
How brands are reinventing loyalty programmes: Benepik's 2025 Report maps the future of channel partner loyalty
Titled 'Channel Partner Loyalty: Trends & Challenges Report 2025', the report's findings highlight that while 46% of companies continue to struggle with low channel partner engagement, largely due to complex redemptions, poor communication, and manual processes, a shift is underway. Loyalty, today, is no longer limited to just rewards and incentives; it is evolving into a holistic channel partner engagement. A growing number of brands are embracing technology-driven, personalised, and role-specific loyalty programmes that deliver a stronger and more sustainable impact. Organisations that have adopted partner segmentation and mobile-first dashboards have seen up to 60% improvement in ROI, with one auto ancillary brand reporting a 3.5x increase in participation within just 90 days of revamping its program.
Published as part of
Benepik's Channel Partner Loyalty: Trends & Challenges Report 2025
, these insights reflect perspectives from organisations across sectors such as fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG), auto ancillary, agri-inputs, pharma, construction material, and banking, financial services, and insurance (BFSI). The report uncovers how traditional loyalty programmes, often transactional and narrow in scope, are no longer delivering the desired impact. Many of these programmes fail to engage partners meaningfully or adapt to their evolving needs. In contrast, leading brands are now shifting towards tech-enabled, segmented, and partner-centric models that emphasise real-time engagement, personalisation, and long-term value creation.
'This study highlights a clear misalignment between loyalty programme design and what truly drives channel partner motivation,' said Saurabh Jain, Founder, Benepik. 'The opportunity lies in rethinking loyalty not as a reward system, but as an ecosystem strategy that fuels growth, trust, and long-term advocacy. What makes this report truly comprehensive is its inclusion of perspectives from both organisations and their channel partners, offering a 360-degree view of the loyalty ecosystem.'
Spotlight Wire
Brands struggling to engage channel partners
Despite recognising the importance of loyalty in driving channel performance, 46% of companies report low engagement from their partners, driven by heightened competition, limited personalisation, ineffective programme execution, and weak communication. Key challenges include complicated reward redemption (42%), poor programme communication (38%), manual processing of incentives (33%), and lack of CRM/ERP integration (31%). These friction points have caused many programmes to underperform. As Saurabh Jain notes, 'Redemption is the moment of truth in any loyalty journey. If it's slow, unclear, or delayed, it erodes partner trust instantly.'
Live Events
Personalisation and segmentation show measurable uplift
The study highlights that brands embracing channel partner segmentation and real-time engagement are seeing significantly improved outcomes. Programmes tailored to partner roles such as dealers, retailers, and influencers report up to 60% stronger ROI, while mobile-first platforms are driving higher adoption, particularly in rural and semi-urban markets. Echoing this shift toward inclusive loyalty, Ratnesh Mishra, GM-Spares & Allied Business at Atul Auto, emphasised the value of consistent, ground-level engagement: 'We reached beyond dealers to mechanics and incentivized consistently, not just quarterly. It helped us convert channel touchpoints into long-term loyalty.'
Missed opportunities around learning and recognition
The report reveals a significant missed opportunity in how brands approach training and channel partner recognition within loyalty programmes. While partner education is widely acknowledged as a driver of long-term engagement, only 36% of organisations currently integrate training into their loyalty strategies. Even fewer provide consistent communication or field-level recognition, with most rewards still concentrated on top-performing sellers, overlooking key influencers like support staff. Highlighting a more inclusive approach, Shashank Shaikhar, Marketing Manager at Dr Willmar Schwabe, quoted: 'What stood out for us was Benepik's ability to include pharmacy staff, not just (the) field force. Recognition across the entire value chain helped drive brand recall and partner motivation.'
The partner perspective: Loyalty that's simple, visible, and meaningful
Channel partners interviewed in the report consistently voiced a need for simplicity, transparency, and timely recognition. Rather than complex structures or delayed incentives, they seek intuitive tools that help them track progress and feel genuinely valued.
'I can now track everything on one screen: targets, rewards, and how to earn more. That makes me want to sell better,' says Rajeev Gupta, a retailer based in Delhi.
With such diversity in channel partners from dealers and retailers to contractors, mechanics, and field staff, loyalty can no longer be one-size-fits-all. Their roles, motivations, and expectations vary widely, and so must the way brands engage with them. Loyalty today is about creating tailored experiences and offering relevant value.
Real-world impact: Loyalty as a strategic business lever
Across industries from cement and insurance to pharmaceuticals, leaders agree that when executed well, loyalty programmes do more than just reward performance; they strengthen relationships, drive consistent sales, and build long-term brand affinity.
