What Does Your Credit Card Say About You?
- Add article to Digg / del.icio.us /
Furl
- FREE online credit check
- FREE Instant Mortgage quote
There are so many credit cards on the market these
days and those you use can say a lot about you. As well as a multitude
of designs there is also a variety of types: affinity cards, loyalty
cards, reward cards, and charity cards. But, which card you choose is
most likely to be determined by how you use it.
A major American study conducted by J.D. Power and
Associates analysing typical credit card customers' behaviour
highlighted two major types of card users; the 'transactor' and the
'revolver'. A 'transactor' typically pays off their entire balance each
month, so are totally unconcerned with the interest rate that the card
carries. Their focus is firmly on the rewards that the card brings.
However, the survey also highlighted the fact that some rewards give
more satisfaction than others. Cards offering air miles are popular,
but that satisfaction wanes when attempts are made to redeem the
mileage, with customers often complaining that flight choice under air
miles offers is severely restricted.
Cash back is very popular as a reward, especially from
those who repay in full each month as they are effectively getting
discounts on the goods they bought merely for using their credit card.
Other affinity cards offer rewards, but not to the card user;
premiership and other football teams are popular with card issuers and
offer a form of cash back. From those schemes a percentage of each
purchase goes to the team featured on the card, rather than the card
holder.
The other type of card-holder - the revolver - typically
carries a large balance on their credit cards, transferring it from one
to another, seeking the best interest rate deal they can get. Rewards
are not relevant to this group as interest rates on reward cards tend
to be higher; that's how they fund them! They are typically card users
who transfer a balance to zero-interest deals once their current deals
expire.
However, most credit card users are a combination of
transactor and revolver, using separate cards for each category. They
will have a revolving balance on one card and use another for their
day-to-day spending. For these 'mixers' reasons for using particular credit cards
will vary depending whether it's their revolver or transactor card.
They may even choose a card for a non-financial reason such as the way
the card looks, or on a combination of the design and the benefits that
it offers.
Whatever the reason for the choice of card, the way you use it is most likely to influence it.
Article Source: Adam Singleton
|