Why JCPenney’s loyalty program is the next step in its $1B turnaround plan
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JCPenney today (April 17) launched a new loyalty program that could deliver half a billion dollars to its consumers, per details shared with Marketing Dive, representing another major investment by the retailer following the $1 billion turnaround plan it announced last year.

With the launch of a revamped JCPenney Rewards and Credit Program, the retailer is delving into one of the four core areas it established with last year's launch of its "Make It Count" brand positioning, alongside accessible fashion, community support and a commitment to positive change.

The rewards program, which already counts 20 million members that shop at JCPenney an average of five times per year, looks to make every dollar and every trip to the retailer count, with faster point accrual and other ways to earn CashPass points — a new reward structure reminiscent of the one popularized by rival Kohl's.

The free-to-join program guarantees $20 in CashPass rewards, with a $10 reward earned after each $200 of spending and a faster rate of accrual for JCPenney credit cardholders. To promote the launch, the retailer is hosting a More, More More Event on May 4 that challenges shoppers to make a three-point shot — a feat accomplished by brand ambassador Shaquille O'Neal only once during an NBA game — into a shopping cart for a chance to win more rewards. A related social media hashtag challenge gives consumers a chance to meet the pop culture phenom.

Katie Mullen, who was promoted from JCPenney's chief digital and transformation officer to chief customer officer last April, detailed the rewards program and associated marketing plans during a press briefing and interview with Marketing Dive.

This interview has been edited for clarity and brevity.

MARKETING DIVE: It's been a few months since JCPenney announced its billion dollar plan. What has the marketing strategy been since then?

KATIE MULLEN: What we did in September, from a marketing perspective, was use the reinvestment moment to re-establish our brand value proposition, talking more explicitly about the four pillars of our brand, which are making fashion truly accessible, being genuinely rewarding, standing with our communities and doing for others what we want for ourselves, given our history as "the Golden Rule store."

September through December was really about making sure that the customer was seeing and hearing from us about accessible fashion. We spent a lot of our internal time in terms of content creation and dollars in terms of amplification really making sure we were getting credit for the amount of fashion, newness and innovation, both from an inclusion standpoint and from a value standpoint. We were talking about making every body count, and really making a statement about inclusion and the range and breadth of our customer needs.