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Delaena Kalevor - Independent Financial Consultant
Want to grow your business more, and looking for a business leader? Then contact Delaena kalevor. He has a strong background in finance, marketing, and competitive strategy. So you can learn financial planner from him.
Delaena Kalevor, he is best in the fields of finance and marketing, strategy, and operations. You can learn financial planner from him. He is the best trainer as a financial planner. He teaches you how you can invest your money in the stock market and get more benefits. He helps you to make an expert on the market.
I would like to introduce readers to a concept called âbreakage.â Itâs a common business strategy in fee-based or subscription-based services, such as gym memberships, video rentals, and annual fee credit cards. Itâs also common in loyalty rewards programs.
Before I discuss this concept, I want you to think of how most businesses operate. The customers want a particular product or service. They buy it. They use it and the transaction is complete.
I would like to introduce readers to a concept called âbreakage.â Itâs a common business strategy in fee-based or subscription-based services, such as gym memberships, video rentals, and annual fee credit cards. Itâs also common in loyalty rewards programs.
Before I discuss this concept, I want you to think of how most businesses operate. The customers want a particular product or service. They buy it. They use it and the transaction is complete.
Letâs consider a basic example:
Letâs assume that youâre hungry and you want a bacon burger.
You go to the drive-through and buy a burger. You eat the burger.
Youâre happy because youâre no longer hungry.
The drive-through franchise owner is happy because they generated a sale. This is how most businesses work.
The âbreakageâ model works the exact opposite way. With breakage, the company makes money when you do not use the product or service you purchased.
Letâs look at the gift card business for example: Letâs assume you buy a $25 gift card from Amazon.
You give the gift card to your friend for his birthday. How does Amazon make any money doing this?
Well, it turns out that for every $100 spent on buying a gift card, only $75 is actually ever redeemed. People who receive the gift card either lose the card, forget about the card, donât use up the entire value of the card or the card expires.
This is breakage. Gift cards have an implied breakage of 25%. Meaning on average 25% of the value of gift cards never get redeemed. According to Delaena Kalevor, breakage can be very profitable. When someone purchases a gift card, the issuer of the gift card recognizes the gift card value as a contingent liability on their balance sheet. When the gift card value expires, the contingent liability is taken off the books and recognized as revenue. This has a direct accretive impact on net income, which can make breakage in the gift card and loyalty rewards industry extremely profitable.
The cashback and loyalty programs of credit card issuers also work in the same way and breakage is a valuable part of how these banks make money. They use tools like redemption caps (for example with American Express, you canât redeem until you have $75 worth of points), points expiration, etc to enforce breakage. Most customers never reach that $75 redemption threshold before the points expire. This is an example of breakage. Thatâs why Delaena Kalevorâs favorite credit card is Discover Card. They have no breakage at all â no redemption caps and no points expiration.
Another example of breakage is health clubs or gyms. The parallel to that in the credit card industry is cards that have an annual fee.
Most fitness centers work on a monthly membership fee model.
I pay $50 a month to have access to the facility.
Whether I show up every day or never show up, I still pay the health club the same $50.
In the health club business, by far the most profitable customers in the industry are people who sign up as members but donât actually show up to the gym.
This is also breakage. Similarly, credit card customers with an annual fee credit card, generate breakage income for the issuing bank when they do not use their card.
Breakage-based business models can be very profitable. Imagine a health club with 10,000 paying members where nobody actually shows up.
The problem with breakage business models is that youâre receiving value from customers without customers actually receiving value in return. Basically, youâre betting that customers are too lazy to recognize this.
I would like to introduce readers to a concept called âbreakage.â Itâs a common business strategy in fee-based or subscription-based services, such as gym memberships, video rentals, and annual fee credit cards. Itâs also common in loyalty rewards programs.
Before I discuss this concept, I want you to think of how most businesses operate. The customers want a particular product or service. They buy it. They use it and the transaction is complete.
Letâs consider a basic example:
Letâs assume that youâre hungry and you want a bacon burger.
