NALA (North American Loyalty Association) has launched across the US and Canada as a membership organization for brands and retailers and their loyalty, CRM, and customer engagement teams. The group is operated by ELA Europe Ltd and positions itself as a more practitioner-driven alternative to traditional industry bodies and events.
The launch is less about new software and more about how loyalty teams are trying to learn faster in a noisy ecosystem. As loyalty and CRM stacks become more complex, communities and peer networks can act as a practical layer for sharing operational playbooks, vendor experiences, and measurement approaches that are hard to get from polished conference talks.
Short on time?
Here’s a quick look at what’s inside:
- What NALA is, and how it plans to operate
- Why loyalty and CRM teams are leaning into practitioner communities
- Competitive context: how NALA compares with other networks
- What the event strategy signals about member value
- What loyalty leaders can take from this launch
What NALA is, and how it plans to operate
NALA is a membership organization aimed at practitioners working in loyalty, CRM, and customer engagement at brands and retailers. Membership is positioned as free for brands, with technology providers and consultancies participating as partners.
NALA builds on Europe’s Loyalty Association, which says it has grown to over 1,000 members across 800 brands over the past four years. NALA’s stated plan is to establish a footprint across North America over five years, including expansion into additional cities, regional “NALA HUBs,” and a goal of more than 500 members by 2027.

Why loyalty and CRM teams are leaning into practitioner communities
Loyalty and CRM have become increasingly cross-functional: data engineering, privacy, analytics, lifecycle messaging, offer economics, and creative testing all intersect. Many teams also operate under pressure to prove incremental lift, not just engagement.
In that environment, practitioner communities can fill gaps that vendors and conferences do not:
- Unfiltered implementation reality: what actually worked in onboarding, segmentation, and measurement.
- Benchmarking: what KPIs, offer structures, and testing cadences peers use.
- Vendor decision support: how teams evaluate CDPs, ESPs, loyalty engines, and attribution approaches in practice.
NALA’s messaging emphasizes candid discussion and practical takeaways, which aligns with what many operators say they want: fewer case-study narratives, more problem-solving.
Competitive context: how NALA compares with other networks
NALA sits in the professional community space rather than the martech vendor market. It competes for attention and membership time with other learning and networking options such as Loyalty Academy and Customer Strategy Network, plus broader CRM and retail marketing events.
Differentiation here usually comes down to format and audience quality:
- Curated peer groups vs open attendance
- Operator-led sessions vs sponsor-led agendas
- Practical working sessions vs keynote-heavy programming
NALA is explicitly leaning into a practitioner-first tone and smaller senior-leader gatherings, which can be valuable if it maintains strong moderation and avoids partner content turning into sales enablement.
What the event strategy signals about member value
NALA plans two flagship events in 2026: an inaugural Toronto event on April 21 (expected 170 senior leaders) and a Chicago event on November 10 (expected 200 attendees). It also describes virtual meet-ups, workshops, and community-led content.
For working teams, the event approach is a signal of the organization’s operating model:
- Smaller events can produce higher trust and more usable peer exchange.
- The tradeoff is scalability. To grow member value, the organization needs consistent programming and mechanisms to capture and share learnings between events.
If NALA can turn event conversations into repeatable frameworks (measurement templates, test designs, governance models), it can become more than networking. If not, it risks being another calendar item.
What loyalty leaders can take from this launch
Even if you do not join, the launch is a reminder to treat “community” as part of your operating system:
- Create a peer bench: identify 5–10 practitioners you can call when you hit a loyalty economics or deliverability issue.
- Standardize what you share internally: turn learnings into one-page playbooks your team can reuse.
- Use communities to de-risk bets: before switching platforms or rolling out a new earn-and-burn structure, sanity-check assumptions with operators who have shipped similar changes.
NALA’s growth targets and early event plans suggest it is betting that loyalty and CRM leaders want smaller, more direct environments to compare notes as customer engagement becomes more data- and experimentation-driven.


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