Olympic Case study (please read the case and answer these 4 questions ) - Business Finance
1.What should Walkins do? What factors help explain Olympic’s performance? What market forces may impede it in the future?2.Assuming Olympic responds to Enterprise, how should it do so? What is the potential impact of emphasizing dollars spent versus days of rental? What is the potential impact of removing blackout dates?3.What is the cost of matching Enterprise? How much should Olympic be willing to spend for the Medalist program?4.What is the monetary value of a medalist to Olympic?
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REV. DECEMBER 6, 2013
JOHN DEIGHTON
JAMES T. KINDLEY
Olympic Rent-A-Car U.S.: Customer Loyalty Battles
Laura Walkins, vice president of marketing, and Andy Kim, manager of customer relations
programs, stepped off the DFW Airport shuttle bus on a warm October afternoon and hurried inside
to the Olympic rental area. They had come to Dallas to meet with Olympic’s district managers and
top marketing staff to try to determine how to respond to Enterprise Rent-a-Car’s recent aggressive
move with its EnterprisePlus customer loyalty rewards program.
As they spotted their names on the Olympic Medalist board, indicating where to find their
waiting car, Laura and Andy couldn’t help but notice the long lines at the Enterprise counter.
Enterprise had changed its customer rewards program several months before. On July 5, 2012, it
announced that its ‘‘regular’’ customers would receive free rental days on any car, with no blackouts.
It also announced a perhaps more troubling aspect of its new program: a shift from rewarding days
rented, the common practice in the industry, to dollars spent. Because frequent travelers typically
spent more for daily rentals, they would earn free rentals faster------and more often.
Laura slipped behind the wheel of a white Hyundai Sonata and drove toward the exit, listening as
Andy talked about the main topics for the meeting. He pointed out that the Olympic Medalist
Awards loyalty program was, in his view, the number-one reason for Olympic’s growth and
profitability. He also stated that Enterprise was making inroads in its quest to capture more of the
crucial business traveler market. ‘‘We have to do something. Enterprise is a well-run company and a
formidable competitor. We can’t just let it take business from us,’’ he said. ‘‘I think our service and
pricing are competitive. Our share of business-traveler bookings is holding up, but our Medalist
Awards program may come to be perceived as inadequate compared to Enterprise’s.’’ Laura
accelerated onto the highway toward their hotel. This is going to be an interesting meeting, she
thought.
Loyalty Marketing Programs
Customer loyalty programs are direct efforts by companies to gain long-term business from their
best customers. These programs also provide considerable information about customers that enable
companies to maintain a more knowledgeable and ‘‘personal’’ relationship------ideally similar to those
customers develop with many small, local businesses like dry cleaners and hair salons.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
HBS Professor John Deighton and College of Charleston professor James T. Kindley prepared this case solely as a basis for class discussion and
not as an endorsement, a source of primary data, or an illustration of effective or ineffective management. Although based on real events and
despite occasional references to actual companies, this case is fictitious and any resemblance to actual persons or entities is coincidental.
Copyright © 2013 President and Fellows of Harvard College. To order copies or request permission to reproduce materials, call 1-800-545-7685,
write Harvard Business Publishing, Boston, MA 02163, or go to http://www.hbsp.harvard.edu. This publication may not be digitized,
photocopied, or otherwise reproduced, posted, or transmitted, without the permission of Harvard Business School.
This document is authorized for use only by Essa Alkhudaysh (eank1989@gmail.com). Copying or posting is an infringement of copyright. Please contact
customerservice@harvardbusiness.org or 800-988-0886 for additional copies.
913-568 | Olympic Rent-A-Car U.S.: Customer Loyalty Battles
The idea of rewarding loyalty is not new. As self-service businesses began to grow in the early
1900s, mass loyalty programs, built around coupons and trading stamps, appeared. Retailers would
give customers small adhesive stamps in proportion to the amount of their purchases, to be pasted
into books and eventually redeemed for merchandise. The best-known provider had been the S&H
Green Stamp Company. These first programs were popular until about 1930. They reemerged in the
1950s and ended in the 1960s as consumers tired of them.
