Co-Branded Cards: Will Travel be Back in Vogue?

Business Travel

Co-branded credit cards play an essential part in account acquisition and retention.  By linking up with a partner, card companies and merchants can create a symbiotic relationship. Use the card, earn a point.  Use the card at the merchant-partner, and you will likely find additional bonuses and discounts.

Reward partners fall into four categories: general retailers, airline companies, automobiles, cruise lines, hotels, and other types.   The travel-related sectors are particularly sticky because they offer aspirational family events, whether the goal is a family vacation to Europe or a second-honeymoon to Hawaii.

They work well most of the time, but not always.  Consider the COVID Pandemic.

Consider the boom in travel premium cards less than four years ago. Chase threw down the proverbial gauntlet with its highly successful Sapphire card.  For an unusually high fee of almost $500, new cardmembers received up to a 100,000 point bonus reward.  The card had panache, and the bonus outweighed the expense. 

Mainstream travel co-branded cards, such as American Express’ Delta cards, Citi’s American Airlines cards, or Chases’ United card scrambled to protect their business proposition.  Then, the trend for cash-back rewards entered the picture, long after Discover pioneered the option. 

With the pandemic came a reduced ability and desire to travel, making airline and hotel cards less attractive to the primary consumer.

Today’s read comes from the American Banker.

The article draws data from a Gigapoints/Ipsos survey which indicates that only 9% of cardholders prefer airline miles, and another 4% prefer hotel points.  My personal favorite, cash back, received a 73% preference rating.  Keep in mind, the points purpose, beyond rewarding the cardholder, is to increase transaction volume, card spend, and account retention.

Two top firms in rewards include Amex and Discover.  Discover rocked the rewards industry back in about 1988 and has been progressive in cash-backs since.

People are getting itchy about attending that excellent business conference in Florida, NYC, or SFO.

I am ready for a good old-fashioned business trip, and I bet you are too.  And, a family vacation wouldn’t be bad once everyone gets their vaccine.  Maybe it is time to take the airline credit cards out of the family safe.

Overview Provided by Brian Riley, Director, Credit Advisory Service at Mercator Advisory Group

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