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I was chatting with @WilsonM and he suggested that every time you earn points, you're effectively buying them in one way or another (at varying costs, including sometimes at very good value, and not always for money).
For example, if you get a credit card sign-up bonus, you still need to pay the annual fee and complete a minimum spend on the card. If you earn Flybuys points shopping at Coles, you still need to buy groceries to get those points - and if you convert 2,000 Flybuys points into 1,000 Velocity points, you're giving up a $10 shopping discount. If you pay for something with a credit card, you still have to buy the product (and sometimes pay a card surcharge).
I suggested that earning points for completing your step challenges in the Qantas Wellbeing app is free, but Wilson pointed out that you are still giving up some of your data in exchange for those points. Or there could be an opportunity cost, e.g. your time spent completing a Red Planet survey.
I personally would say that points are "free" if you're paying no marginal cost just for those points for something you were going to do/buy anyway. But is that a correct way of looking at it?
What do you think?
For example, if you get a credit card sign-up bonus, you still need to pay the annual fee and complete a minimum spend on the card. If you earn Flybuys points shopping at Coles, you still need to buy groceries to get those points - and if you convert 2,000 Flybuys points into 1,000 Velocity points, you're giving up a $10 shopping discount. If you pay for something with a credit card, you still have to buy the product (and sometimes pay a card surcharge).
I suggested that earning points for completing your step challenges in the Qantas Wellbeing app is free, but Wilson pointed out that you are still giving up some of your data in exchange for those points. Or there could be an opportunity cost, e.g. your time spent completing a Red Planet survey.
I personally would say that points are "free" if you're paying no marginal cost just for those points for something you were going to do/buy anyway. But is that a correct way of looking at it?
What do you think?