American Airlines created the first major travel loyalty marketing program in 1981 when it
introduced the AAdvantage frequent-flyer program (FFP), giving ‘‘miles’’ redeemable for free travel
based on paid miles traveled. The program succeeded because it had high perceived value for the
frequent traveler and it cost American very little to provide a free seat that otherwise would not have
been occupied. The heaviest travelers usually paid the most for their tickets------meaning that American
also received the highest revenue for rewarded miles.
American’s program administrators quickly realized they had a tool that did not only rewarded
loyalty but also identified the individuals who accounted for most of aviation’s revenues. The
technology facilitated a way to tailor programs and offerings to individual customers.
Airline frequent flyer programs (FFPs) became so popular that credit card companies and other
businesses began offering them as inducements to their customers, paying the airlines around one
cent per mile toward a customer’s preferred FFP, thus yielding large additional profits to the airlines.
FFP rewards, like other loyalty programs that followed, also received favorable tax treatment, as
they were not counted as income. Companies mostly viewed the rewards as an affordable employee
perk, even though they were paying for the airlines, hotels, and rental cars.1 This encouraged
travelers to opt for their favorite providers even though it may have cost their company more. As the
decade ended, computer-based customer loyalty programs were widespread in many industries,
including hotels, department stores, video and book retailing, credit cards, movie theaters, and the
car rental industry.
The U.S. Car Rental Industry: From 10 cents a mile to a $24 billion industry
The U.S. car rental industry was born in 1916 when Josiah Ellis Saunders, of Omaha, Nebraska,
ran a seven-line classified ad offering ‘‘Automobiles for Hire.’’ Saunders’s fleet consisted of one
Model T Ford that he rented for ten cents a mile. The industry Saunders created grew slowly at first,
then took off with the boom in commercial air travel after World War II.
The rental car business is closely tied to the state of the overall economy as business, and
especially leisure, travel tends to be somewhat discretionary. In 2009, total market revenue fell 6.5\%
from 2008, but revenue was up 2.5\% in 2010 as business and consumer confidence slowly returned.
The growth rate was about 2---3\% per year in 2011---2012. While business travel had increased from its
lows in 2009, the climb in customer spending on travel was due more to increased prices than to a
rise in bookings.
Unlike airline seats and hotel rooms, car rental fleets can be increased or decreased in response to
demand factors. This takes time, but in 2012 there were 1.6 million rental cars in service, 0.5\% fewer
than in 2009 but higher than in 2010. Car rental fleets seemed to have reached a level in balance with
demand. Matching fleet size to demand is a key element in car rental profitability.
1 These programs did, however, often help companies steer their employees to preferred vendors with whom they had
discounts.
2
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Olympic Rent-A-Car U.S.: Customer Loyalty Battles | 913-568
The industry has two distinct markets with very different customer requirements:
Airport rentals: Roughly half of industry revenue (about $12 billion) came from airport rentals,
where most business and leisure travelers picked up their cars. Because costs are higher for operating
at an airport (including, for example, running a shuttle service) most airport locations were
dominated by the major brands. Even value-oriented major brands such as Budget (now owned by
Avis) had a hard time competing profitably on-airport. Car rental firms paid airport operators
concession fees of around 10\% of revenue, as well as fixed fees for their customer service counters.
Staffing had to be in place from early morning to late at night.
Local rentals: The other half of the car rental business originated in local offices, including car
dealerships and repair shops. Car repairs or service for which a driver’s insurance covers the rental
cost was the main business. In 2012, Enterprise and Hertz were the only significant brands serving
this customer, although numerous small operators also played a part. Enterprise had more than 50\%
of this market.
Car Rental Consumers
Approximately 27\% of U.S. adults rented a car for business or personal use in 2012. Industrywide, 80\% of the revenue on-airport derived from business rental and 20\% from leisure. (See Exhibit
1 for a summary of total U.S. business travel trips.) However, only 20\% of travelers who rented at
airports were business travelers. This breakdown could be further segmented as shown in Table A.
