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s consumer spending continues to sag in this - dare we say it — recessionary economy,
retailers both big and small are looking for any extra edge that might convince customers to keep
shopping. Enter loyalty programs, a device once monopolized by airlines and credit card companies,
but now maintaining popularity with big box retailers, grocers and e-commerce merchants trying to
entice shoppers to visit and spend.
Former Oracle exec and local entrepreneur Dan Draper believes he sees the future of these
loyalty programs, and he launched My Retirement Rewards, a company with a unique program that lets
consumers save the rebates they receive from shopping at participating online stores and invest the
money into various financial instruments, including mutual funds, IRAs and - if you're bold enough
- the stock market.
Expecting profitability in the first quarter of 2009, My Retirement Rewards has already
signed up nearly 1,200 merchants, with top-tier retailing names like Target and The Home Depot
already on board. Perhaps the biggest sign they're on to something? In late September, Wal-Mart
called: They want in.
CatalystMag.com's Associate Publisher and Editor Drew Ermenc sat down with Draper to discuss
his Reward's business model, the concept of self-funding and his belief that shopping online will
soon be the norm, not the exception.
Drew: Tell me about My Retirement Rewards.
Dan: We call it "savings without sacrifice." In the past, we've dealt with
different types of rebate programs that no one could ever seem to understand. Whether it's points
that don't really quite add up to dollars or a bank with a savings program where they save the
change, all they're really doing is sweeping money from your checking account to your savings
account. So it's still a sacrifice because it's your money that you're putting into
savings.
Right now, we have contracts with the merchants themselves. We have about 1,200 merchants
that pay us an actual commission by having our members shop with them through our membership. Then,
we take a majority of that commission and pay it back to the member into an investment account of
their choice.
So if it's their own investment account they have set up, we can sweep it to that. If they
don't, we have an incredible partnership with financial service providers, like MyStockFund, for
instance. You can invest into ETFs, mutual funds, IRAs; you can even trade stock with the money if
you want. And the cool thing about them is, for the first time ever, whether it's MyStockFund,
e-Trader, any of those guys, they've taken a little different direction on investing. They used to
be these big commission loads up front, but they don't commission load anything anymore. They
typically charge $5.95 a month, so that's $7.95 a month just to be in their program. Then you can
invest in anything you want, whether $5 to thousands of dollars.
So you're partnering with these financial service providers as well?
Yes. The cool thing that we've done with MyStockFund is they saw the value in us and the
value of having massive numbers. For our members - for the first time ever - you can open up a
MyStockFund account for free. It costs our members nothing to open up an investment account with
MyStockFund. So it's truly free from beginning to end. Unless you're in the financial realm, you
can't understand how big that is.
Is there a cost to your membership?
No. That's the whole purpose that we were really driving home to them. Banks.com bought
MyStockFund. Huge company. They've got a lot of members, and are going to promote our business to
all their members. Banks.com is going to have us up on their homepage as well.
We don't want it to cost our members anything. We want this to be truly savings without
sacrifice. All they have to do is shop like they do every day. Some of their habits need to change
a little bit, although in our next stage, we're going to have an in-store application where they
can shop in-store. We really want to push people to buy online.
All the big box and brick-and-mortar retailers want people to shop online because it's
cheaper for them to do business. And in the future – I'm telling you the next two to five years –
it's going to be the only way you're going to be able to buy many things.
It's a paradigm shift we are starting to see. First, we started seeing [retailers] say,
'Shop online and it costs to ship.' And people were like, 'Forget that! I'm going to go in the
store and just pick it up.' So then, they started saying, 'Shop online and we'll ship for free.'
And then there are those people that said, 'That's great, but I still want to touch and feel it.'
So now, with most of the major brick and mortars – Wal-Mart, Target, Best Buy, most all the
big ones – they say now, 'Buy online and if you want to pick it up just come to the store and pick
it up.' To give an example, I went to Staples because I wanted a certain HP laptop. I found what I
wanted in the store, logged on to their computer onto my account, bought the computer and took it
home. And I got 6 percent back. It was cheaper.
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