The Potential for Using Loyalty Rewards and Incentives Programs to Encourage Transit Ridership and Regional Transportation and Land Use Integration

Transit smart cards can be used as a tool for increasing transit ridership, increasing retail sales in transit-oriented developments (TODs) and eventually, increasing opportunities for retail development in TODs. Instead of providing separate loyalty rewards for each store, or chain of stores, such cards would provide loyalty rewards—in several possible forms, including free transit ride credits, cash rewards, retail purchase discounts, sweepstakes rewards—to all transit riders who patronize TOD retail businesses. Additional rewards could also be given to transit riders who live, work, and shop in TODs, and even to riders who take transit for specific shopping trips in TODs. In this way, smart cards and transit loyalty programs could become not only useful tools for increasing transit ridership, but also tools for targeted economic development of individual TODs, a means to increase economic opportunities and equity for low-income residents and shoppers in inner-city commercial zones, and in their most fully-realized expression, as tools for regional planners to concentrate retail, services and housing in priority development areas consistent with smart-growth planning principles.

This literature review and case study research resulted in the identification of a number of practical lessons, and promising directions for future research:

1.    There is a lack of research linking transit smart cards, transit ridership, and shopping behavior in TODs.
2.    It is important to retain existing transit riders (reducing ridership “churn”), potentially through the use of loyalty rewards programs and incentives programs to keep these riders or win back those who have given it up.
3.    There is both need and potential for rebranding transit’s public image.
4.    There are risks of overreach when implementing a transit loyalty rewards and incentives program.
5.    There is high potential of incentives and loyalty rewards programs in building transit ridership, TOD, and beyond.

University: 
Mineta Consortium for Transportation Mobility
San José State University
Principal Investigator: 
Christopher E. Ferrell, PhD
PI Contact Information: 

Mineta Transportation Institute
San José State University
210 N. 4th St., 4th Floor
San José, CA 95112
ceferrell@yahoo.com 

Funding Source(s) and Amounts Provided (by each agency or organization): 

U.S. Department of Transportation, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Research and Technology – $24,955.50 

Total Project Cost: 
$24,995.50
Agency ID or Contract Number: 
69A3551747127
Dates: 
October 2017 to December 2019
Project Number: 
1797

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CSUTC
MCEEST
MCTM
NTFC
NTSC

Contact Us

SJSU Research Foundation   210 N. 4th Street, 4th Floor, San Jose, CA 95112    Phone: 408-924-7560   Email: mineta-institute@sjsu.edu