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The Holding Pattern Coupon Strategy

Written by Evan Schuman
June 25th, 2009
Typical retail IT execs trying to map out their chain's long-term coupon strategy are hoping for 20 percent off their migraines. That's because as Web fraud—not to mention the death of newspapers across the country--is making today's paper coupons less and less viable, the frequently-discussed replacements for paper coupons are still likely a couple of years away. Many retailers had hoped that paper coupons will die a slower death, hanging on until mobile coupons were ready for mass market.

But that's not the way it's playing out, especially among younger consumers. The nirvana is to go with a full mobile approach, whether it be NFC or regular smartphone coupon displays. The idea would be a color display with enough CPU and RAM to handle a very large number of customized coupons and a POS-connected scanning device that could read off of the screen. Or perhaps it could be beamed to the POS system. Even for those retailers who want to deploy such a system today, there are three obstacles to widespread immediate deployment.

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3 Comments | Read The Holding Pattern Coupon Strategy

  1. Bill Bittner Says:

    Let’s just hope the retailer is not using a stand-beside device for credit card authorization (just kidding)

  2. James Tenser Says:

    Paper coupons appeal to a very defined subset of shoppers – roughly 30% – who are generally inclined toward pre-planning behavior. This group is very demographically diverse, and includes folks who just clip paper coupons and others who join coupon clubs online.

    The rest of the population generally ignores pre-planning and therefore can’t be bothered with coupons. Nevertheless, 300 billion paper coupons are issued annually in the U.S. About 1 – 2% of these are actually redeemed, so I think reports of their imminent demise are unjustified.

    Now, print-from-the Web coupons are certainly a concept with a very limited future. But this was true from the start. The future is certainly the personal mobile device, juiced up with an NFC-enabled coupon “wallet”. But this is a short way off.

    I think the most promising transition technology might be NFC-enabled USB key fobs (available now) that let shoppers download and store security-coded Web coupons and instantly redeem with a tap at the POS. The NFC readers cost as little as $40 and are USB plug-and-play (that is, they look like a bar-code scanner to the POS terminal).

    The cool thing about this scenario is that the NFC coupon’s convenience and speed might appeal to shoppers who until now have shunned pre-planning and coupon use. Oh – and did I mention this would completely bypass today’s clumsy coupon redemption process, putting more pennies in the retailers’ pockets?

  3. Kate Janson Says:

    The only way this can evolve is for banks/credit cards to issue the coupons at POS via opt-in web-based CRMs. Card swipe at checkout, discounts applied to consumer, bank/credit card companies reimburse retailer (better yet, offset transaction fees), manufacturers partner with retailers and bank/credit cards and reimburse discount with marketing promotion budgets. When will retail learn that in this new tech society, less is more?

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