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Walmart, Costco, Kroger, Walgreens, BJ’s Wholesale, Meijer,  Publix,      H-E-B, Rank Among Retail Loyalty Leaders

CINCINNATI—    In a vast departure from COLLOQUY’s 2008 report on consumer loyalty to     U.S. retailers, Walmart dominated the 2010 COLLOQUY Retail Loyalty       Index, in results that reflect a reality of the Great Recession –  low     prices drove consumer loyalty.

 

COLLOQUY, the publishing, education and research division of LoyaltyOne,      previously published the COLLOQUY Retail Loyalty Index in 2008.      COLLOQUY’s index ranks the top U.S. retailers according to customer     loyalty ratings. The 2010 index was built from a December 2009 survey of     3,500 U.S. consumers in five regions: Northeast, Southeast,  Midwest,      Southwest and Northwest. Respondents were surveyed across four retail     categories that included Grocery, Personal Care, Department Stores and     Mass Merchants.

The 2010 COLLOQUY Retail Loyalty Index shows that customers claimed the     highest loyalty to Walmart in many of the Grocery, Personal Care and     Department Store regional categories. Costco had the highest customer     loyalty ratings in three out of five Mass Merchant regional categories.      In COLLOQUY’s 2008 index, shoppers claimed the most loyalty to Costco,      which ranked first in nine out of twenty regional and retail categories.

“Our 2008 index showed that loyalty marketers worked within a     significantly different retail landscape. Customer service, store     environment and a wide product selection were the underlying     factors for customers’ self-professed loyalty. But our 2010 index proves     that the Great Recession became the great equalizer,” said COLLOQUY     Partner Kelly Hlavinka. “Two years later, customers view loyalty     differently. We’ve witnessed a profound change among consumers since the     recession hit: Low prices have stepped up to become retail’s strongest     loyalty lure according to consumers. That is something which was simply     not true in 2008,” she said.

Hlavinka is the author of a 17-page white paper titled “RetailTALK: What     Price Loyalty? The 2010 COLLOQUY Retail Loyalty Index,” which provides a     complete review and analysis of COLLOQUY’s latest study of U.S.  retail     consumer loyalty ratings and attitudes. The paper is available free of     charge at http://www.colloquy.com/files/2010-COLLOQUY-RetailTalk-White-Paper.pdf.

While Walmart clearly dominated most retail categories, other chains –      including Kroger and Walgreens – did climb up the loyalty chart or make     their first appearances, edging out 2008 loyalty leaders. Here are the     highlights by category:

Grocery

Kroger, which has adopted a customer-centric focus and used a customer     loyalty program through the recession, was the loyalty leader in the     Midwest. In the Southeast, Publix moved up to first place from its       second-place showing in 2008. In the Southwest, regional grocer H-E-B     ranked first with similar messaging to Walmart and the continuation of a     six-store rewards program in its Waco, Texas, stores.

But the highly fragmented Grocery sector, where neither conventional nor     discount grocers operate in every state, holds certain advantages for     Walmart. Walmart’s message of low prices and value resonates with     customers – and its ability to deliver on that promise by leveraging its     broad distribution network translated to first-place consumer loyalty     ratings for Walmart in the Northeast and Northwest, and third-place     finishes in the Southeast, Southwest and the Midwest.

Personal Care

In the highly competitive Southeast region, Walgreens finished in a dead     heat with Walmart for the top loyalty ranking, with CVS and Publix tied     for second place. In a tight three-way race in the Midwest,  Walgreens     and CVS edged out Walmart, even though CVS hadn’t been among the top     five in 2008.

Walmart easily won the Northwest, maintained the top spot in the     Southwest, and finished ahead of CVS and Rite Aid in the Northeast.

Mass Merchandisers

The regional chains BJ’s Wholesale and Meijer replaced familiar names     such as Sears, Sam’s Club and Big Lots for top loyalty rankings in the     important Northeast and Midwest markets (respectively). Costco continued     to rank first in all other U.S. regions.

Walmart, meanwhile, came in second in all but the Southeast, where it     ranked third behind Target, which itself rated third in the rest of the     country.

Department stores

Several chains that made the top three spot in COLLOQUY’s 2008 Retail     Loyalty Index for department stores fell off the 2010 top-three list –      among them J.C. Penney, Dillard’s and Dollar General. As in other retail     categories, these names were replaced in large part by Walmart and       Target.

Walmart ranked first in customer loyalty ratings in the Northeast and     Midwest, and tied with Macy’s for the top spot in the Southwest.  In the     Southeast, Walmart took second to Target, and in the Northwest it     followed top-spotter Costco.

“With the recession acting like a second-stage booster rocket,  Walmart     has upended the status quo among its national retail peers by chewing     into their last remaining frontier – customer-professed loyalty –  at     least for now,” Hlavinka said. “The glimmer of hope for retailers is     that as jobless rates go down and consumer confidence returns,  retailers     may very well regain their footing – if they continue to work towards     customer-centric solutions and more sustainable strategies rather than     combating Walmart on low prices.”

COLLOQUY will be sharing the results of the 2010 COLLOQUY Retail Index     in a webinar sponsored by the Catalog and Multichannel Retail Marketing     Councils of the Direct Marketing Association on April 22 at 2 p.m.  EDT.      Registration information is available at http://www.colloquy.com/event_view.asp?uid=140.

About COLLOQUY:

COLLOQUY® comprises a collection of publishing, education and research     resources devoted to the global loyalty-marketing industry. Owned by     LoyaltyOne, COLLOQUY has served the loyalty-marketing industry since     1990 with over 30,000 global subscribers to its magazine and www.colloquy.com the most comprehensive loyalty web site in the world. COLLOQUY’s     research division develops research studies and white papers including     industry-specific reports, sizing studies and insights into the drivers     of consumer behavior. COLLOQUY also provides educational services     through workshops, webinars and speeches at events throughout the world     and is the official loyalty-marketing partner of both the Direct     Marketing Association and the Canadian Marketing Association and a       content provider to the American Marketing Association. COLLOQUY also     operates the COLLOQUY Network, a global consortium of practitioners     certified in COLLOQUY’s proprietary methodology. COLLOQUY magazine       subscriptions are available at no cost to qualified persons at www.colloquy.com or by calling 513.248.9184.

Photos/Multimedia Gallery Available: http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/mmg.cgi?eid=6230687⟨=en

 

For COLLOQUY
Tim Sansbury, 513-231-5115
[email protected]
or
Lisa     Biank Fasig, 513-231-5115
[email protected]

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