800 345.5000 Login
Business Type
Mood Media - Small to Medium Businesses Icon

Small / Medium Business

Mood Media - Franchise Businesses Icon

Franchise Business

Franchisees & Franchisors

All Franchise Solutions

Mood Media - Global & Enterprise Businesses Icon

Enterprise & Global Business

Industry
Solutions
Solutions
Core Solutions
I
Digital Signage
I
Digital Signage
I
Digital Signage
Music for Business
Music for Business
Music for Business
w
Audio Messaging
w
Audio Messaging
w
Audio Messaging
f
Audiovisual Systems
f
Audiovisual Systems
f
Audiovisual Systems
Drive-Thru Systems
Drive-Thru Systems
Scent Marketing
Scent Marketing
Scent Marketing
Managed Services
Managed Services
Managed Services
Retail Media
Retail Media
Retail Media
Retail
QSR
Hospitality
Automotive
Convenience Store
Financial
Fitness
Grocery
Healthcare
Restaurant
Salon & Spa
Solutions
Retail Solutions
I
Digital Signage
Music for Business
w
Audio Messaging
f
Audiovisual Systems
Scent Marketing
Managed Services
QSR Solutions
I
Digital Signage
Music for Business
w
Audio Messaging
f
Audiovisual Systems
Scent Marketing
Managed Services
Retail Media
Hospitality Solutions
I
Digital Signage
Music for Business
w
Audio Messaging
f
Audiovisual Systems
Scent Marketing
Managed Services
Case Studies
How we transform spaces into engaging environments.

Insights & Trends
The latest insights, industry resources, tips and best practices.

Samples
Music
Digital Signage
Audio Messaging

Latest Insights

From Ads to Atmosphere: Influencer Partnerships in QSR

From Ads to Atmosphere: The Next Phase of Influencer Partnerships in QSR Celebrity partnerships in QSR used to mean a commercial, a signature meal, and a social media push. That playbook still exists, but the most forward-thinking brands have moved well beyond...

The Forgotten Generation Retail Can’t Ignore

The Forgotten Generation Retail Can’t Ignore How Data and In-Store Media Unlock Gen X Loyalty Retailers are missing their best customers. While brands focus marketing budgets on boomers and millennials, Gen X — shoppers born between 1965 and 1980 — account for 31% of...

Personalization in Retail: The Myth of the Average Shopper

Personalization in Retail: The Myth of the Average Shopper In 2026, personalization in retail has moved beyond a digital trend to become a survival mandate for the physical store. Increasingly, leading retailers are discovering how personalized in-store advertising...

Future of Physical Retail: 10 Stores Mastering Sensory Experiences

Inside the Future of Physical Retail: 10 Stores Mastering Sensory Brand Experiences On a rainy January afternoon in New York City, a group of retail leaders, brand partners, and media gathered in SoHo for a guided tour through the future of physical retail. Discover...

Mood Media Future Stores Case Study

See how our customers are making the most of their in-store experience.

Contact Sales

Why Loyalty Is Still a Major Growth Lever for QSRs in 2026

QSR brands are navigating a more cautious consumer than they’ve seen in years. Menu prices are up across the category, traffic has softened, and guests are making more deliberate choices about where they spend. In that environment, holding onto the customers already walking through the door is the priority.

Loyalty programs are one of the clearest ways to do that. Enrolled loyalty members visit 64% more and have a 40% higher average ticket per visit than non-members. Enrollment alone is one of the highest-value actions a QSR can drive. The problem is that most brands are promoting their programs in the wrong place.

Email campaigns, social ads, and push notifications reach guests who are already digitally connected to the brand. They do little to capture the guest who is standing at the counter or waiting in the drive-thru line, ready to order, with no existing relationship with the loyalty program.

That guest is the highest-intent audience a QSR has. And that moment, when they are already making a purchase, is exactly when loyalty messaging is most likely to convert.

Digital screens placed at the counter, drive-thru, and dining area give brands a real-time channel to surface program perks, limited-time bonuses, and app download prompts at the point of decision. Paired with in-store audio messaging, they create a consistent, layered push that reaches guests no matter where they are in the restaurant.

%

Enrolled loyalty members visit 64% more and have a 40% higher average ticket per visit.

The Value Equation Has Shifted

The post-pandemic price increases that reshaped QSR menus haven’t fully reversed, and guests have adjusted their behavior accordingly. Consumers are eating out more selectively, comparing value more carefully, and gravitating toward brands that give them a concrete reason to come back.

For QSR operators, that shift has put one metric front and center: frequency.

Acquiring new customers has always been expensive, but protecting the regulars who already know and visit a brand is where sustainable revenue actually lives. Research compiled by Restroworks shows it costs 5-25 times more to acquire a new customer than to retain an existing one, and loyalty programs are one of the most proven mechanisms for keeping frequency intact. Just a 5% increase in retention can boost profits by 25%-95%.

That’s why major QSR players are reinvesting in the category. After 20 years, Subway revived its Sub Club loyalty program in late 2025 with a national ad campaign, a new buy-three-get-one-free footlong mechanic, and expanded member perks.