Table A Rental car customer segments
\% of All Business
Travelers
‘‘Heavy’’ Business Travelers
‘‘Medium’’ Business Travelers
‘‘Light’’ Business Travelers
Leisure Travelers
Other
37
45
18
\% of Industry
Revenues
55
20
5
15
5
Consumers were more likely to rent a compact car than any other class of vehicle for both
personal and business use------about 25\% of vehicles rented. Regional differences were important.
Miami was more leisure oriented, for example, than Boston. The length of rental and miles driven per
day for leisure and business averaged 4.6 days and 150 miles in Miami, as opposed to 2.3 days and 45
miles in Boston. This made a difference to franchisees with respect to loyalty program redemptions.
Frequent renters tended to earn points where they did business and spend them in leisure locations.
Leisure travelers tended to rent larger cars for longer periods, even though the per-day charges
were generally less due to factors such as preplanned trips and lower revenue days (weekends).
Business travelers generally paid more per day, although rates varied based on location and day of
the week and whether the traveler worked for a company with a contract rate.
Competition for the ‘‘Loyal Customer’’
Exhibit 2 presents a competitive comparison of major brands’ market shares.
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913-568 | Olympic Rent-A-Car U.S.: Customer Loyalty Battles
With 870,000 cars in service and $12 billion in annual revenues, Enterprise had more than half of
the entire rental car market. It dominated in off-airport rentals with 5,000 neighborhood locations
within 15 miles of 90\% of the population.
Of the 20\% of the market who were business renters, about one-fifth rented from Enterprise (4\% of
total renters) and one-quarter from Hertz; the balance was spread among Avis, Olympic, and
regional brands. Revenues from business travelers broke down as follows:
1.
2.
3.
4.
Hertz: 30\% market share of revenues
Avis: 26\% share
Enterprise, which had recently acquired National and Alamo: 20\% share
Olympic: 8\% share
The tough competitive rental car landscape had forced out weaker, smaller companies, and the
industry had been consolidating. In 2002 there were nine national car rental companies in the U.S.; by
2012 there were four.
The U.S. Travel Booking Industry
Travelers are increasingly driven to make travel bookings in the most budget-friendly, convenient way
possible. Given their propensity to be online, travel providers have more incentive to push the Internet as the
go-to source for booking, associating the tool with perks that are unavailable offline.
------ CEO of a major travel company
As of 2012, 78.6\% of Americans were online and spending 2.5 hours more online each week than
they did five years earlier. Online sales of leisure and personally booked business travel increased
from $90 billion in 2009 to over $119 billion in 2012. Mobile devices were projected to account for 32\%
of online travel bookings by 2016. Online booking allowed users to compare prices and availability,
and provided immediacy, which was often needed in booking travel, especially for business.
The rapid rise of third-party travel consolidators such as Expedia, Priceline, Travelocity, and
Orbitz, and the equally rapid decline in the use of travel agents (used by fewer than one in ten
travelers in 2012), was particularly significant for the leisure traveler who preferred the convenience
of booking airlines, hotels, and car rentals from one provider. In fact, each of the third-party travel
consolidators targeted women in higher-income households who were booking mostly for leisure.
About half of all leisure travelers booked rental cars online.
Approximately 46\% of all business renters booked through a rental car operator website (e.g.,
Hertz.com), while an additional 12\% rented online via a third party, such as Travelocity or Orbitz.
Best price was the main reason for booking online through company websites, while convenience
was cited as the main reason for using a third-party consolidator.
Pricing and Profitability in the Car Rental Industry
Variable pricing, or revenue management as it is known in service industries, was used
extensively in the rental car business to optimize profit. Sophisticated data management indicated
when demand was likely to be highest, allowing car rental companies to charge the most at those
times and also allowed them to adjust prices as demand fluctuated.
4
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Olympic Rent-A-Car U.S.: Customer Loyalty Battles | 913-568
Daily rental rates could range from $10 to $150 before fees and taxes. Approximately 80\% of
corporations negotiated nationwide agreements with car rental companies that provided up to 30\%
off standard car rental rates.
