Loyalty program

  • Written by Ganesh Pawar 3 min read
  • Updated: July 22, 2025

What is a loyalty program?

A loyalty program (sometimes called a rewards program) is a structured marketing strategy that rewards customers for repeat purchases or specific brand interactions. Rewards typically include points, discounts, free products, free shipping, exclusive access, or member-only perks. The goal is straightforward: turn one-time buyers into repeat customers, and repeat customers into long-term brand advocates.

Why are loyalty programs important?

Loyalty programs are one of the most effective customer retention tools available to ecommerce brands, especially in categories where acquisition costs are rising and price competition is fierce. They lift retention by giving customers a reason to come back, increase average order value (AOV) when rewards are tied to spending thresholds, and reduce subscriber churn by giving members a reason to stay engaged with the brand. They also let you compete on experience and exclusivity instead of getting pulled into ongoing price wars.

How do loyalty programs work?

Most loyalty programs follow a simple earn-accumulate-redeem loop. Customers earn points or progress for completing actions like making a purchase, referring a friend, writing a review, signing up for an account, or following on social media. Those points accumulate over time and can be redeemed for discounts, free products, free shipping, or VIP-only perks. Some programs add a tiered layer on top, where benefits increase as customers spend more or engage more.

Types of loyalty programs

Most ecommerce loyalty programs fall into one of these models:

  • Points-based: Customers earn points per dollar spent (and sometimes for non-purchase actions) and redeem them for rewards. The most common model and the easiest to launch.
  • Tiered: Customers progress through levels (Bronze, Silver, Gold) as they spend or engage more, unlocking better benefits at each tier. Examples include Sephora Beauty Insider and Adidas adiClub.
  • Paid membership / subscription-based: Customers pay a recurring fee for ongoing perks like free shipping or exclusive access. Amazon Prime is the canonical example. Best fit for high-frequency brands.
  • Referral programs: Reward customers for inviting friends, turning the customer base into an acquisition channel.
  • Value-based or cause-driven: Rewards convert into donations or align with a brand’s mission. Strong fit for brands with a clear ethical or community angle.
  • Hybrid: A mix of the above, often points + tiers, to balance accessibility with aspirational rewards.

What are the benefits of customer loyalty programs?

  • Higher customer retention and lower churn
  • Increased customer lifetime value (LTV)
  • Larger average order value, especially when rewards are tied to spend thresholds
  • More referrals and word-of-mouth from incentivized advocates
  • First-party and zero-party data customers willingly share in exchange for perks
  • Brand differentiation in crowded, discount-heavy categories

Example of a loyalty program

Sephora’s Beauty Insider program awards 1 point per dollar spent and uses three tiers (Insider, VIB, Rouge) to unlock progressively better perks like birthday gifts, free shipping, and early access to launches. The combination of point earning and tiered status nudges customers to consolidate their beauty spending with Sephora rather than splitting it across competitors.

Driftcharge Tip

Pick the program type that matches your purchase frequency. Points-based or tiered programs work for most DTC brands. Paid memberships only work if customers buy often enough to feel the value (Amazon Prime style). Track redemption rate, repeat purchase rate, and the LTV gap between members and non-members; if members aren’t worth materially more, the program isn’t earning its keep.

Track redemption rate, repeat purchase rate, and the LTV gap between members and non-members. Calculate LTV for your store to see whether your program is earning its keep.

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Ganesh Pawar

Ganesh Pawar is the founder of Driftcharge, a subscription management app designed to help Shopify merchants streamline and scale their subscription businesses. With a deep focus on solving real-world pain points—like legacy account page support, flexible subscription options, and advanced analytics—Ganesh is passionate about building tools that drive growth and retention.