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How can American Express improve its cashback ‘statement credit’ offers?

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There is no doubt that the American Express cashback rewards programme is very popular.

Many HfP readers generate substantial savings from it. We often see people saying in our comments that the ability to save via Amex cashback is a key reason why they continue holding their card, even if it has an annual fee.

Just because something is good doesn’t mean that it can’t be improved, however.

Here are a few ideas from myself and from reader comments. If you have any others, please post them below and we can add them in. You can be sure that Amex will read them.

How to improve American Express cashback rewards

Put new offers at the top of the list, not randomly inserted into it

As you can see here, my wife currently has 95 offers on her Preferred Rewards Gold card:

Because I’m weird, I am happy to scroll through the 85 unsaved offers on a regular basis to see what is new. However, the biggest mistake that people who work in the loyalty business make is to assume that all of their customers are as committed / obsessed / weird as they are.

Put the new offers where they can be seen – at the top. Even better, send out a weekly personalised email of new offers.

Allow offers to be dismissed or removed from the list

If new offers can’t be put at the top of the list, or perhaps even if they can, include an option to dismiss or hide offers which are irrelevant.

Amex may say ‘well, you never know what you may end up needing’. Whilst this is the case for some retailers (my wife may announce tonight that she has found something on FARFETCH she wants to buy) I can promise you that I won’t be spending £50 on mail-order steak or £650 on a Brighton & Hove Albion season ticket.

Allowing deals to be dismissed would also give Amex valuable data on what offers to show to you in the future.

List offers by category, or at least allow filtering by category

Some sort of deal filtering would help. If someone is looking for a hotel, putting the relevant offers together in the list or allowing the list to be filtered to just show hotel offers would be useful.

Clarify what an offer is about

Again, this comes back to the disconnect between the Amex staff who put these offers together and Mr Average Cardmember.

I can get £10 back at ROWBOTS. What is this? Where is it? If I already know what the business does, then arguably I am less likely to need a cashback incentive to check it out. Explain it to potential new customers. List it as ‘ROWBOTS boutique fitness studio’.

Get on top of the small print

We get hundreds of comments on HfP each year questioning the small print – more precisely, the lack of it – on Amex cashback offers.

The most common problem is over whether an offer is cumulative or not. This crops up primarily with the hotel offers. You will occasionally see wording such as ‘spend £350 in one transaction’ but the lack of this wording does not necessarily mean that cumulative spending is acceptable.

For example, I have a Blacklane (high end chauffeur service) offer on my Platinum card. It is worth £25 back on a spend of £100.

You would assume this is cumulative, since even if I took Blacklane to Heathrow it wouldn’t come to £100. The wording, however, says “get a £25 statement credit on an eligible transaction of £100+ online at Blacklane”. This implies that the £100 must be done in one transaction. Am I going to risk putting £100 through Blacklane over 2-3 trips just to see if the cashback appears? No.

The Dell cashback offer for Amex Business cardholders is equally confusing. For some reason the small print suggests you use an Amex-branded link to the Dell site. In reality, the cashback works perfectly well on Dell Outlet, the Dell trade site and the Dell personal site.

Find a way around the problem with sign-up caps

Most of these cashback offers have a limited number of registrations, often 5,000 to 10,000 people. This is peanuts compared to the number of Amex cards in circulation.

Retailers want caps in place because they want to restrict their financial exposure. Having talked to companies who have run Amex cashback offers, however, they create more problems than they solve.

Here are some of the issues:

  • some people ‘save’ offers purely to get rid of them from their offers list, to make new offers easier to spot. This reduces the number of genuine potential users who can register. This problem can be fixed if Amex allowed people to dismiss or hide offers that don’t interest them
  • some people ‘save’ offers even if there is only a 1 in 1,000 chance that they might use them. There is no downside and they don’t want to run the risk of losing out if the offer disappears. I can understand why people do this – it is economically rational – but it causes real issues for the retailer if people who register only have a 0.1% likelihood of redeeming
  • some people do not save the offer immediately (which is the ‘responsible’ thing to do) but when an unexpected requirement to spend £500 at Agent Provocateur comes up, they can no longer find it. This is because other people – who have no intention of visiting Agent Provocateur but ‘saved’ the offer due to the two reasons above – have taken all of the registration spots. Annoyed, the customer decides to spend their £500 elsewhere because they feel they are somehow being ripped off if they still visit Agent Provocateur.

There is an obvious way around these problems, which is to set a cap on the number of REDEMPTIONS. This would cause its own problems, because you wouldn’t know before you made a purchase whether the cashback would appear or not. This isn’t something Amex would want to do.

Another option would be to allow people to un-save an offer. A little nudge (“Won’t use this? Unsave and let another cardholder benefit”) would do the job. It could then be shown again to cardholders who were originally offered it but didn’t save it before it disappeared.

I wish there was an easy answer to this one, but there isn’t.

The only real solution is that Amex and advertisers learn from previous behaviour. If an airline has a £100,000 budget and estimates that 10% of people who ‘save’ will redeem a £100 cashback offer, it will set a limit of 10,000 registrations. If it turns out than only 1% do redeem, it should adjust the next offer to allow 100,000 registrations – possibly with Amex sharing some of the financial risk.

Do you have any other suggestions for this list?

