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We began the program in 1999 and after 9 months had 643 customers signed on. We then ran the numbers on those companies and found that their purchases were up an incredible 40% over the previous year. With those results in hand we incentified all of our salespeople, with miles of course, to sign up new customers to the program and within a year we had about 2500 companies on board.
Not only did our “external” customers love it, but so did our “internal” customers…our salespeople and staff. For a program like this to be successful it is critical for your own people to buy into it first. Every one of our employees was on the program and earned miles for selling or renting those products that we would incentify. We would run product specific sales programs with our vendors and they would co-op our people’s miles, we put miles on dead inventory and we empowered our staff to use miles as a bargaining tool to close sales or take care of unhappy customers. We also rewarded loyalty to the company by giving everyone 1000 miles for every year that they were there on the anniversary of their employment. The different ways that we would use these loyalty and incentive miles, which cost us only $.02 per mile, were numerous and fun. It was the ultimate way of stepping out of the box and marketing our company like no one had ever done in our industry before.
As time went on I read different articles and studies on how non-cash incentives typically do a much better job of driving performance than does cash or discounts. In an article entitled “The Benefits of Tangible Non-Monetary Incentives” written by Scott Jeffrey, an assistant professor in the Department of Management Sciences at Canada’s University of Waterloo, he offers four specific reasons why cash doesn’t measure up to merchandise and travel incentives:
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