Join friction
How much work does the customer have to do before loyalty even begins: download an app, keep a paper card, or just save a wallet card?
Compare hub
Use these comparison pages to decide whether paper cards, loyalty apps, or wallet-based loyalty make more sense for your business and your customer behavior.
Most businesses do not need more marketing jargon. They need direct answers about friction, retention, customer habit, reward control, and which loyalty model fits their real queue or service flow.
A good comparison should focus on customer friction, repeat visibility, operational fit, reward control, and how much future growth the business needs from the loyalty system.
How much work does the customer have to do before loyalty even begins: download an app, keep a paper card, or just save a wallet card?
Can the customer easily find the loyalty card later, or does the habit disappear after the first visit?
Does the model work with busy counters, personal service, delivery, kiosks, or high-speed queues?
Can the business keep rewards simple at first and tighten redemption later if needed?
Each comparison page is built to answer a specific buying or setup question without hiding the answer inside vague sales language.
See how digital wallet-based cards keep the same simple habit as paper while reducing lost cards and adding return-visit tools.
Best for businesses replacing paper cards or evaluating whether software is worth it.
Open comparisonCompare app-download friction with a wallet-first loyalty flow built around Apple Wallet and Google Wallet.
Best for businesses deciding whether they really need a separate customer app.
Open comparisonIf you are comparing 7stamp with Loopy Loyalty, the fastest way to decide is to test customer join speed, wallet card clarity, reward control, and staff workload against the actual counter flow you run.
Best for wallet-first local business teams comparing no-app loyalty options.
Open comparisonIf you are comparing 7stamp with PassKit, focus on the real operating model: how customers join, how the wallet asset is reused between visits, how rewards are controlled, and how much rollout effort your team can absorb.
Best for businesses choosing between wallet infrastructure and a ready repeat-visit loyalty workflow.
Open comparisonWhen comparing 7stamp with Stamp Me, test the real customer join flow, reward visibility, and staff effort needed to keep loyalty active during normal service hours.
Best for local businesses choosing between wallet-first loyalty and other repeat-visit tools.
Open comparisonIf you are comparing 7stamp with Square Loyalty, test whether the better choice for your business is a no-app wallet loyalty workflow or a setup more closely tied to the rest of your current operations.
Best for teams deciding whether loyalty should start wallet-first and low-friction.
Open comparisonIf your shortlist includes 7stamp and Smile.io, compare them through the lens of customer behavior: what kind of repeat visit, reward visibility, and day-to-day team workflow your business actually needs.
Best for businesses checking whether a wallet-first loyalty flow is the right alternative.
Open comparisonIf you are comparing 7stamp with Yotpo Loyalty, focus on which option creates the cleaner repeat-visit loop for your business, from customer join through reward redemption and reactivation.
Best for teams evaluating whether in-person wallet loyalty is the stronger fit.
Open comparisonIf you are comparing 7stamp with Fivestars, test which option makes it easier for customers to join quickly, understand progress, and return without the loyalty program adding new operational friction.
Best for local brands testing which loyalty flow produces less friction at the counter.
Open comparisonA practical comparison of the three main loyalty models for local businesses: which one is easiest to explain, easiest to operate, and most sustainable over time.
Best for teams choosing the right reward mechanic before they launch.
Open comparisonA rollout strategy page that compares launching with redeem codes and wallet cards first versus waiting for deeper POS integration work.
Best for operators deciding whether integration should block the first loyalty launch.
Open comparisonNext step
For many local businesses, the winning move is to start with a no-app wallet card and one validation workflow, then add more control only when the program proves itself.