Reliant Payment Systems offers great gift and loyalty card programs from Valutec and Secure Payment Systems. Below is everything you need to know about gift and loyalty cards. Further down are the contracts you need to start accepting these cards.

Why plastic vs paper?
Increases prepaid gift sales
Builds brand awareness
Keeps full cash value in store
Customers spend more
Boosts Loyalty Program usage
Easy to carry and use
Powerful promotional tool
Complete transaction reporting automates record-keeping
Why have cards become so popular with consumers?
Cards have more perceived value than paper certificates or coupons
Gift Cards provide a personal gift without the giver having to select a specific item
A Card is a convenient way to participate in a loyalty program to receive rewards, discounts and incentives
Identifies the Cardholder as a valued customer
Easy to buy, easy to carry, easy to use, and easy to give

MARKET FACTS
The average value for gift cards is $50—up from $44 in the previous year
Nearly 90% of the top 200 national retailers have switched to gift cards
Most gift card recipients make more than one trip to the store to use up the value of their card
61% of customers spend more than the original value placed on the card

One out of every two in-store
purchases is made with an
electronic payment instrument.*

Gift Cards outsold paper
gift certificates $45 billion vs
$6 billion last year.**
* American Bankers Association
**The Nilson Report

Loyalty Card Programs
Retain customers and increase shopping frequency with Loyalty cards.

How sticky is your business?
In today’s competitive retail environment, the battle to retain customers is fierce. The winners are those who establish and maintain one or more competitive advantages in the minds of their customers. A loyalty program can be a powerful means of creating a compelling reason for consumers to prefer one business over another. With a Loyalty Card in her wallet, a customer is much more likely to choose that merchant the next time she makes a purchase.

Points for purchases
The first step in creating a Loyalty Program is to decide what point value to assign to customer purchases. Our recommendation is that you keep it simple and award one point for every dollar a customer spends.

Award levels & redemptions
The next step is to decide what reward(s) to give your customers when a specific point level is reached. Rewards can be products, services, discounts, or spendable value added to the card. The system can accomodate up to 6 (six) Award Levels.
Each time an Award Level
is reached, the terminal printer will print a message advising the merchant and cardholder that the cardholder is eligible to redeem an award at that time.
The cardholder has the option to not redeem an award and continue accumulating points in the program. Awards are given by the merchant according to their specific program rules.

The Loyalty receipt
The terminal prints a receipt which tracks the points added to the customer’s Loyalty account and provides a total for all points accumulated to date and available for redemption (point balance). To eliminate confusion, no previous redemptions are shown.

Terminal applications
All of the terminals and applications that process Stored Value / Gift Card transactions can also be set up to process transactions for the Loyalty Program.
See available equipment / software descriptions here.

Reports
The system will provide reports indicating loyalty points earned through purchases, a summary of redemptions, transactions voided, balance inquiries and other activity relative to that merchant’s program.

Data Mining
Through Valutec’s web-based Virtual Terminal application, customer demographic information can be tied to a specific card number and stored in our host database. This database can be used to target marketing campaigns to specific customers based on a variety of card usage criteria.
Valutec has a simple popup web form that can easily be added to a merchant website to allow cardholders to “register” cards themselves by entering their personal identification information

Industry Perspective
The Stage Has Been Set
A lot of our customers end up with gift cards when they’re unsure about what to buy, but they know the person they’re buying for loves our store.”
—Tina Baldock, Kirklands
Nilson Report
Gift card systems are the fastest growing consumer payment system in the U.S. over the last three years… Retailers have much to gain from the migration from paper certificates to plastic cards…gift cards will dominate the prepaid payment system for years to come.

Retail Card Forum
Shoppers using prepaid gift cards and certificates are less concerned about paying full price in retail stores than shoppers using other media, according to research by Daniel R. Horne, assistant professor of marketing at Providence College, RI. Horne’s survey of gift card and certificate users found that 40% of shoppers using a retailer’s gift card or certificate purchased items at full price, compared to 16% of shoppers using other payment methods.

Los Angeles Times
Macy’s, Gap, Bloomingdale’s and others are promoting prepaid gift cards that take the place of paper gift certificates, hoping to boost sales… The cards have an important advantage for retailers over paper gift certificates. Consumers using gift certificates receive their change in cash, which can be spent elsewhere. The electronic gift cards keep the money from leaving the store.
Dan Horne, retailing professor at Providence College in Rhode Island, said sales of gift cards and certificates have been growing 11% to 15% annually since 1993, thanks in large part to gift cards. Americans will spend billions on them, he said. The cards appeal to time-pinched consumers in search of a convenient gift, Horne said. Also, corporations purchase batches of the cards to give to customers.
Retailers view the cards, which usually have the store logo on them and easily slip into a consumers’ wallet, as a form of branding.“A reusable gift card can be a constant reminder of a store and its brands,” said Joe Enos, a spokesman for Old Navy.
Neiman Marcus is credited with creating the electronic gift card in 1994. The retailer — known for its expensive, not to say extravagant, merchandise – has actually sold cards with values in the $100,000 range, said Billy Payton, vice president of marketing at the Dallas-based chain. “We launched the prepaid gift card because we believe it can be fun to buy, fun to give and fun to use,” Payton said.

The Associated Press
Retailers have high hopes for the future of electronic gift cards. Finding that perfect gift for someone – at Christmas or any other time is never easy, but a growing number of retailer’s think they have the solution…It’s plastic.
Stores are converting gift certificates from documents to electronic cards. They’re less cumbersome to carry, have a technological edge that appeals to kids and are advantageous for retailers.

Card Marketing
Neiman-Marcus and Barneys New York are wrapping up higher gift sales after replacing paper gift certificates with magnetic stripe, prepaid cards in all stores. Customer response has been so strong; the upscale stores are now jockeying to develop the most colorful and unique cards for every occasion, before mainstream department stores jump on the bandwagon.
Although the trend began at two of the nation’s most upscale stores, retailers from Bloomingdale’s to Target are offering prepaid gift cards, because of the convenience and cost savings the cards offer.

ATM & Debit News
Consumers reported receiving 4.3 gift cards last year, with an average face value of $35. Consumers who gave gift cards stated that they spend an average of nearly $143 on the plastic annually. The average amount consumers spend above the value of the card is $24.
Also significant to retailers is that they enjoy the “float” on unspent funds while consumers keep their cards in their wallets.

The above information is from the Valutec Website