'Our advisors and loan partners are the backbone of our business, especially in underserved markets, keeping them engaged goes beyond payouts. We've seen that loyalty programmes offering transparency, timely recognition, and flexibility help build lasting trust,' quoted Rohit Gaur, Head of Product & Strategy at India Shelter Finance Corporation Ltd.
'Trade gratification is a game changer. It helped us build stronger retail relationships and drive consistent sales,' says Balakrishna Sahu, DGM-Marketing at Dharampal Premchand Ltd.
'For a B2B beauty brand like ours, loyalty helps us engage salon owners beyond transactions through upskilling, technology, and co-creation,' notes Supriya Agarwal, Head of Marketing at ESME Beauty.
'At Dhanuka, we see loyalty as a means to empower our channel by combining timely incentives with knowledge-sharing and grassroots recognition,' shares Subodh Kumar Gupta, DGM – Marketing at Dhanuka Agritech Ltd.
Each testimonial underscores a common truth: effective loyalty programmes are not just incentives, they're enablers of business transformation.
What's next: Building loyalty that's intelligent, inclusive, and impact-driven
The report concludes with a strategic roadmap for brands aiming to elevate their channel loyalty programmes from tactical initiatives to long-term growth enablers. Future-ready programmes, it suggests, will need to:
Leverage AI for hyper-personalised partner journeys
Enable real-time engagement through intuitive dashboards
Integrate training, recognition, and role-specific rewards
Foster a sense of community and emotional connection across the partner ecosystem
As Saurabh Jain aptly puts it:
'Loyalty isn't won with rewards it's earned through recognition, relevance, and relationships. The brands that embrace this will lead not only in market share, but in mindshare.'
Disclaimer - The above content is non-editorial, and TIL hereby disclaims any and all warranties, expressed or implied, relating to it, and does not guarantee, vouch for or necessarily endorse any of the content.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
2 days ago
- Time of India
Mphasis Q1 profit up 8.4% on-year on strong BFSI, TMT show
Blackstone-backed mid-sized IT firm Mphasis on Friday reported a first-quarter net profit of Rs 442 crore, up 8.4% from a year earlier by 1.1% lower for the quarter ended June 30 rose 9.2% YoY to Rs 3,732 crore, lifted by strong performance in its verticals serving the banking, financial services & insurance (BFSI) and technology, media & telecommunications sectors, despite a 50% fall in logistics & transportation business. On year, the revenue was almost the growth was boosted by the Americas, which constitutes more than 80% of revenue share, and India, led by ramp ups in recent large reported strong deal wins. Quarterly total contract value (TCV) at $760 million was the highest on record and up 138% from a year earlier. The management said 68% of these were the four large deals won in the June quarter, three were $100 million contracts and one was $50 million. Order from It saw a 47% increase in the banking and financial services (BFS) segment from a year earlier. Non-BFS orders rose 108%.Operating margin was flat sequentially at 15.3% and a tad higher from 15% a year an investor presentation, Mphasis CEO and managing director Nitin Rakesh and chief financial officer Aravind Viswanathan highlighted continued volatility and lack of tailwinds in the market, with decision cycles remaining elongated due to uncertainty and geopolitics and cyber still dominating Bengaluru-headquartered firm expects its growth in the congoing fiscal 2026 to be two times faster than the industry, 'on the back of our Q1 performance and steady conversion of TCV to revenue', according to the investor presentation. It targets an operating (EBIT) margin of 14.75-15.75% for the fiscal experts estimate the IT sector to grow around 3-5% this fiscal said its wholly owned US subsidiary, Mphasis Corporation, acquired a 26% stake through preferred shares in Bengaluru-based Aokah, a platform-as-a-service company designed to help enterprises set up, scale, and optimise global capability shares ended 1.3% lower at Rs 2,619.55 on the BSE Friday.


