Is Nordstrom’s loyalty program worth the splurge? The Loyalty Program Slam is diving into the perks, points, and potential pitfalls of this fashion-forward rewards program. Get ready for a story filled with discounts, exclusive offers, and maybe even a few style surprises!
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(upbeat music)
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- Hey everyone, welcome back to Lowell Tegrogram Slam.
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I'm Amber Collins, senior marketing manager,
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the Ardanaq's Cloud, the comprehensive
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and ASVAL staff solution for enterprise low-team management.
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As you know, the lowell Tegrogram Slam is jammed back
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with real world commentary on some of the world's
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most beloved lowell Tegrograms.
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So here's how it works.
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Each slammer is gonna have about two minutes
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to take their case on these four areas.
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Program design, value proposition, engagement
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and performance.
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Slammers are gonna get points for one liner,
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two bunking, or just generally being awesome.
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And today's Slammers are Alex, head of strategy,
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thought director of product solutions,
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and at least manager of digital and design.
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And together the four of us are going to examine
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today's program, which is Nordic Club by Nordstrom.
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Nordstrom is obviously in the retail space,
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but they're also a manufacturer.
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They have several private label brands
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that they run in several product categories.
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They have 13 million members in the Nordic Club.
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You can use their program at Nordstrom and Nordstrom Rack,
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as well as having a Nordstrom credit card.
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Nordstrom is quoted themselves as saying
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that 26% of their sales come from those 13 million
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lowell T members.
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So their competitors include NACs,
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Bloomingdale, stacks of avenue, and even markets.
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Not quite ultra luxury, but definitely a higher end
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of the retail experience.
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And personally, I love Nordstrom's return policy,
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which can definitely be taken advantage of.
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But the Nordic Club program features
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include earning points for purchases.
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They've got tiers.
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You can redeem them for Nordstrom notes,
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which is what are like their currency, exclusive experiences,
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and personal life rewards.
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I personally have attended several beauty experiences
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in the store with their brand partners.
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You can also get to the recommendations
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and early access to fail.
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I know that they have at least an annual sale.
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If it's not by annually, that people really, really look forward to.
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And then if you talk about the services side
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of what Nordstrom offers, the little team members also
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enjoy reservation online, trying to store, buy them on pickup.
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They have stylists in store.
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So one thing about Nordstrom is definitely
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they have a great like services unit.
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Nordstrom's program focuses on building emotional connections,
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and they coined it Nordstrom notes.
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So let's dive into how well Nordstrom actually knows us.
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And today let's start with Alex.
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Alex, stay your case from Nordic Club.
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Yeah, no, I've been around the Nordstrom loyalty program
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Nordic Club for a number of years.
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I think that they've definitely made
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some smart evolutions to the program.
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Probably I'd say about five to eight years ago.
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I think there's been some small tweaks since,
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but overall I think it's pretty stable
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in terms of a baseline program for retail.
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I like that you can use the rewards both at Nordstrom
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and then they're more opening price point or discount
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offering with Nordstrom RAC.
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And I think they've done a pretty good job
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of keeping the tier qualifiers in a place where consumers
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can stretch to achieve the tier and unlock
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some interesting benefits or some more benefits.
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And then obviously gating all of the best for the credit card.
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So really working to get you into the card
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and to get you into the highest status
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I'm locking the most benefit.
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I think the choosing your double points days
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as you move into higher tiers is great.
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I think that that's obviously been copied
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by a number of their competitors.
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Bloomingdale's, for example, with the loyalist program
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is offering triple points days.
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The only thing with Bloomingdale's is that
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everything's really gated behind a credit card.
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So I do appreciate that Nordstrom offers the free option.
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And then I do like that back in the day
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they used to do just $20 notes.
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So it was requiring 2,000 points or close to $2,000
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in spend in order to unlock that.
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Now they offer the $10 note is issued to you.
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And then you can choose when you want to redeem it.
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And I also like that in the app, they differentiate it that.
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So you can actually get a $5 note, a 10 or a 15.
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You can redeem it yourself.
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I think that's a nice differentiator
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and really does incent or influence the consumer
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to go into the app and have that desired behavior to interact.
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I think the one thing that they're really missing
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is the idea of partnerships while they do exclusive events
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with designers, stylists, et cetera.
