Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Starbucks Changes Rewards Program; Small Spenders Lose

The Canadian Press, 22 Feb, 2016 11:00 AM
    NEW YORK — Starbucks is changing the terms of its rewards program so that people who spend around $5 or less per visit won't get as many freebies.
     
    The Seattle-based coffee chain says its loyalty program will award stars based on the dollars spent starting in April. Currently, people earn a star for each transaction, regardless of how much they spend, and get a free food or item of their choice after earning 12 stars.
     
    People will now have to earn 125 stars for a free item, with each dollar spent being worth two stars — meaning they have to spend $62.50 to get their free item. That means people who stick with options like plain coffee are losing out.
     
    For instance, someone who regularly pays $2 for a regular drip coffee would currently earn a free item after spending around $24 over 12 visits. Under the new system, they would have to visit more than 31 times before they earn the perk.
     
    Someone who gets a large latte for $4.45 currently spends around $53.40 over a dozen visits before getting a free item. That person would need to visit a couple extra times for the freebie with the new system.
     
    Still, Starbucks Corp. says the change is the No. 1 request among loyalty program members and predicts it will lead to higher spending by customers eager to earn more stars.
     
     
    In a call with analysts, Starbucks Chief Strategy Officer Matthew Ryan said the vast majority of customers will earn rewards at an equal or better rate with the change. Without providing details, he said a "small minority" of customers will earn rewards at a slower pace.
     
    The change is not an opportunity to opaquely reduce the value of the program, Ryan said.
     
    The current rewards system can also increase waiting times in store lines, Ryan said, because some people try to get additional stars by asking to ring up multiple items separately. Such instances account for 1 per cent of all transactions, he said.
     
    The change comes as Starbucks has been pushing to get more people signed up for its My Starbucks Rewards program. Loyalty members spend three times as much as non-members, and help push up profit, according to the company.
     
    Last month, Starbucks said it had 11.1 million loyalty program members in the U.S., up 23 per cent from the previous year.
     
    The coming change will not benefit customers such as Vincent Fiorese, who works in construction management and spends less than $3 on a cup of coffee whenever he goes to work. But Fiorese said it wouldn't deter him from getting his coffee.
     
    "It sucks, but what am I going to do," he said.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    'It isn't easy to fool a five-year-old'

    'It isn't easy to fool a five-year-old'
    A new study by psychology researchers from Concordia University and the University of British Columbia shows that by the age of five, children...

    'It isn't easy to fool a five-year-old'

    Right At Home: Decor And Entertaining Ideas For A Poe-inspired Halloween Party

    Right At Home: Decor And Entertaining Ideas For A Poe-inspired Halloween Party
    IIn classics like "The Cask of Amontillado," ''The Murders in the Rue Morgue," ''The Masque of the Red Death" and more, the master of horror fiction gave us imagery that have long inspired Halloween aficionados and lovers of all things spooky

    Right At Home: Decor And Entertaining Ideas For A Poe-inspired Halloween Party

    Artist puts moms in a museum - real moms

    Artist puts moms in a museum - real moms
    BENTONVILLE, Ark. - The first thing you encounter at a new contemporary art show at Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art is the "Mom Booth," where a woman in an apron sits at a table.

    Artist puts moms in a museum - real moms

    Screenwriter Craig Borten kept faith for 20 years in 'Dallas Buyers Club'

    Screenwriter Craig Borten kept faith for 20 years in 'Dallas Buyers Club'
    VANCOUVER - "Dallas Buyers Club" had its moment of glory at the Academy Awards earlier this year, a night two decades in the making for screenwriter Craig Borten, who penned the first version of the film's script in 1992.

    Screenwriter Craig Borten kept faith for 20 years in 'Dallas Buyers Club'

    The science behind near-death experiences

    The science behind near-death experiences
    A high proportion of people who survive cardiac arrest may have vivid death experiences but do not recall them due to the effects of brain injury or...

    The science behind near-death experiences

    Genes decide if you will love coffee or not

    Genes decide if you will love coffee or not
    In a first, researchers have identified six new genetic variants associated with habitual coffee drinking, suggesting why some people love to...

    Genes decide if you will love coffee or not