

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experience,

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you know, whether it's the launch, the check in, what we do on board, you know,

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the bar in the

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back of the 380 etc. So, so for us, it was important for us to take that, you

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know, what the airline

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stands for and try to just, you know, build something from a loyalty in the

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loyalty space that actually

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supports that as well. Yeah, absolutely. Amazing. Great. Well, thank you. Thank

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you for sharing that.

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Another chapter in the book is chapter 64 about gamification. So, this is one

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of those words when

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I touch on it in the boardroom of so many clients or partners, that it's either

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gets a reaction of

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"Yeah, this really makes sense" or "flip, please don't use that word". So, from

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your point of view,

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do you think it has impact in the loyalty world or is it a bit of a fad?

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Well, we debate that, but for me, you know, eventually what we want is, is

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engagement. So,

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if gamification helps with the younger generation to be able to get their

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attention, to be able to

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spend a bit more time with them in terms of interaction and to have a way for

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us to provide

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them with access to rewards in a gamified way, again, I think it's, you know,

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it serves a purpose.

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But just not, you know, a fad where, you know, we're just going to jump on it

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simply because

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it's there, it's just how things are evolving, the engagement or the

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interaction needs to be a

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bit more lively and the creation of that gamification is important. We haven't

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done too much out of this

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in the SkyWords today, you know, within one piece around gamification for us is

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in SkyWords

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exclusives, the platform that we have for money can buy experiences. And the

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bidding mechanism for

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people, you know, for some of these, as I said, money can buy, you know, VIP

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experiences behind the

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scene experiences is really fun to see. And where people are really engaged,

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you know, they're

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bidding, you know, takes a week for them to know who's winning at the end of it

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. And then, you know,

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it's amazing. People really have a lot of, you know, miles in their balance to

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be able to bid

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350,000 miles on average. We've seen for the experience that we have with Din

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mati in Sri Lanka

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for a retreat, for three days retreat for a couple to go and do tea tasting,

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you know, in the plantation.

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But it's something that when you get the feedback, people, you know, the 350,

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000 miles is one thing,

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but what they got out of it was absolutely amazing. And I think when you win

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them,

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somewhat through this experience, and they're looking, you know, forward to the

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next one,

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we just done one in France with Moichon-Dao, you know, in champagne for tasting

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as well,

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where people stayed in their domain there. And then actually a couple of days

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in Paris as well,

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in one of the luxury hotels. That, again, those experiences, the bidding is a

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gamified way. Now,

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it's not, by the way, it's not targeting that younger population I just talked

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about. This one

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is targeting people with a lot of miles, which are, you know, people who have

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more season travelers

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who've been around us. I would have bid on that Moichon-Dao, experience for

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sure.

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Yeah. That's a good one. Lovely. So my last question. So for you personally,

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and being, you know,

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working with such a prestigious and successful airline in the loyalty industry,

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where do you get

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your loyalty inspiration from? That's a very interesting one. And always a

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tricky one to answer,

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right? A lot of people just go to another industry to talk about where they're

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getting the inspiration

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from. Well, first of all, I'm getting my inspiration from the brand, from

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everything itself, as I

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mentioned, you know, when we moved to lifestyle, it was almost due to mimic

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what the brand was doing,

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and taking this live better concept into the fly better concept to, you know,

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travel better,

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to live better if you will accept. So my inspiration comes truly from a greater

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line. We're working for the service that we provide, the product that also we

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provide to our

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travelers. So, but from a loyalty perspective, again, I follow what my good

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partners that I

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have to talk about, two partners, Qantas and Air Canada. So Sarah on Qantas and

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then Mark on Air

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Canada. So, you know, we follow what they do. I think they're really, they have

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kind of cracked the,

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you know, the code on how to create a very, you know, engaging loyalty program,

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of course,

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and they're set up in a way where they can be extremely agile from a program

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perspective in

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terms of adding partners, you know, playing around with the program, the value

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proposition,

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access to rewards, you know, they really worked very well with RO for example,

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which is something

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we're learning from on our side as well to get access to rewards. So yeah, I

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talk about these

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two, but then I have to go to Starbucks again and then, and then, you know, use

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your ranking to say

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these are the most inspirational ones. But I'll stay with my with with our

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domain and the airline

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size well. I think that's a really good point, right? That loyalty doesn't

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exist in isolation

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of its mother brand. You know, it doesn't just float around in the in the

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status fair on its own.

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It just amplifies like again, to your point in the in the 10 piece is the icing

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and the cake at

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the end. The program brings it all together. But you've got everything else

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lined up,

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including the product right before you you put something around it. Otherwise,

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it's, you know,

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it's sitting on an empty shell and it's not it's not delivering that. Yeah, the

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expectation.

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I love the way you're quoting the book through and through. Thank you so much.

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That's amazing.

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So you were nominated to do the blind loyalty challenge by Xi Am Shah from Jag

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adot. Who would

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you like to nominate to take over the reins? I really thought about it very

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hard. I have to say,

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I'm on that come up with with one person that I think is maybe not your your

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traditional

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loyalty practitioner, but a fascinating individual to go talk to. His name is J

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itandra Jane. He's the

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VP loyalty and partnership at Marriott, another partner of ours and it's like

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coincidence that's

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a partner, but also I'm very, very blessed to have these these type of partners

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that inspire you.

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But Vijay and I really met when I was on the technology side and he was he was

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on the hotel side

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already in the loyalty space. And he's he's a tech enthusiast. And then he

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calls himself

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an AI tinker. He he experiments with a tinker, a tinker like buddy who

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experiments with things,

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right? Yeah. And he has published a number of really, I would call them white

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papers that actually

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are more like, you know, on his page on LinkedIn, he he he's been writing, he's

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done a 30 day challenge

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with AI. And he has one idea a day. So can I kind of kind of like you with the

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concepts the 100

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one? Yeah, talk about his done this 30 day challenge. And I really, you know,

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would love to see him.

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And of course, he ties it back to member experience. He ties it back to loyalty

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. So he would be a

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great person. I haven't told him about this. It's it. But I think I think you

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will find him

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fascinating as well. Well, I hope it I hope he accepts the challenge. Thank you

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for the nomination.

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Did you thank you so, so much. I've loved chatting to you and congratulations

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again for all the

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amazing accolades that you collect along your way. I have to command you,

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Amanda, for everything

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you're doing. And then hopefully we'll we'll be contributing as well. You know,

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as we go,

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the team is, you know, we shared the book with the team and hopefully we'll get

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people to

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not just borrow my copy, but which is my copy because it has. Of course,

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I'm delivered by myself. So I delivered. Thank you so much. But having them

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also,

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you know, contributed to the cause as well. Yeah. And thank you for everything

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you do and how

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you're bringing all all this to life. Beautiful. Thank you. Thank you so much.