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I'm not really seeing a lot of interesting opportunity
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within partnerships and obviously being such a high end
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department store, they have that ability.
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So I think they're missing the mark there.
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Might be a limitation of their solution.
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I'm not really sure.
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But I think overall they're using their footprint well,
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the alterations, they're using both Nordstrom Nordstrom Rack.
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But I would like to see a little bit more
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of an elevated offering and really getting even closer
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to the consumer's lifestyle beyond just shopping
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at Nordstrom, right?
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These people are likely, especially in upper tiers,
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they're affluent, they're travelers, they're adventurers.
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And so I think thinking through how
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to make a more cohesive experience would be more exciting.
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I'm just saying, so you mentioned their credit card.
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Bloomingdale's and NACs both sort of really give those rewards,
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just hire value rewards to their credit card consumers.
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And well, I didn't get any numbers on how many
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of the 13 million low-wields he members are actually credit
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card members as well.
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I can imagine that it was probably a really good percentage.
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But I like to say, everybody has a credit card.
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Everybody wants to join their credit card.
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You go to TJ Maxx, they want you to get a credit card.
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I'm like, dude, I'm fine, it's like, I'm cool.
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I don't need more credit.
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So taking those out of that credit card tier
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and accessible for everybody, I think
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is something that definitely does not
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come apart, especially when you look at those other options
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like DCs and Bloomingdale.
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So great, an interesting point there.
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Points from that one.
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Scott, would you like to go next?
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Or shall we let you have the last word?
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I think actually, you know what?
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We're going to go to the least first.
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And Scott, I want you to do your doubles advocate
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and wrap up everybody.
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I didn't go a week.
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Yeah, so I think Alex touched on a lot of what
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I had to say as well.
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Although, I mean, I am an influencer,
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a member for Nordstrom.
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And I have a credit card.
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So automatically an influencer, because I have
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the credit card, which gets me, I had early access
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to the anniversary cell that they just had.
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I don't have to spend a ton of money, because I already
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have that status.
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So what I really like about the program
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is they make it valuable to even the lower tiers.
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I don't have to, as long as you are participating,
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and you have access to--
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I can pick a couple of double points days.
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I have free alterations.
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I have access to the early events, which is really great.
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And as you move up to an ambassador level,
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then you get even more personalized experiences, which
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makes you want to keep being a member.
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And keep shopping with Nordstrom.
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I think the app is really great.
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It's easy to use as a consumer.
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I can put things in a wish list.
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And then it can notify me of price drops.
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And if something is back in stock after not being in stock,
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so I mean, it just keeps me wanting
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to continue to make purchases at Nordstrom.
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And also, you know, we touched down the 13 active million, 13
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million active members.
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I found a quote from the CEO, Scott Maiden,
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that, you know, these members are spending four times more
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and shop three times as often than non-members.
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So I think in terms of performance,
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it's doing really well compared to competitors in the market.
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Elise, when you go in and you have this status,
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and are you more of an in-store shopper
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or are you more of an online shopper?
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I think both, but since I'm going to be honest since COVID,
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you know, and more of an online shopper,
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but it's still, it's really easy to find what I'm looking for.
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And, you know, the online experience is pretty great too.
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But like you mentioned before, you know,
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it's real easy to go in and everyone's really helpful
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when you return things.
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They don't give you a hard time about it.
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It's just an overall positive experience, I think.
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Yeah, because I was going to ask you, you know,
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when you go in a store, do you feel
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that status?
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Do you get acknowledged by name?
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You know, what is that?
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You know, is that something that really adds to your experience?
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Because I will say that on the website, not logged in,
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loyalty is not really like, you know,
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I'm struggling to find it on the PDP.
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You know, I know that they have a page for it,
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but as far as I can tell, the Nordic Club isn't
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that's a fairly like in your face in that online experience.
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So when you are in the store,
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are you feeling like a little team member
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when you go to the in-store experience?
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Because it just seems like it lacks a little bit online.
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Yeah, I mean, I just feel like in terms of people being
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helpful and, you know, and just positive.
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But I don't know if like, I've never had someone straight out
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ask me if I'm a loyalty member before.
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So, but I mean, I think they just want everyone
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to feel that way.
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So I don't know specifically if I feel that more in-store
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than online, to be honest.
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So, Pat, Alex, are either of you guys a member?
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How do you experience the Nordic Club experience?