A brand with that level of recognition doesn’t rebuild a rewards program from scratch unless there’s a strong incentive to do so. Sub Club’s return was a direct response to rising food prices and a more value-driven consumer. Restroworks also reported that over 90% of restaurants now run some form of rewards program, and 80% of loyalty program owners plan to increase their spend on customer loyalty.

Why Most QSR Guests Leave Without Enrolling

For most QSRs, in-store loyalty promotion is static and easy to miss. A sticker near the register. A card on the tray liner. A small sign by the door. None of that is dynamic, contextual, or timed to the moment a guest is most receptive. It blends into the background the same way a terms-and-conditions page does — technically present, but not actually communicating anything.

That passivity comes with a cost that compounds over time. Every uncontacted in-store guest represents a missed enrollment. And for a QSR doing hundreds of transactions a day across dozens or hundreds of locations, those misses add up fast. The consequences show up in three specific ways:

Lost timing opportunities. Guests have the most dwell time during drive-thru waits and while eating — windows when they’re relaxed and receptive. Most brands aren’t putting loyalty messaging in front of them during those moments, which are arguably the best ones available.
Missed revenue potential. A guest who walks out without enrolling has no reward balance building and no pending offer pulling them back. Eighty-five percent of consumers say that holding a loyalty program membership influences their likelihood of purchasing from that brand.
A gap in customer intelligence. Enrolled members generate data that lets brands personalize future visits with relevant offers and targeted promotions. A non-enrolled guest is also a non-existent data point, which means brands can’t market to them effectively even if they do come back.

The fix isn’t a bigger sticker. It’s a smarter use of the screens already in the building.

Digital Screens as a Real-Time Loyalty Channel

Static signage promotes loyalty the same way a terms-and-conditions page does: It’s there, but it isn’t working.

Digital signage for QSRs change that dynamic entirely. Placed at the drive-thru, counter, and dining area, they give brands a live channel to promote loyalty program perks, limited-time bonuses, and app download prompts that can be updated in real time as offers change, dayparts shift, or new incentives roll out.

Different areas of the restaurant reach guests at different stages of their visit, and the in-store messaging should reflect that:
Drive-thru screens reach guests during the order wait, when they have time to read, consider, and act. A prompt to download the app or earn bonus points on their current order fits naturally into that window.
Counter and POS screens catch guests at the moment of payment, when a specific incentive — “Earn double points on this order today” — can tip a non-member toward signing up before they even finish the transaction.
Dining area screens reach guests who are already settled in, giving brands a longer window to communicate program benefits in a lower-pressure environment.

The specificity of the message is what separates effective loyalty promotion from background noise. A generic “Download our app” banner is easy to tune out. A contextual prompt tied to what a guest is already ordering, or a time-sensitive bonus expiring that day, gives them an immediate reason to act.

That kind of dynamic, location-specific messaging is where operational infrastructure becomes critical, and where having a single platform managing both digital signage and in-store audio makes all the difference in execution.

Mood Media QSR Loyalty program digital signage

The Need for In-Store Loyalty Activation

The data on loyalty program ROI is well established. But none of that value materializes until a guest joins the program. Enrollment is the gate, and everything else follows from it.

The investment required to activate loyalty messaging in-store is relatively low compared to the lifetime value of an enrolled member. Brands already running digital screens have the infrastructure in place. The opportunity is in using it more deliberately. Closing the loop between digital loyalty infrastructure and the physical restaurant environment creates a compounding advantage; more enrolled members generate more visits, data, and opportunities to personalize future offers in ways that keep those members engaged.

QSRs that treat loyalty as a digital-only initiative are leaving enrollment on the table every day. The restaurant itself is a marketing channel, and the brands building the deepest loyalty relationships understand that. They’re going beyond investing in better apps by activating loyalty at every touchpoint.

Your Next Loyal Customer Is Already Inside the Restaurant

Most QSR locations already have the screens and audio infrastructure to run effective in-store loyalty promotion. What’s often missing is the operational backbone to manage that messaging consistently, keep it current, and deliver it across every area of the restaurant without it becoming a workflow burden for individual locations.

That’s where Mood Media comes in. From dynamic digital signage to integrated in-store audio managed from a single platform, Mood gives QSR brands the tools to turn existing infrastructure into an active, always-on loyalty channel.

About The Authors

Kevin Jones
Kevin Jones, VP of QSR and Hospitality at Mood Media, brings vast experience transforming how restaurants and hospitality brands connect with customers through sensory media and technology. Throughout his 19-year tenure at Mood Media, he’s built a reputation for translating evolving consumer expectations into strategic in-store solutions that drive measurable results. Kevin partners with both global QSR leaders and regional hospitality brands to deliver experiences that balance operational efficiency with authentic customer connection, leveraging real-time feedback and market trends to shape solutions that improve both guest satisfaction and bottom-line performance.

CONNECT WITH US

Elevate your Customer Experience through the power of Mood.