Loyalty is evolving faster than ever, but the way people form habits and connections hasn’t changed.
I’ve been in offers and rewards for over 25 years. I’ve watched us move from paper and plastic to frictionless card-linked loyalty, and now to AI-powered development that compresses months of work into days. Here’s the paradox: the fundamentals of loyalty haven’t changed, even while the speed of building, testing, and iterating has exploded.
Human nature is stable. Trust still has to be earned. Relevance still beats frequency. Programs still win when they connect to what people actually care about. AI doesn’t replace those truths, it just lets you act on them faster. If your strategy is strong, AI helps you succeed faster. If it’s weak, AI helps you fail faster.
How we got here
To understand where loyalty is going, it helps to see how far it’s come.
Past: Foundations (clear value, clunky delivery)
Loyalty started out simple, but clunky. These early programs laid the groundwork for loyalty psychology, but they were missing what matters most - ease, emotional connection, and a sense of community. The state of the art at the time was:
- Paper coupons and punch cards. “Buy 10, get 1 free” was easy to explain but offered low utility and was hard to measure.
- Plastic loyalty cards. Points and barcodes added trackability, but friction stayed high and data stayed blunt.
- Basic digital IDs. Phone number and email reduced wallet clutter, yet redemption was still delayed and generic.
What stayed the same: People responded to clear, tangible rewards. If the value was obvious, they played along. If it wasn’t, they opted out.
Present: Embedded and data-driven (ease + insight)
The loyalty experience today looks nothing like it did 20 years ago – and that’s a good thing. Today, the centre of gravity is card-linked and account-linked loyalty that are embedded into everyday payments and channels. You often see:
- Card-linked enrollment. Feels like e-commerce: add a card, you’re in. No codes to remember.
- Omnichannel engagement. Earn and redeem in-store, online, and in-app with one identity.
- Multiple value sources. Points, cash back, ecosystem currencies, cause-based rewards.
- Rich data. Real spending signals make meaningful personalization possible at scale.
What stays the same: People want ease. Reduce friction and adoption rises. Add steps and it drops.
Future: Agentic and personal (speed + belonging)
As AI moves from assisting to acting, loyalty will need to live where decisions happen.
AI is pushing us toward agentic commerce, meaning systems that recommend, nudge, even act on a member’s behalf. That raises the bar for embedded loyalty.
- Agentic commerce. If assistants make choices, your program must be present where choices happen.
- Deeper personalization. Cleaner data + better models = relevance tied to motivations, not just past purchases.
- Community and values. As noise grows, belonging and identity become durable moats.
What stays the same: People crave connection. They want to feel recognized, valued, and part of something bigger than a transaction.
Proven programs: What “good” looks like
The strongest loyalty programs don’t just offer rewards, they connect to what people truly value.
The best programs attach to outcomes people actually care about:
- Starbucks x Delta. Your daily coffee ladders to your next trip. Members spend more because every purchase feels like progress.
- Amazon Prime. It isn’t “points,” per se, it’s solved problems – shipping, content, convenience – in one place.
- UnitedHealthcare Motion. Financial rewards tied to health goals boost participation because the payoff is personal and practical.
None of those are points for points’ sake, rather they’re outcome-linked and life-relevant.
Card-linked loyalty in practice
Card-linked programs show these fundamentals in action.
They meet members where they already are: at the point of purchase. Each transaction becomes an opportunity to reinforce value, deliver relevance, and build trust through seamless, real-time rewards.
But speed can tempt over-communication. Three irrelevant messages a week can undo months of goodwill. Quality, timing, and personal meaning matter more than message volume.
Loyalty that lasts: Head, hands, and heart
At its core, loyalty is still about connecting the head, hands, and heart.
- Head: Clarity and logic. Members must see why it’s worth it.
- Hands: Ease of use. Make earning and redeeming effortless.
- Heart: Emotional connection. Help people feel part of something bigger than a transaction.
That’s the foundation that never changes. Technology can enhance it, AI can accelerate it, but lasting loyalty still starts and ends with people.
Loyalty and Olive
At Olive, we believe that when programs align the head, hands, and heart, everyone wins – from members, to merchants, and communities alike.
To learn more about how Olive can help your program, reach out to us today.