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I mean, obviously, I am a member for sure.
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I worked with them in a past life and, you know, been a member.
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But in my experience, when I go into a Nordstrom,
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I get asked more about that than when I go into a Nordstrom
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rack.
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When I go into a Nordstrom rack and I come through the check
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outline, I have to, in my experience, in the stores that I've
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gone to, I typically have to tell them that I'm a member.
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And then they know how to work with my account.
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But it is, I am asked more in a Nordstrom than a rack.
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Very interesting.
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Yeah, I think online, yeah, that you can only find the Nordstrom
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rewards within the drop down on the top nav
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under sign in.
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So I think that that's a miss.
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And then, you know, they're doing the whole anniversary
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sale, but I'm seeing nothing where you get double points or triple
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points on certain brands.
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Knowing there's a number of brands that don't participate in
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the anniversary sale.
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I think that's a huge miss.
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That's easy income for them to get people to want to be a part
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of the anniversary sale, but selling at reg retail and giving
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those points.
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And then they don't actually feature the amount of points
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you'll earn on the PDPs.
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I think that's another huge miss.
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And they're really only featuring in the PDPs to sign up for
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the card.
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The Ford Note bonus, if you sign up for the card, which
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is smart, but it feels like a little over transactionary instead
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of being able to promote the fact that you can enroll for free.
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You can get these baseline points.
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You don't have to take a card.
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And that can be confusing because Bloomingdale's requires a card.
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So if you shop at Neiman's Bloomingees and Nordstrom,
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you're going to get confused against those.
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But being able to submit, you know, really present your
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value proposition there as free to enroll.
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Plus you also have Nordstrom rack.
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I think the value proposition could use a little bit of work,
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especially on the web experience.
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Yeah, I agree.
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So you know, it's about--
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if somebody once said to me when we were talking about CTAs,
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that sometimes it's like asking somebody to get engaged
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and you just met them.
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So what's the-- how do you take them on the first date?
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How do you ask for those phone numbers?
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And so that goes straight to the credit card as the CTA,
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where some people might be, you know,
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maybe who hasn't shopped at Nordstrom.
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But like, you've got to ask for their number first before you
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ask if you get engaged.
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So with that said, Scott, give us your case.
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Well, I agree with a lot of things that Alex and Elisim
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have mentioned.
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But there are things that I feel, again,
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as more of an experiential loyalty provider that
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are missing from this.
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You walk into a Nordstrom, you get treated, you know,
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extremely well.
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Whether you're a loyalty member or not.
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They know who you are.
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They can find the old transactions.
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They can provide you with most of their services,
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their exceptional customer service,
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whether you're a member or not.
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So it's not gated by being a loyalty member.
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There are some things that you do get like the first to shop,
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first to clear the rack, basic alterations, lifestyle
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workshops.
12:39
There are those things that you do start to get.
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So there are some things that--
12:44
and there are some non-dakes.
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But as it was mentioned earlier, it's a very transactional
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program, right?
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For somebody who targets people who really care about their clothing
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and how they look, et cetera, they're doing very little
12:57
to help people talk about their individual style
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and to show off really things that we're
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seeing in experiential programs where, you know,
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hashtag your look, where you are doing store check-ins
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at different events.
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We're doing all of these things that are more experiential
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and non-transactual.
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They're completely lacking from this program.
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So while they are cutting edge in terms of things
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that they give to members, they're just a great company overall.
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So like in some of our other slams, I'm
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trying my best to differentiate what
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is different for a loyalty member than a normal customer.
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And with Nordstrom, there's little in my humble opinion.
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Yeah.
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So like I said, overall, the experience is really great
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whether you're a member or not.
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And perhaps all those other things
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that we were talking about, like getting
13:52
in the first step instead of just going straight
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to the engagement and starting the loyalty
13:56
a little bit deeper into those touch points,
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could bring it more to the forefront
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and potentially spark more exclusive member experiences,
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more exclusive member rewards.
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But like you said, in general, they have amazing services
14:10
for a retail company.
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And they don't necessarily gate keep those.
14:14
With 13 million members--
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yeah, that's just a substantial program.
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It absolutely is.
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And they should absolutely be proud of that program.
14:21
But going back to the Nordstrom knows me
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and their communications, how personalized are they?
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If we're not necessarily seeing the online experience
14:30
changed once you signed in, what data are they using
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to then personalize that one-to-one conversation
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so if one-to-one communications?
