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Off topic: Sainsbury’s guts Nectar earning from April 2015

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I don’t cover Nectar much on Head for Points because it offers little in the way of travel rewards.  I have written about the ability to use your points to book easyJet flights and how the Nectar estore is the only way of getting cashback on an easyJet booking.

I also reviewed the American Express Nectar credit card last year.  This is currently a pretty good deal – no fee for the first year and £100 of Nectar points for signing up.  Amex has tightened up on who can apply, though, and you only get the £100 if you have NO American Express-issued Amex cards at all.

I have also written about how I use Nectar to (indirectly) convert my Amex Membership Rewards points into John Lewis / Waitrose vouchers.  I also covered whether it is better to take Nectar points or Flying Club miles when booking on Virgin Trains.

That is about it.  Here is the new news.

Sainsbury announced yesterday that it is halving its Nectar earning rate from April 2015.  You will earn only 1 point per £1 spent rather than 2 points.  Details can be found on the Sainsbury website here.

This halves your cashback from 1% to 0.5%.

Sainsbury is clearly doing this to cut costs, confident that Nectar is not a sufficient enough attraction to shoppers to cause them to defect in droves.  It is also ending the practice of giving you an extra Nectar point if you use your own bags – it is bringing in a charge for carrier bags instead.

The announcement implies that change is also coming to the Nectar credit card issued by Sainsbury’s Bank:

Nectar is changing for all Sainsbury’s customers, which means that the way our Bank customers collect points when they use their Nectar card in store will change in the future too.

Note that the American Express-issued Nectar card is not impacted.

This is unlikely to signify the end of Nectar in the UK (which, few people know, is owned by the Canadian company which runs Air Canada’s Aeroplan loyalty scheme) but it will be a serious blow.

The problem with Nectar, as I see it, is that it isn’t fun.  It isn’t interesting.  You can’t ‘game’ it.  To all intents and purposes your points are worth 0.5p each and it is hard to improve on that.

Tesco Clubcard, on the other hand, is fun.  You can ‘game’ it and you have sites like this one which spend lots of time explaining how and showing you ways to run up points at minimal cost.  It has a level of customer interaction and involvement that Nectar could never dream of getting.

This is, of course, the same appeal of airline schemes.  Every time I write about a new way of earning or spending Avios points, I am effectively writing a big free advertisement for British Airways / IAG.  Poor old Nectar gets left behind.

Comments (52)

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  • Irons1980 says:

    I don’t understand the bit about charging to use bags – when did they announce that they were bringing in a charge to use carrier bags?

    • Irons1980 says:

      I can see for Scotland, Wales and NI a charge, but not for the UK and no mention of introducing one on their website

    • Darren says:

      I think there is no specific mention because it isn’t a firm date, but it was expected ‘the end of next year’ I think?

    • craig says:

      I think all the major supermarkets are bringing in charges for carrier bags, and so as there is a disincentive to using too many bags, Sainso’s have decided they no longer need to offer a carrot if they have a stick.

      • JQ says:

        Time to load up on free plastic bags to use for my rubbish bins then.

        I’ll still claim 3 clubcard points per shop but just bring 3 small bags, and then take lots of plastic bags too…

        • YOUP says:

          What…don’t you receive charity bags through your letter box? I get one very few weeks!
          Much better volume than a standard carrier bag!

  • Froggitt says:

    Guts or Cuts?

  • David Butcher says:

    Nectar was launched with a huge fanfare and it seemed a great idea – one loyalty card covering many brands – I recall Debenhams were in the scheme at one time, and Barclaycard. In truth, it has always been a poor relation to Clubcard and it’s now even more devalued. I personally think Sainsbury’s have lost the plot. I have no idea what their new TV advertising about new pricing policies is all about – it seems so confusing that it’s probably only understood by their own marketing people. I will still pick up my Nectar points – it’s still something for nothing – but to me the scheme is on its deathbed; maybe it should be put to sleep?

  • Mark2 says:

    I never bother to take the Nectar card in when I occasionally shop at Sainsburys. I agree that they have really gone down. This week I tried to stock up on their own brand coffee which I particularly like but found the shelf empty (probably because it was on reduced price). When I eventually managed to locate a ‘colleague’ he did go and look reporting back eventually that 16 500g bags were expected later that day. I would have bought them all if they had been available.
    I currently spend up to £1000 per month at Tesco but only about £50 in goods. I have just managed to buy something from Tesco Direct using a 3V card; only £6 but I doubt that the amount matters.
    The postman has just delivered a ‘10% off very time you shop’ card from Waitrose. I was going this morn anyway, getting 3% back from Tesco of course.

    • JQ says:

      “I would have bought them all if they had been available.”

      Sounds like your adversary had the same plan…

  • The Lady says:

    One way of getting a good amount of extra nectar points is signing up for http://www.nectaradpoints.com/ which should earn you around 100 points per month, offsetting some of this reduction.

    • JQ says:

      This is a waste of time as you actually need to pay attention

      It doesn’t affect the devaluation at all, unless they double the earning rates there, as you would either be doing it already or not which doesn’t change after the deval

  • martin says:

    This story from the Daily Mash last year now seems even more appropriate:
    http://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/business/nectar-points-not-for-anything-2013112081294

  • Lux says:

    I’m worried about your idea of fun!

  • oyster says:

    Am I the only one who sees this as very much on topic, since Tesco will look very closely at what Sainsbury’s have done and may follow suit?

    More importantly, staff regularly swap between the 2, so it’s not that inconceivable that the person behind this idea at Sainsbury’s ends up working in Cheshunt soon enough.

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