How Many Loyalty Cards do you Carry?
How Many Loyalty Cards do you carry?
“Join our loyalty program and we will give you discounts” is the way most vendors convince you to give away your contact information. Now this grant of information is supposed to be in return for loyalty discounts. What most vendors seem to be doing (assumption here with no hard facts) is raising the base median price of high volume products and then in turn “discount” said item.
This topic, one of frustration, was brought about from a trip to my local supermarket for soap and paying through the self-checkout line. All four automated check out machines were echoing over and over “Have you scanned your club card yet?”
According to my vendor’s loyalty card agreement “<vendor xyz> does not sell, lease or provide personal information (i.e., your name, address, telephone number, and bank and credit card account numbers) to non-related companies or entities.”
Non-Related companies or entities, what does that mean? Depends on your local country law regarding privacy but….
http://www.privacyrights.org/online-information-brokers-list
Looking at that list of Information Brokers leads me to think that non-related could mean? “We don’t partner with them.” Or could mean they don’t share.
In this Facebook world we live in data protection and leakage becomes far more relevant to the individual along with corporate entities.
PCI Compliance places a standard around protecting credit card data and most countries have relevant privacy laws regarding health care data but what about personal data that is given or granted freely?
https://www.pcisecuritystandards.org/security_standards/documents.php
With regards to personal data, it can no longer be said “It’s not that important” or “there is nothing critical on my computer.” Profile data on you is important.
Richard Porter
--- ISC Handler on Duty
Comments
jwhitlow
Jan 12th 2011
1 decade ago
One place used to have to shop at, I gave fake info and i could give my phone number to get sale items. my name was nick dibbler...
"Thank You Mr Dibbler"
seriously, they are a hassle to carry but some places accept a pic of the barcode on your smartphone so ill probably start doing that while giving fake data while applying for the card. I ALWAYS give fake data.
CH
Jan 12th 2011
1 decade ago
Dan
Jan 12th 2011
1 decade ago
G
Jan 12th 2011
1 decade ago
Manly Geek
Jan 12th 2011
1 decade ago
There was a supermarket card that I signed up for once - they had some flunky behind the desk and all I needed to do was give a false name with no address, no phone, and no email.
Jack Russell
Jan 13th 2011
1 decade ago
These stores don't need your name or phone number; they merely want a unique ID with which to track your purchases. The only way to "beat" that is for enough different people to share the same ID so that it confounds their data mining.
What phone number did I decide to memorize for this purpose? Why, the non-emergency number for the local police.
-J
Jan 13th 2011
1 decade ago
I still wonder why people even get them, because if you look at your receipts you generally don't save a whole lot of money. At most, two or three dollars.
No Love.
Jan 13th 2011
1 decade ago
Phred9655
Jan 13th 2011
1 decade ago
They're a great way for businesses to figure out what their customers really want and help make it easier for you to get what you want.
Even better is that the savings really add up. My grocery store has this deal called "FuelPerks" and not only do I save on groceries, but I end up with a free tank of gas once a month.
A lot of the privacy concerns are overrated. They only ask for info that is available in the phonebook. Your buying data is only given to people who are interested in making your life better by giving you what you want (and you're always free not to buy their products). If you embarrassed by the fact that you go through 20 cases of beer a week, then for that purchase just pay cash and don't use the card.
You have complete control when it comes to these loyalty cards since you're the one not only with the money but also the one who decides when to use (or not use) the card.
tom cat
Jan 13th 2011
1 decade ago