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And what data are they gathering along the way?
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Nordstrom RAC informing them that you're a loyalty member
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instead of the other way around is definitely an opportunity
14:44
to insert loyalty into more of that customer journey.
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I'll shop at both.
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But I'm also like a quite frugal person
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so if I can get it at the rack, I'm probably
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going to go to the rack.
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But yeah, it just seems like there's probably
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a lot more opportunities to A, insert the potential
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to join the program and then B, bring some more exclusive stuff
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that just piggybacks on the great stuff
15:04
that they already offer.
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So let's get to scoring, Alex, give me your scores
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for Nordstrom in their value proposition.
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I think for a value proposition, I give--
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I'd have to look at three and a half.
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I hate doing halves, but they really are slightly above average.
15:23
And I like their proposition against their competitors.
15:27
But I think overall in the loyalty industry,
15:29
they are missing a number of different interaction
15:32
based earnings, they're missing partnerships.
15:34
I mean, even rent the runway.
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I mean, they have an exclusive partnership with them.
15:37
And you don't earn bonus points for that.
15:39
They close down Trump Club, but there's some other options.
15:41
So I'm going to go with three and a half.
15:43
I appreciate that.
15:45
Elise, how are you feeling about their value proposition?
15:47
I gave them a four and a half.
15:49
I just like that they're valuable to all tiers.
15:52
You don't have to start seeing some great benefits.
15:58
If you're at the highest tier, you can be at the middle tier
16:01
and start seeing a lot of really great stuff.
16:04
So let's take that.
16:06
Scott.
16:06
Game of three.
16:07
No halves.
16:08
Just a three.
16:09
Again, as a value prop, I don't know
16:11
that the note is at the best rate in the marketplace,
16:17
but I know that a lot of their other things,
16:19
like the first to shop and the basic alterations stuff.
16:23
So they aren't doing a give back beyond just the note.
16:27
But I feel like overall, the value to the member
16:32
is in more of an enhanced experience.
16:35
Because if you're spending $1,000, $1,000 here or there,
16:39
isn't necessarily going to make change your mind,
16:43
whether you're going to do one extra shop or not.
16:46
It's the other engagement elements
16:49
that they are doing that they have for me.
16:53
Yeah, I agree.
16:54
So what's going to make you stop the car
16:56
and say, I'm going to pass all the rest of these stores
16:58
to go to Nordstrom, and it's going to be that experience.
17:02
It's $10.
17:03
If you have it, you have it.
17:04
That's what 1% of the total spend that you've done.
17:07
So I agree with that.
17:08
Let's chat.
17:08
They are program design, Alex.
17:10
I think overarchingly, I give the design a four.
17:14
I think that they just need to position it a little bit better.
17:17
And while I agree with Scott in terms of the lack of generosity,
17:22
if you are a base member that is not taking advantage
17:26
of accelerators, because you can't pick your own double points.
17:29
If you're in the anniversary sale, there's nothing
17:30
on double points right now.
17:32
But if you do have a card, you are getting accelerators
17:35
and you get to pick double points.
17:36
So you can get to that note a lot faster.
17:38
So I think that because of that, they do show that pretty clearly
17:43
in the rewards chart.
17:44
And they do have a lot of interesting benefits
17:46
that you can work with.
17:48
I just wish that there were more partnership offers.
17:51
I wish they were more connected into the lifestyle
17:54
of the consumer, not just so focused on the transaction
17:57
with the Nordstrom and with them that one ecosystem.
18:01
I wonder how many--
18:02
the percentage of brands that they carry is their own brand.
18:07
They have several.
18:08
Oh, wow.
18:09
OK.
18:10
Yes.
18:11
20 own brands.
18:12
So, at least, talk to me about the program design.
18:16
Hey, game of five.
18:17
Just in terms of looking at what their competitors have,
18:21
I just feel like they're the overall clear winner right now.
18:24
And I think that that's just really well executed.
18:29
Well, as a little remember yourself,
18:31
that is a rating that I'm sure they would love to hear.
18:34
It might be a little high.
18:35
Because I mean, you're also a credit card.
18:37
So you clearly like-- you clearly love them.
18:39
So I love that.
18:40
It's a Nordstrom influencer.
18:42
I'm probably going to go a little bit lower.