You go to the drive-through and buy a burger. You eat the burger.
Youâre happy because youâre no longer hungry.
The drive-through franchise owner is happy because they generated a sale. This is how most businesses work.
The âbreakageâ model works the exact opposite way. With breakage, the company makes money when you do not use the product or service you purchased.
Letâs look at the gift card business for example: Letâs assume you buy a $25 gift card from Amazon.
You give the gift card to your friend for his birthday. How does Amazon make any money doing this?
Well, it turns out that for every $100 spent on buying a gift card, only $75 is actually ever redeemed. People who receive the gift card either lose the card, forget about the card, donât use up the entire value of the card or the card expires.
This is breakage. Gift cards have an implied breakage of 25%. Meaning on average 25% of the value of gift cards never get redeemed. According to Delaena Kalevor, breakage can be very profitable. When someone purchases a gift card, the issuer of the gift card recognizes the gift card value as a contingent liability on their balance sheet. When the gift card value expires, the contingent liability is taken off the books and recognized as revenue. This has a direct accretive impact on net income, which can make breakage in the gift card and loyalty rewards industry extremely profitable.
The cashback and loyalty programs of credit card issuers also work in the same way and breakage is a valuable part of how these banks make money. They use tools like redemption caps (for example with American Express, you canât redeem until you have $75 worth of points), points expiration, etc to enforce breakage. Most customers never reach that $75 redemption threshold before the points expire. This is an example of breakage. Thatâs why Delaena Kalevorâs favorite credit card is Discover Card. They have no breakage at all â no redemption caps and no points expiration.
Another example of breakage is health clubs or gyms. The parallel to that in the credit card industry is cards that have an annual fee.
Most fitness centers work on a monthly membership fee model.
I pay $50 a month to have access to the facility.
Whether I show up every day or never show up, I still pay the health club the same $50.
In the health club business, by far the most profitable customers in the industry are people who sign up as members but donât actually show up to the gym.
This is also breakage. Similarly, credit card customers with an annual fee credit card, generate breakage income for the issuing bank when they do not use their card.
Breakage-based business models can be very profitable. Imagine a health club with 10,000 paying members where nobody actually shows up.
The problem with breakage business models is that youâre receiving value from customers without customers actually receiving value in return. Basically, youâre betting that customers are too lazy to recognize this.
Before Netflix and video streaming of movies became popular, a company called Blockbuster used to rent DVD movies to entertainment seekers. You would rent a movie for two nights for something like $5. If you forgot to return the movie on time, they would charge you a $3/day late fee.
Imagine renting five movies for the weekend and forgetting to return the movies for an entire week. Instead of spending $25, you end up spending $100.
This is a form of breakage too. In fact, at its peak, Blockbuster was generating 70% of its net income from late fees. Their profits came from customers who were too lazy or forgetful to return the DVD sitting in their car.
The problem with breakage though is that customers DO NOT like it.
When Netflix first started, they had a subscription-based DVD rental by mail business. For a flat fee each month, you could keep the movies you rented for as long as you wanted.
According to Delaena Kalevor, Netflix targeted Blockbusterâs most profitable customers â those that pay late fees â and ultimately put Blockbuster out of business.
Personally, I prefer a business where sales and profits come from happy customers, instead of unhappy ones that wish your way of business didnât exist.
I donât see the gift card, loyalty rewards, and health club businesses going out of business anytime soon. I donât even expect their breakage business model to change. But Delaena Kalevor likes the idea of customers receiving good value for what they pay. The value should be mutually beneficial, like in the burger example. Itâs a good thing to profit from really happy customers that are thrilled to do business with you. Blockbuster did not expect to go bankrupt. But they did. History has a funny way of repeating itself. The breakage based businesses out there should take lessons from Blockbusterâs experience.
Looking For best business leader? Check Delaena Kalevor, he is best in the fields of finance and marketing, strategy, and operations. So you can learn  financial planner from him.
If you want to get tips about finance and marketing, then  contact with Delaena Kalevor. He knows well about finance and he can help you for Debt management.

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