A car rental company’s largest expense item was its fleet of vehicles, which represented
approximately half of all operating expenses. Cars were generally purchased with a guaranteed
repurchase price. These cars, in the industry called ‘‘program cars,’’ were returned four to sixteen
months later, which relieved the company of the risk of used car prices. The average car was rented
208 days per year.
Rental car companies tried to gain additional revenue by inducing travelers to take insurance, gas
fill-ups, and upgrades to larger cars. For several years, GPS devices, satellite radio, and electronic toll
payment were features for which some consumers were happy to pay an extra few dollars. However,
growth in the use of smart phones, which gave consumers access to such items as GPS navigation at
no charge, had diminished the revenue from these sources.
By 2012 a number of other developments had put additional pressure on pricing and profitability.
Online coupon vendors such as Groupon and comparative pricing sites such as rentalcarmomma.com
distributed pricing discounts. Consumers could access availability of cars by location along with
other data, giving them additional purchasing leverage. Consumers were increasingly comfortable
transacting business online and while on the go, and they were becoming savvier at finding the
lowest prices and best deals.
Olympic Rent-A-Car
Olympic Rent-A-Car was founded in 1976 by a former Olympic pole-vaulting champion, John
Uelses, who was also a U.S. military officer. The company was almost totally a franchising operation,
which allowed it to grow rapidly and profitably to its 2012 position of approximately 7\% market
share. Its initial strategy was to price lower than Hertz in every market, no matter what. Olympic
capitalized on its popular founder in its promotion and advertising. Uelses sold the business to a
private equity firm in 1987, but continued on its board. The Olympic theme resonated with customers
as the company stressed quality service and the slogan ‘‘go with the winners’’ in its ads and
promotions.
When Uelses launched Olympic there were five major car rental agencies and approximately 200
regional firms. Olympic’s rental operations were conducted primarily at major airports and at
downtown locations in major cities. Olympic was able to gain critical airport distribution by helping
its franchisees acquire a number of the smaller regional firms. Olympic franchisees were also able to
gain airport space as major airports were enlarged in the early 2000s. By 2012, Olympic had
approximately 464 rental car locations in the United States and operated a rental fleet of around
108,000 vehicles (see Exhibits 3 and 4).
Olympic’s domestic fleet was made up of cars from many global auto manufacturers. Over the last
few years, the company had added more fuel-efficient cars as customers had demanded. Olympic
purchased new cars, rented them to customers for 15,000 to 30,000 miles (approximately eight months
to a year and a half), then sold them to retail (60\%) or wholesale markets. Olympic’s fleet of 108,000
cars averaged daily rental income slightly below the industry average, and its typical car was rented
about 232 days per year.
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913-568 | Olympic Rent-A-Car U.S.: Customer Loyalty Battles
The Olympic Medalist Rewards Program
The Olympic Medalist Award customer loyalty program was launched a few months after the
first rental car loyalty programs------National’s Emerald Isle Program and Hertz’s #1 Loyalty
program------were introduced in the late 1980s. It had been modified several times over the past twenty
years in response to various competitive moves. Olympic had chosen to be a follower. Since it tried to
provide lower overall pricing than the leading companies, management always felt it did not have to
offer more in its loyalty program. Exhibit 5 shows loyalty members as percentage of customers for
major rental firms, including Olympic. Most of Olympic’s Medalist members belonged to several
other car rental loyalty programs.
Andy Kim was charged with managing the program as a cost center and was expected to at least
maintain the program’s cost at the same percentage of sales as the previous year. Kim oversaw the
program’s marketing efforts and managed the loyalty customer database. Franchisees paid Olympic
3\% of a member’s rentals in addition to the standard franchise fee.
Anyone could join Olympic Medalist at no charge. Members earned rewards by accumulating
credits. When a member accumulated 16 credits he received an award of one free day. Each rental
day under the program equaled one credit. A rental day was based on a 24-hour rental day starting at
the time of the rental. Credits earned were valid for one year from the date of issue. Credits could
also be redeemed for airline frequent flyer programs and other rewards such as rental car upgrades.
The Medalist program had three tiers of membership:
•
Bronze: Member is credited as outlined above.
•
Silver: Member is moved to silv ...
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