The
last five places I went to spend money asked me if I had their rewards card.
The movie theater asked me for the card. Duane Reade did as well. Barnes &
Noble, too. Everyone has a stupid card. If I accepted their cards, my wallet
would be filled with 20 pieces of plastic. What a waste of resources, space -- and
the time it takes to sign up for these things. They should do what Stop &
Shop does. They offer their rewards card but if you don’t have one, the cashier
will volunteer hers so you get preferred prices.
Is
there any way publishers and authors can take advantage of this rewards card
craze? B&N sells their rewards card. It begins to pay for itself once
you’ve bought $250 worth of stuff in the course of a year. We just need a book-buying rewards card that is good in all stores and places where books are sold.
It doesn’t matter who sells the book, just that books are being bought and
read.
Why
do stores need these cards? They hope to lure you with discounts or freebies
based on frequent shopping. They want to capture your e-mail address and hook
you as a customer for life. But why can’t they just keep their prices fair,
their service good, and their product quality high?
Cards
don’t keep people coming back but a friendly business that treats customers
well will always get the business.
My
opposition to loyalty cards is similar to my aversion to shopping on Black
Friday. Why do I have to risk a stampede to get a discount on some product I
probably don’t even need? Stores shouldn’t encourage a crazed mentality around
a sale. Instead of making it a lottery, where only a few win, spread the wealth
and just offer good deals every day.
Who
agrees?
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Brian Feinblum’s views, opinions, and ideas expressed in this blog are his alone and not that of his employer, Media Connect, the nation’s largest book promoter. You can follow him on Twitter @theprexpert and email him at brianfeinblum@gmail.com. He feels more important when discussed in the third-person. This is copyrighted by BookMarketingBuzzBlog © 2014.
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