18:45
But I did give it a three.
18:46
Similar to Alex, I think that there are more engagement
18:51
elements that they could be doing.
18:52
I think that the program design could do a better
18:55
give back, the end acknowledge, the non-credit card holders.
19:00
I feel like they could talk about it a little bit more.
19:05
And we'll get into it.
19:05
The engagement elements in just a moment.
19:08
But I do feel like it is not necessarily--
19:11
the design is not built to engage across the entire lifecycle
19:17
of a customer, only the transaction.
19:20
Yeah.
19:20
But what they do for the transaction is not terrible.
19:25
So I gave it a terrible.
19:26
Definitely think that there's room for expanding
19:30
the loyalty messaging across the journey
19:33
and across the touch points.
19:36
I won't say it's low hanging through,
19:37
because this is a nation-wide rollout.
19:40
But there's also an opportunity to throw
19:43
some more training at store associates.
19:45
And possibly there's a divide there because we don't know
19:50
what their POS looks like on the backside.
19:52
They haven't integrated loyalty into it yet.
19:55
That's certainly an opportunity to insert loyalty more
19:59
across the journey.
20:00
Well, they have a little bit.
20:01
So when you do your check out, they
20:03
can redeem the notes for you right there.
20:05
So maybe it's a training.
20:06
Maybe it's an initiative thing and an incentivization.
20:09
Talking about employee engagement and employee
20:13
participation in the loyalty program,
20:16
as an emerging topic for us as well,
20:18
we've talked about secret tiers and employee tier.
20:22
So there's possibly a massive opportunity there
20:25
to for the loyalty program.
20:27
So with that being said, let's talk about the engagement.
20:30
At least, how do you feel this program
20:33
is on the engagement side?
20:35
I gave it a four.
20:36
I think they say that they use gamification
20:39
with the double points.
20:41
And they have the exclusive events.
20:44
And I think it does, overall, make people want
20:47
to engage with the program.
20:49
But with everything we've been talking about,
20:52
I do think there's a little room for improvement there.
20:54
Yeah.
20:55
So how often do you get comments from them
20:58
that prompts you to want to shop or prompts you
21:01
to open the app or prompts you to check in with your stylist?
21:05
I'm just curious.
21:05
I mean, not a whole lot, I guess.
21:08
I mean, when there's the events going on,
21:11
like the anniversary sale, obviously I hear more.
21:14
But in terms of just every day, I'm not getting
21:18
tons of communication with them.
21:19
But I might also just have notifications turned off,
21:23
as my personal preference, I don't offhand
21:27
remember if I did that or not.
21:28
But that could be contributing to why I'm not
21:31
hearing from them more often.
21:32
That's a delicate balance.
21:34
You don't want to be ESPM, but you also don't want
21:36
your customers to forget about you.
21:38
One thing that I would love to see or know
21:40
is that North Trump's thought, something
21:43
for everybody in all phases of life.
21:47
So really, this lifestyle retailer,
21:49
do they know you're wedding anniversary
21:51
when you might need an outfit from your stylist?
21:53
Do they know how many kids you have in their ages?
21:56
Do they know just the things like that
22:00
that could bring up personalization home
22:03
that could prompt the use of those services?
22:06
You've got your wedding anniversary's coming up.
22:08
Come see the stylist.
22:09
And I'm just wondering there's opportunities like that.
22:11
And not as they can't see their back end.
22:12
And we'll talk about their performance in a little bit.
22:14
But Alex, how do you feel about their program engagement?
22:17
I feel good.
22:19
I still think it's funny though the name, right?
22:21
Like they said that that members used to call it that.
22:25
And you know, like there's Target and Tarje.
22:27
You get that level of sophistication
22:30
with the French pronunciation, if you will.
22:33
Nordy just feels a little interesting.
22:37
And maybe they did it also to combine North
22:40
from rack and Nordstrom.
22:42
I don't know.
22:42
It's an interesting one.
22:44
It's kind of kitschy.
22:45
But yeah, I think from a brand perspective,
22:48
I think a lot of people love Nordstrom
22:50
for its overall great customer experience.
22:52
I think they're using loyalty to layer on top.
22:56
But I think there's ways that they could make it even more
22:59
exciting, that it feels really good that I'm
23:01
a Nordstrom member versus I just shop at Nordstrom.
