
Across the globe, there is no shortage of member benefit programs.
Consumers now receive access to discounts, perks and offers through many of the brands they are customers of. On paper, this sounds like a golden age of customer value. In reality, many of these programs have become almost indistinguishable from one another.
- The same movie ticket discounts.
- The same gift card promotions.
- The same cashback mechanics.
- The same “up to 50 per cent off” retail offers.
- The same wine clubs, dining platforms and experience marketplaces.
The result is a growing loyalty problem hiding in plain sight: if every provider offers effectively the same member benefits, those benefits stop being a reason to stay.
For many organisations, member benefit programs have become a hygiene factor rather than a differentiator. Customers expect them to exist, but they rarely drive genuine loyalty because the exact same offers are available elsewhere through another provider the customer already has a relationship with.
This is particularly visible in Australia, where consumers are often simultaneously members of multiple ecosystems. A single customer may have access to rewards and benefits through:
- their telco provider,
- their health insurance fund,
- their energy retailer,
- their credit card,
- their airline loyalty program,
- their automotive membership organisation,
- and even their employer.
If all of those programs provide near identical offers, the perceived incremental value of each individual program declines dramatically.
The loyalty industry has spent years focusing on building larger marketplaces of offers. You may have access to thousands of offers in your program, but the reality is that 98% of your members purchase the movie tickets and grocery gift cards, with a sprinkle of other brands. The next phase will be about building differentiated ecosystems that members cannot easily replicate elsewhere.
Access is no longer exclusive
Historically, member benefit programs worked because they gave consumers access to something they could not easily obtain themselves. That scarcity created value.
Early loyalty partnerships with airlines, premium events, retail discounts or entertainment access genuinely felt differentiated because distribution was limited. Being a member unlocked experiences or savings that non-members did not have.
Today, the opposite is often true.
Many third-party offer providers now distribute their inventory across dozens of loyalty and member benefit programs simultaneously. The same cinema offer may appear across banks, insurers and telecommunications providers. The same gift card supplier may power multiple competing ecosystems. The same dining platform may sit underneath several different white-labelled member benefit portals.
Consumers notice this duplication quickly.
Once members realise they can access virtually identical offers through another provider, the emotional and behavioural switching barrier disappears. The benefit stops reinforcing loyalty because it is no longer unique to the relationship.
This is one of the reasons many member benefit programs generate high registration numbers but relatively low ongoing engagement. The program exists, members know it exists, but it does not materially change customer behaviour because the value proposition lacks exclusivity.
The difference between value and differentiated value
One of the biggest misconceptions in loyalty strategy is that more offers automatically create more value.
They is not the case and as Jerry Maguire put in his mission statement, “The answer was fewer clients. Less money. More attention.”
A program with 5,000 generic offers is often less powerful than a program with 20 genuinely differentiated benefits that members cannot easily access elsewhere.
The critical distinction is between:
- value,
- and differentiated value.
A discounted movie ticket has value. But if customers can obtain the same discount through five other providers, it is not differentiated value.
Differentiated value is what creates switching resistance. It is what gives customers a reason to preference one ecosystem over another.
This is where many member benefit programs are currently falling short. The industry has become heavily reliant on syndicated offer networks that maximise scale and ease of deployment, but unintentionally create uniformity across competing programs.
From a commercial perspective, this is understandable. Shared offer marketplaces are operationally efficient, relatively low risk and quick to launch. They allow organisations to populate a benefits platform rapidly without needing to negotiate hundreds of direct merchant relationships.
The problem is that operational convenience often comes at the expense of strategic differentiation.
The strongest programs focus on best in market offers
The most effective member benefit programs are increasingly moving away from broad generic marketplaces and towards fewer, higher quality partnerships that deliver genuinely compelling member value.
This does not necessarily mean building the largest ecosystem. It means building the most strategically differentiated one.
The strongest offers tend to share three characteristics.
1. They are difficult to replicate
If a competitor can onboard the exact same offer next month, the advantage is temporary.
The best loyalty partnerships involve:
- exclusive pricing,
- unique packaging,
- bonus inclusions,
- priority access,
- member-only inventory,
- or benefits that are structurally difficult for competitors to reproduce.
This is why “best in market” matters so much. Members do not compare your program against having no benefits. They compare it against every other ecosystem they already belong to.
2. They create emotional value, not just transactional savings
A 10 per cent discount is rarely memorable.
Experiences, status recognition, upgrades, access and convenience tend to generate far stronger emotional engagement than generic percentage-off offers.
Programs that consistently outperform often connect members to:
- aspirational experiences,
- lifestyle alignment,
- exclusivity,
- or insider access.
This is one of the reasons airline loyalty programs remain so powerful globally. They combine transactional utility with aspiration and status psychology in a way that generic discount marketplaces cannot replicate.
3. They align naturally with the customer relationship
The best partnerships feel logical within the context of the brand.
- A health insurer partnering with wellness and preventative health services makes sense.
- An energy retailer helping members reduce household costs makes sense.
- A telco provider connecting members to entertainment and digital experiences makes sense.
Programs become significantly more powerful when the benefits reinforce the broader brand positioning rather than existing as disconnected add-ons.
Why exclusivity is becoming more important
As loyalty ecosystems continue to converge, exclusivity will become increasingly valuable.
This does not necessarily mean every partnership must be fully exclusive. In many cases, that is commercially unrealistic.
But programs should be asking:
- Is this offer meaningfully better than what members can get elsewhere?
- Does this partnership create a competitive advantage?
- Would members notice if we removed it?
- Does this benefit genuinely strengthen retention?
If the answer to those questions is unclear, the partnership may be adding volume without adding strategic value.
The programs that will win over the next decade are unlikely to be the ones with the largest catalogue of generic discounts. They will be the ones that deliver distinctive member experiences and genuinely differentiated value propositions.
Loyalty is earned through differentiation
The irony of modern loyalty programs is that many have become so similar that they no longer drive loyalty.
When every provider offers effectively the same member benefits, the benefits themselves stop influencing retention decisions. Consumers simply default to whichever provider delivers the best core product, price or convenience.
This means loyalty teams need to think beyond simply adding more offers to the platform.
The strategic question is no longer: “How many offers do we have?”
It is: “What do we offer that competitors cannot?”
That distinction will define the next generation of successful loyalty and member benefit programs across the globe.
The future belongs to programs that move beyond generic marketplaces and create ecosystems members genuinely value, remember and cannot easily replace elsewhere.

