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.