23:05
So I think thinking about how do you level up?
23:07
How do you layer in that sophistication
23:09
a bit more and more engagement tactics?
23:11
So I'd give it, I'd still give it a four.
23:13
I think it's strong compared to like maces and bloomies, et cetera.
23:17
Got it.
23:18
OK.
23:18
Scott, how do you feel about their program engagement?
23:22
Give it a two.
23:23
Let's get into it.
23:24
Again, it's because the sophistication
23:27
of the experience for non-members is very high.
23:32
You have a personal shopper that they know you're wedding.
23:35
They know your size.
23:36
They know your colors.
23:37
They know all that's up.
23:38
You don't have to be a member to have this entire profile
23:42
built around you and to have somebody reaching out to you.
23:45
So as specifically like separating that from the loyalty
23:50
experience, the engagement elements are kind of lacking.
23:53
As a loyalty member, they're not engaging
23:55
me to do anything more or to do anything different.
23:59
As a customer, they know me, you know,
24:02
as a-- you have a personal shopper that you
24:05
establish a relationship with this person, but it's not
24:09
as a member, right?
24:10
You're just a good person to them.
24:13
So the engagement elements as a member are, in my opinion,
24:18
severely lacking.
24:19
They are not engaging me to do anything differently.
24:24
The reason that it's not a one in my opinion
24:26
is because yes, they do have like double points days.
24:29
Yes, they do have some like first to shop.
24:32
Things where again, that's a lot of that kind of shoves
24:34
into the value prop, the value that I get as a member,
24:37
but you engaging with me.
24:39
It's-- I separated and gave it only a two.
24:42
Yeah, so I say that because you have access
24:45
to all those services regardless of whether you're
24:46
a member or not, I guess the difference is going to be--
24:48
if you're using the service, then you're
24:49
going to be in the CRM.
24:51
If that profile unified, are you constantly--
24:53
are you using that profile every time you talk to them?
24:55
When you go with a diet cut a card,
24:57
are you self-identifying?
24:58
You might not be.
24:58
But you're in the CRM, right?
25:00
So that's like loyalty baby loyalty, right?
25:03
At least they have you and they could reach out to you
25:05
if they wanted to.
25:06
And so the difference between just being a regular customer
25:08
and using the services of the UCRM and being the loyalty
25:11
member is that regardless of if you're
25:13
coming into use of service or not,
25:14
you're going to raise your hand and say, hey, I'm here.
25:16
I'm a member.
25:17
Remember me, put this on my profile.
25:19
And then that's the one that's where they have a wallet or not.
25:22
But that's also one way that people get identified,
25:25
especially when you're shopping online.
25:26
So it seems like to me like the biggest difference
25:28
between just being a customer and being a little
25:30
close to members, that self-identification.
25:32
How much more could they gain from gaining more people
25:35
to self-identify becoming the member and not just
25:37
shopping, shopping, shopping or using a service one or two
25:40
times?
25:40
That's a great question to lead us into what do we
25:43
think about the performance?
25:44
So Alex, what do you think about minority clubs performance?
25:47
And obviously we don't have the back end members,
25:48
but like from what you can see.
25:49
No, I mean, at least I think set up perfectly where it's
25:53
being talked about in analyst reports,
25:55
it's being talked about in what they're discussing
25:58
with the street.
25:59
I mean, the member versus non-member performance
26:01
is amazing.
26:02
So I'd be excited to run that program.
26:05
I'd be excited to be a part of that team.
26:07
And I think what's also nice, the reason I would love
26:09
to be a part of that team too, is because there's
26:11
so much room for opportunity.
26:13
There's little things that you can do to make Scott happy.
26:16
And be able to come in and pick up his--
26:19
I don't know, new Chanel loafers or something.
26:21
So I think that that's where I would go with them.
26:26
The other thing that I was thinking too
26:27
is that they have such high-end store within a store.
26:30
So the prod is the Gucci's, the Chanel's.
26:34
Those don't really have a lot of--
26:35
they have client telling, but they don't really
26:37
have a lot of loyalty programs, because that's not found
26:39
as much in luxury.
26:40
This is a really interesting way, though,
26:41
to partner with those brands and say, hey, when members come in
26:45
and when they raise their hands, or if we make it easier
26:47
for you to understand that, what are you going to do for them?
