Omni Talk Retail

Gap Inc. Debuts Encore To Unify The Four Brands | Fast Five Shorts

4 min
Feb 28, 2026about 2 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Gap Inc. launched Encore, a unified cross-brand loyalty program spanning Old Navy, Gap, Banana Republic, and Athleta with 40 million active members. The program consolidates three separate loyalty systems into a single points bank with three tiers, a co-branded MasterCard, and experiential rewards tied to Gap's new entertainment strategy.

Insights
  • Consolidating fragmented loyalty programs across multiple brands can reduce customer friction and encourage cross-brand shopping within a portfolio
  • Unified points banking and single credit cards strengthen customer lifetime value by keeping spending within the brand family rather than competitors
  • Experiential rewards and entertainment partnerships are harder to scale and execute than transactional loyalty benefits and require proven marketing strategy
  • Restoring brand cohesion across a portfolio requires simplifying customer experience across touchpoints, not just loyalty mechanics
Trends
Retail consolidation of fragmented loyalty programs into unified ecosystems across multi-brand portfoliosIntegration of experiential and entertainment rewards into traditional points-based loyalty programsCross-brand credit card strategies to increase wallet share and incentivize portfolio shoppingChief Entertainment Officer roles signaling retail's pivot toward lifestyle and cultural experiences beyond transactionsAutomatic migration of legacy loyalty members to unified systems to reduce adoption frictionSingle points bank architecture enabling unified customer spend visibility across brand boundaries
Companies
Gap Inc.
Launched Encore, a unified loyalty program consolidating Old Navy, Gap, Banana Republic, and Athleta into single poin...
Old Navy
One of four Gap Inc. brands integrated into the Encore loyalty program with shared points and unified customer experi...
Banana Republic
One of four Gap Inc. brands integrated into the Encore loyalty program with shared points and unified customer experi...
Athleta
One of four Gap Inc. brands integrated into the Encore loyalty program with shared points and unified customer experi...
MasterCard
Co-branded credit card partner for Encore program offering 5x points at Gap brands and 3x on eligible apparel purchases
People
Chief Entertainment Officer (Gap Inc.)
Appointed January 2026 to lead experiential rewards and entertainment experiences component of Encore loyalty program
Quotes
"I do love this as a loyal Gap customer. I do love this for the points consolidation. It never made sense to me that there were three different credit cards and three different loyalty programs."
Host
"If customers are keeping their money in the family, they're driven to try another Gap banner instead of going to another store. I think this could lead to probably some slower, but some positive growth for Gap Inc."
Host
"I think back to having worked at the brand, too. I thought, you know, I never thought about this until you just mentioned it. You know, I think, you know, if you look at Gap 20 years ago, there was there was a good cohesion across all those brands."
Co-host
"I think there's a lot more proof that needs to be put into that pudding. so to speak, because that's just something that's really hard to scale. It's really hard to make it impactful to a large degree to a large number of consumers."
Co-host
Full Transcript
Gap Inc. has launched Encore, a new cross-brand loyalty program spanning Old Navy, Gap, Banana Republic, and Athleta. According to retail touchpoints, Gap Inc. officially launched Encore on February 24, 2026, which is a rebranded unified loyalty membership across all four of its core brands, building on a house file of nearly 40 million active members. Encore introduces three tiers, Core, Premier, and All Access. I always love it's three tiers. It's never like seven tiers or 13 tiers. It's always three. That's just your that's the business school motto, right? You always have to break things out into three. It's probably coming from someone, one of your peers at your school. Yeah, it's a consultant thing. You give them two options that are good and one that's horrible. So that's kind of what they're doing here, probably most likely. But anyway, they're introducing three tiers with the updated earning thresholds, extended returns, birthday bonuses, and new and a new Encore MasterCard that earns five times points at Gap Brands and three times on eligible apparel purchases elsewhere The program leans heavily into experiential rewards as well which means exclusive fashion drops early access to product launches and entertainment experiences reflecting Gap recent appointment of a chief entertainment officer in January 2026 Existing loyalty members are automatically transitioned with prior points carrying forward, and all four brands share a single points bank, giving Gap a unified cross-brand view of consumer and customer spend. And what do you think of Gap's Encore launch? Is this the loyalty play that finally gives the brand portfolio a genuine growth engine? Or is it just glossed up loyalty points? I don't know that we will. I don't know yet. That's the question. I do love this as a loyal Gap customer. I do love this for the points consolidation. It never made sense to me that there were three different credit cards and three different loyalty programs. You had Gap cash that you could use at some, but you couldn't. You're all feeding into one larger Gap Inc. So number one, I think that while it's just a loyalty program for now, my hope is that this means consolidation in other areas of the store and just making it one unified brand that I can shop And the credit card is another good example like having one credit card that you can use across brands and gain five times more points because those points really do add up. And I've been using them for a long time. So I'm really excited to see them all come together. I also think that it could encourage some crossover in maybe I'm an athletic shopper, but I've never shopped at Old Navy, but now I have these points that I can use across all the labels, it might prompt me to go into a store that I maybe haven't been to in a while, like an Old Navy or like a Gap. So I think, you know, all boats rise, right? If customers are keeping their money in the family, they're driven to try another Gap banner instead of going to another store. I think this could lead to probably some slower, but some positive growth for Gap Inc. And that's on the loyalty part, the fashion attainment component. I'm still kind of pausing on that one. I gonna reserve judgment until I see what really happens with the new ex woman leading that up So we see I going to reserve judgment on that But for now I really like the combined loyalty program part of this But how about you? Yeah, I think that's great. I think those are great points. I mean, I think, you know, at the end of this is just good, smart retailing. You know, and I think back to having worked at the brand, too. I thought, you know, I never thought about this until you just mentioned it. You know, I think, you know, if you look at Gap 20 years ago, there was there was a good cohesion across all those brands. I felt like people knew that the same company was running all of them. And I feel like that's kind of died off a little bit. And to your point, it is a very frustrating experience to have to use different credit cards at all the different brands. And why is that? So if that's what they're going for here, I think it's a big win. And it potentially does get me cross-shopping more and makes it easier for me too and makes me have more affinity to the brand. But I'm with you. I'm not buying into the entertainment connection just quite yet. I think there's a lot more proof that needs to be put into that pudding. so to speak, because that's just something that's really hard to scale. It's really hard to make it impactful to a large degree to a large number of consumers. You've got to really figure out the marketing side of that. So I'm hesitant on that, but I think it just seems like a good, smart move.