Our Perspective
What this means for leaders navigating growth, change or transformation in their organisation.
What Loyalty Really Buys
Loyalty isn’t a coupon; it’s confidence. When customers believe a brand will consistently deliver what it says, they tolerate fewer checks, ask fewer questions, and accept firmer prices. The commercial upside is real: Accenture Strategy’s Global Consumer Pulse notes that 63% of people are prepared to pay more for brands they feel loyal to. That’s not a licence to increase prices; it’s a signal to align the promise with proof so a higher price feels earned, not imposed.
The task for leadership is to convert belief into a predictable premium. That means making the promise specific, operational and measurable—so price becomes the shorthand for value the customer actually experiences.
Price As Proof
Price is part of the story you tell, but it’s also a test you must pass. Set it confidently and you set expectations; fail to meet them and you feed comparison shopping. The move isn’t “charge more,” it’s “charge for what you can reliably prove.” That repositions pricing from a defensive tactic to a strategic declaration.
Most organisations we work with over-index on campaigns and under-invest in the mundane mechanics that create confidence: response times, issue resolution, onboarding clarity, and the absence of friction. Tidy those, and the price stops being an argument and starts being evidence.
Design The Evidence
A loyalty premium rests on an evidence chain that holds under pressure. Start by defining the few moments that matter and the proof customers will recognise without explanation.
- Name one non‑negotiable promise in plain language, then specify the behaviours that deliver it across sales, service and product.
- Set customer-facing standards that can be felt, not just measured: first‑response time, right‑first‑time rates, proactive updates.
- Make proof visible: simple guarantees, transparent dashboards, and recovery rituals that show how you put things right.
Leadership Moves
The alignment between promise and price will not happen by chance. It needs choices that concentrate attention and remove noise.
- Decide what you won’t promise. Narrow scope accelerates delivery and justifies firmer pricing.
- Tie pricing rules to proof. Premiums should map to clearly superior experiences or outcomes, not just features.
- Regularly review friction hotspots and switching signals so pricing confidence is anchored in current reality, not last year’s assumptions.
Looking Ahead
As expectations rise, the brands that turn price into proof—by matching a clear promise with daily evidence—will not just hold their ground; they’ll convert belief into durable margin and steadier growth.
Sources:
Accenture Strategy Global Consumer Pulse