26:49
Because if I have an amazing experience across brands,
26:52
I love within the Nordstrom ecosystem.
26:55
And because I'm a member, that really could accelerate things
26:57
as well for them.
26:58
So I think performance is good.
27:00
I think there's tons of room for opportunity
27:02
in terms of more of that engagement, emotional connection,
27:05
partnership aspect.
27:07
Did I hear a number there?
27:08
No, you didn't.
27:09
I'm going to go with-- I'm going to view it classic three to half.
27:11
Play it safe.
27:12
Gotcha.
27:13
At least what do you think about the performance?
27:15
I went high again here.
27:16
I gave it a five, just based mostly on that statistic
27:21
that there's 13 million members spending four times
27:24
as much and three times as often.
27:26
I think that a really good indicator of performance.
27:29
You are one of them.
27:31
Yeah.
27:31
Scott, round us out.
27:33
What do you think about this performance?
27:34
Another big two for performance.
27:38
For me, again, it is the loyalty like moving the dial.
27:43
And at the note level, I think we already discussed
27:48
that the $10 note is not moving the dial on a $1,000
27:54
average shopper.
27:56
You're coming in anyway.
27:57
So you're identifying so that eventually you're earn points.
28:01
So saying that you've got 13 million members who are just
28:04
identifying to eventually earn points for shops,
28:07
they were probably going to be doing anyway.
28:09
I don't think is a performance program.
28:11
I think it just shows that they have a good customer base,
28:15
not a good member base.
28:17
So again, I differentiate there fantastic
28:20
in the world of customer service and making
28:23
the experience for everyone elevated.
28:27
But as a member, I don't know that it's moving the dial
28:32
at what they're doing.
28:33
I think that they are taking people
28:35
who are already doing shops and just identifying them
28:38
as loyalty members.
28:39
So to me, that tends to skew the data in my interpretation.
28:44
So I choose kind of where I sit.
28:47
To piggyback off what Scott said to,
28:50
and we see this with an example would be hair.
28:52
It's out in the UK, which is luxury department store.
28:55
What I think is really interesting about their program
28:57
is they create these mini clubs where they get to know you.
29:00
And if you join their kids club or their coffee club,
29:03
it then knows that you're within that segment.
29:06
And then it offers and curates more things for you
29:08
that are tailored to you.
29:09
And I think what's interesting is a lease
29:11
who is definitely their demographic.
29:13
She's exactly who they want to be shopping with.
29:15
She has a card.
29:16
The program is built for her.
29:18
The program from a free enrollment,
29:21
and I'm not really going to take a credit card with them.
29:23
But I'd love to see some more aspects
29:25
that benefit me within the program, which is Scott and I.
29:28
There's not as much for us, right?
29:30
And so there's no like men's club.
29:32
There's no unique aspect there.
29:34
Maybe there is with personalization.
29:36
Again, we aren't close to the detail of what they're doing
29:39
from segmentation, CRM, and email, et cetera.
29:43
But I think there's something there that's really missing.
29:45
It's this idea of clubs or accelerated ways
29:49
of engaging to core segments.
29:50
And then learning from that and then positioning
29:53
that to partners, positioning that to brands
29:55
to create different campaigns.
29:57
I think that's where they're really lagging.
29:58
Yeah, I think that's a really good point as far as like,
30:00
OK, now we've identified them.
30:02
If you've got-- if you've incentivized them for that
30:04
and you're identifying themselves, how are you learning,
30:06
how are you growing, how are you personalizing?
30:08
What's the next appropriate time to ask
30:11
for some deeper information looking at your cohorts,
30:13
what's the evolution there?
30:16
And then like you said, it's a really exciting place
30:19
for North Shore to be in because there
30:20
are so many opportunities and things
30:23
that can easily be implemented to take that program
30:26
to the next level.
30:27
So today's total scores.
30:30
And so that brings Nordy Clubs total average score
30:33
across the four categories as a 3.63, which, looking back
30:37
at the programs that we've already slanned,
30:40
that's like the second highest rating.
30:42
So I think that if they're doing really well,
30:44
that they know who their loyal chopper are,
30:50
and that there's so massive opportunities
30:52
to take us to the next level and turn that 3.6 into a 4.5.
30:56
So I'm really looking forward to seeing what Nordy
30:58
should have brought to the table the next 12, 24, five years.
31:02
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31:04
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31:07
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