The ideas above will all improve the effectiveness of American Express cashback rewards for Amex, retailers and cardholders. Some will not be easy to implement, but others – especially making the terms and conditions crystal clear – won’t cost a penny.

If you have any other ideas, please comment below.

Amex …. my invoice is in the post.

PS. Here are some additional ideas submitted via the comments:

  • Remove the ‘show all’ button and simply show all of the offers in one list in the first place
  • Restrict the number of offers that can be saved per card, coupled with the ability to unsave other offers to free up space
  • Insist that an offer be redeemed within x days of being saved to your card, or it is removed
  • Speed up the process for saving offers by removing the need for a ‘double click’
  • Improve the wording on ‘percentage’ offers – does ‘get 20% back up to £100’ mean you can earn £20 or £100 cashback?
  • Add a progress counter for those offers which are triggered by cumulative spend

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Earning miles and points from small business cards

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Comments (152)

This article is closed to new posts. Discussion continues in the HfP Forums.

  • Andrew says:

    Agree with all of that analysis and suggestions Rob. I would love the list to be less of a game of spot the difference in the morning so I can see what’s new at the top, like my emails. The list even changes order each day! And yes come on Amex stop copying and pasting T&Cs and write them properly for each offer that is clear about cumulative spend. And with things like the 20% back up to £100 worded offers – make it clear that’s a maximum of £100 back rather than a max 20% on £100 spend.

  • Mark says:

    Firstly they do have a mini filter when you view offers from offer page and not main dashboard which prob most people dont go to…

    Secondly, there needs to be more practical offers especially on paid cards… not once in 2 months something you actually going to use… no point having 95 offers if most people only will use 2…

    • AJA says:

      I pointed out the limited filter that already exists yesterday. Since it’s there it should be relatively easy to modify it for some of these suggestions. Eg filter by expiry date, filter by expiry date, sort alphabetically, sort by oldest to newest or newest to oldest etc

  • RobH says:

    To limit people saving to card when they do not intend to use the offer. Only allow a set number of offers (say 5-10) that have not yet been redeemed be saved at one time. Then the card holder will need to think about what they are saving. (I actually think this is about “training” the card holder to “behave responsibly and have consideration to others”)

  • CarpalTravel says:

    The dismissing one is key I think. It’d be useful for the merchant as they can actively see or learn about those who are definitely not interested in their offering (rather than wondering / guessing if the card holder just hasn’t noticed it) and would save the need for Amex to apply a sort order to the offers list.

    I’m not shocked though that they don’t provide additional details, it drives people (or me at least) to search and visit the website so I can see what on earth itnis they actually offer. I too am looking at you, Rowbots. An easily accessed direct link would be better though as I had to Google them and no doubt Google charged them when I hit the sponsored search result.

    Disconnect is the right description for the offers, they need to be more of an offer boutique, rather than just a list.

    • ThinkSquare says:

      No, that doesn’t work for me. I have no idea what Farfetch or Sweaty Betty sell, and am not inclined to spend time finding out.

      • Jonathan says:

        If you were remotely interested in fashion or “athleisure”/gym wear then you would definitely know who those 2 were as they are big players.

        If you don’t know them then you’re incredibly unlikely to be in the market for a £1000 handbag or £80 leggings so further info not going to sway you!

        • AJA says:

          +1 And if you’re that intrigued just go to their website to find out more. That said these offers are advertising on the Amex site and clearly it’s not working terribly well as it’s not getting people to click through and find out more. Even with those who save offers just to get rid of them from the list.

      • CarpalTravel says:

        Then just dismiss them. No one’s forcing you to spend time researching them.

    • kitten says:

      Maybe a Dismiss and Never Show me Offers from that Retailer again” button too

  • mradey says:

    Immediate confirmation of successful offer redemption upon eligible transactions.

    If Amex can alert me to a £1.99 purchase at Sainsbury (via smartphone) before the till can spit out the paper receipt, it should be able to tell me ‘offer redeemed – £xx saved’ by the same route.

    • Andrew says:

      And save the hit and miss email notification. Yes agree with this improvement.

  • mark2 says:

    Specifically for Shop Small they should save the offer to all cards since it is available to everyone. Because of the 24,000 Platinum referrals my wife and I have a number of fairly new cards and some mature Additional Cards also did not get the offer. This wastes time for the cardholder and Customer Services.

  • MadeUpName says:

    What Santander do with their Retail Offers in their app – the app home screen says (for example) you have 2 new offers and has 2 little logos of the Retailers (>2 new = no logos). This is new offers since you last clicked through to the Retailer offers page. So once you’ve clicked on Retailer Offers you won’t see the you have new offers message again until you have new offers.

  • Andrew says:

    Amex should avoid sending emails about offers you don’t have. Yesterday they send out emails about the Hilton offer to lots of us who don’t have the offer available.

    They should also send emails when an offer date is extended – the QR offer was extended by a month but unless you noticed the change to expiry date in your saved offers you wouldn’t know.

    • Lady London says:

      Similarly it would be interesting to know to what extent Amex thinks about the impact of POMO (Pssd Off Missed Out) on a particularly good offer. Such as the Marriott one which p****d off quite a lot of people on here.

This article is closed to new posts. Discussion continues in the HfP Forums.