Time of India
3 days ago
- Time of India
Persistent Q1 revenue up 19% YoY, reaffirms $2bn aspiration by FY27
Bengaluru: Persistent Systems reported a 3.3% sequential revenue rise for the June quarter and a 19% year-on-year increase in constant currency terms. Growth was led by BFSI, which rose 9% sequentially, and software, hi-tech & emerging industries at 3.6%, while healthcare and lifesciences declined 1.9%. Geographically, North America grew 3%, Europe 11.3%, and India 9.4%; however, Rest of the World (RoW) dropped 19.2%. Total contract value (TCV) stood at $520 million, with new bookings of $337 million. CEO Sandeep Kalra expressed confidence in reaching the aspirational $2 billion revenue goal by FY27. "To reach that, we need a 19–20% CAGR annually. We're already tracking at that pace. So far, our growth has been largely organic. Even the 18.8% we reported includes very little inorganic contribution. Over the next two years, if we add a few small acquisitions—or a larger one—it will support that trajectory. The $2 billion aspiration remains intact. Whether we hit it a quarter early or late, we're committed," he said. You Can Also Check: Bengaluru AQI | Weather in Bengaluru | Bank Holidays in Bengaluru | Public Holidays in Bengaluru Kalra said that while the macroeconomic environment remains soft, improvements are expected over the next 1–3 quarters. "With developments like the tariff discussions and legislative clarity in the US, along with stabilizing inflation and potential rate cuts, we anticipate a more favourable environment," he added. EBIT margins contracted by 10bps sequentially to 15.5%, slightly below expectations of 15.6%, impacted by slower ramp-ups, onsite resource retention during offshore transitions, and currency movements. These were partially offset by a 230bps benefit from lower ESOP costs. CFO Vinit Teredesai said ESOP costs follow the Black-Scholes model, with around 60% expensed in the first year, 25% in the second, and the rest thereafter. "Most of the ESOP grants from last year were already accounted for in FY25. That's why ESOP expenses were higher then. As we moved into FY26, the cost naturally reduced, helping our margins. Any new grants or senior-level hires will have some incremental impact, but nothing significant at this point," he said. On the rising GCC (global capability centre) playbook in IT, Kalra said, "Our aim is to coexist with GCCs. In many of our large programmes, we work alongside global counterparts and the GCCs. We're not setting up infrastructure or admin teams for clients, but where customers want us to scale within their GCCs, we absolutely do that—particularly in tech-focused areas."


Time of India
3 days ago
- Time of India
Pressures build: Donald Trump's tariffs, Big Beautiful Bill may play party pooper for India's IT sector; here's how
AI image India's top IT firms are witnessing weak demand across key verticals such as manufacturing, consumer, communications and life sciences, which together account for 40–70% of revenues for several large players, as clients cut discretionary spending and defer projects amid global economic and policy headwinds. According to analysts, these sectors—once seen as growth engines diversifying revenue away from BFSI (banking, financial services and insurance)—are now reeling under tariff-related supply chain disruptions and the impact of America's 'Big Beautiful Bill' (BBB), which has led to a rollback of clean energy incentives and regulatory shifts in healthcare, according to an ET report. Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) flagged pressures in the MedTech segment, citing heightened regulatory scrutiny, changing demand patterns, cost concerns, regional consolidation and elevated customer expectations. 'The pharmaceutical sector, which is witnessing pricing, supply chain challenges and export risk, is prioritising R&D, profit margin and operational efficiency,' InCred Equities said in a report. 'Leading companies in the US, UK, Europe and Japan are consolidating vendors while leveraging AI.' The healthcare bill recently passed in the US includes nearly $1 trillion in cuts to Medicaid over 10 years, rollbacks to the Affordable Care Act, and a $500 billion reduction in Medicare spending. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like No annual fees for life UnionBank Credit Card Apply Now Undo 'This could severely impact the earnings of Medicaid-focused insurers and hospitals,' InCred warned. Tech Mahindra, which earns nearly 70% of its revenues from these stressed verticals, lost a major hi-tech deal and is now pivoting toward BFSI and retail to drive future growth, the firm noted. BFSI and retail show resilience Amid the turmoil, BFSI and retail have emerged as more stable revenue drivers. Infosys reported that its financial services vertical continues to perform strongly, driven by vendor consolidation and digital transformation deals. Though it registered growth in manufacturing and auto during the last quarter, the company remains cautious about the outlook. Similarly, HCL Technologies has not seen a worsening in discretionary spending in financial services and technology. In its post-results note, Motilal Oswal said the company is optimistic about sustaining growth in BFSI. 'The first half of 2025 presented a mixed bag for IT services companies, characterised by macroeconomic uncertainties, global trade policy shifts, and evolving client spending priorities,' said Nitin Bhatt, Technology Sector Leader, EY India. He noted that the BBB's aggressive tariffs and rollback of green subsidies have weighed on manufacturing and automotive firms—especially those focusing on EVs and sustainable technologies—leading to increased input costs and delayed IT investments as companies shift focus to cost optimization. While the pharmaceutical industry has generally been more resilient, Bhatt said it too is now showing signs of softness. Stay informed with the latest business news, updates on bank holidays and public holidays . AI Masterclass for Students. Upskill Young Ones Today!– Join Now