If you rewind ten years, loyalty looked very different.
It was mostly about points, about earning faster, redeeming smarter and occasionally feeling clever when you timed something just right. Programs competed on earn rates, catalogs and aspirational rewards, and participation followed a simple pattern of opting in, accumulating points and redeeming them when it made sense. Loyalty lived beside life, not inside it.
That’s no longer the world we’re in.
As we saw in the EQ Bank–PC Financial story, banks and their partners are now competing by building ecosystems that sit directly inside everyday life. Loyalty, distribution, data and habit have become the connective tissue, and the goal is no longer just to reward behaviour but to become part of how people already move through the world.
Once that architecture is in place, a more human question takes over as we begin to ask whether people actually want to live inside these systems.
That’s why the recent loyalty announcements feel like more than operational updates. Shell joining Scene+ and Air Miles being reshaped under BMO as Blue Rewards are signals that loyalty itself is being rethought, not just structurally but emotionally, reflecting different ideas about what loyalty should do for people now.
To understand why these moves make sense, it helps to step away from points and partners and look instead at Social Values. Social Values reflect the deeper beliefs and priorities that shape how people see the world, make decisions and relate to institutions, often without realizing it.
Air Miles and Loyalty as Continuity
For most of its history, Air Miles worked because it didn’t ask for attention.
It rewarded consistency and accumulated quietly over time, creating a sense of dependability. Its core users tend to approach consumption in a practical way, where rewards matter because they are useful rather than flashy. Loyalty becomes something you stay with rather than something you constantly reassess, supported by the comfort of understanding how the system works and trusting that it will continue to work tomorrow.
That mindset also comes with a clear expectation of boundaries. People pay attention to how much personal information they share and expect institutions to be measured and predictable. Stability matters not just financially but socially, and calm systems feel reassuring in a world that increasingly feels noisy.
This context matters when you think about Air Miles moving under BMO and becoming Blue Rewards. The real test is not whether the program feels more modern, but whether it feels clearer, simpler and more contained. When the transition feels orderly and respectful, it can reinforce continuity rather than loss, while anything that feels imposed or opaque can erode trust quickly.
For this group, loyalty does not need to be reinvented but instead needs to behave in a way that feels consistent and reliable.
Scene+ and the Reality of Busy, Values-Aware Lives
Scene+ reflects a very different everyday reality.
Its members tend to live with constant pressure on time and attention, where life feels full and responsibilities continue to stack up. There is a steady effort to manage work, family, health and personal expectations all at once, which shifts loyalty away from long-term accumulation and toward making daily life feel a little easier.
Flexibility becomes important in this context, as the ability to act on impulse, adjust plans or take small breaks from routine becomes part of how people cope. Rewards are most effective when they support that flexibility instead of introducing another set of rules to remember.
At the same time, this is not a carefree or indifferent group. There is strong awareness of personal boundaries, and while convenience is welcome, it is not accepted blindly. People want to feel respected, they care about how their information is used and they expect organizations to act responsibly.
There is also a quieter aspiration underneath it all. People want to live well, which means health matters and work is expected to carry meaning rather than simply provide income. Value is increasingly defined in terms of quality of life rather than material gain alone.
This combination helps explain why Scene+ works best as a broad coalition rather than a tightly defined rewards program, as it fits into multiple parts of life without demanding constant attention or emotional commitment.
Why Shell Fits Scene+ So Naturally
Shell joining Scene+ makes sense not because it is fuel, but because it fits into everyday routines.
Fuel is one of the most frequent and unavoidable purchases people make, closely tied to mobility, family logistics and the daily pressure of getting where you need to be. By adding Shell, Scene+ becomes more present in everyday life without becoming more intrusive.
For people already stretched for time, this matters because earning rewards without changing behaviour feels like support rather than obligation, reflecting an understanding of how people actually live and reinforcing the sense that the program is there to help rather than manage.
At the same time, it strengthens Scene+ as a practical lifestyle utility instead of a standalone points engine, showing up naturally where life already happens.
The People Who Opt Out Entirely
There is one more group that completes the picture, which is Canadians who do not participate in loyalty programs at all.
What stands out is that this group is not disengaged from consumption or experience. In many ways, their worldview overlaps with Scene+ members, particularly in their desire for flexibility, personal freedom and the ability to live life on their own terms.
The difference lies in how they relate to systems. For these consumers, formal enrollment can feel restrictive because loyalty programs introduce tracking, structure and a stronger institutional presence, and even when the rewards are appealing, participation can feel like giving something up.
Their absence highlights an important boundary, since loyalty expansion has limits and no ecosystem, no matter how well designed, will appeal to everyone. Some people will always prefer value that feels informal and untracked rather than structured and optimized.
Two Loyalty Paths, One Ecosystem Era
Seen together, these announcements point to loyalty evolving along different paths.
Scene+ is leaning into breadth and everyday relevance, designed for people navigating busy and values-aware lives who want flexibility and small moments of relief built into routine spending.
Blue Rewards is moving toward a more contained banking experience, appealing to people who value clarity, predictability and systems that feel firmly under control.
Both strategies reflect the same shift we saw in the EQ Bank–PC Financial deal, where loyalty is no longer a standalone tactic but part of how ecosystems earn permission to exist in people’s lives.

Legacy
Utilitarian Consumerism
Control Of Privacy
Cultural Assimilation