Showing posts with label mobile wallet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mobile wallet. Show all posts

Monday, 19 July 2021

Facebook Pay’s Expansion Plans Might Get No ‘Likes’ From Big Tech Rivals

The mobile wallet race officially became the mobile wallet war  last Wednesday, after Facebook announced plans to support the use of its Facebook Pay system on sites outside of its ecosystem. 

This first big step into the wider world of payments would have been less remarkable had it not involved Shopify’s 1.7 million merchants as its inaugural external test case. It was a move that gave the Facebook endeavor an immediate degree of credibility and surely caught the eye of wallet-space heavyweights like Apple, Google, PayPal, and more.

Tuesday, 22 November 2016

Mobile payments trends report shows mainstream adoption is a long way off

Industry analysts had predicted that Apple would kick smartphone wallets into gear but that might not be it.

When Apple Pay was launched, many analysts believed this would be the start of powerful mobile payments trends. They felt that Apple was the key to the mainstream adoption of mobile wallets. That said, that wallet app has now been available for about two years and adoption has been slower than anticipated.

Some analysts are now saying that the start of the widespread use of mobile payments won’t happen for some time.

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Tuesday, 12 July 2016

Mobile Wallets Must Move Beyond Payments to Escape Infancy


From Payments Source –

“Mobile wallets remain in a nascent stage until service providers can deliver value beyond just payments.”

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Monday, 1 February 2016

Mobile payments – why the latest technology may not be such a good idea just yet


By Stanley Epstein

In a recent article (‘Reflections on the fintech revolution’) I referred to technology vendors who constantly harassed the financial services industry with a range of new technologies and tech-solutions leaving it up to the banks to find the problem for their solution to solve.

The reality was that there are dozens of problems and for the most part they are all partially solvable by these new technologies. In truth however many of these solutions are simply just not viable. This is either as a pure business proposition or because somewhere along the line the technology is not quite as perfect as one is led to believe.

Just look at the modern banking scene with its miracle device – the mobile phone.

The mobile phone has, among many other uses given us mobile banking and mobile payments. Many people confuse mobile banking with mobile payments, so let’s put some of the myths to rest before we take another step.

Mobile payments are having either stored value or an electronic version of your credit/debit card on your mobile phone. Nothing really new here – just a different human/system interface in the form of your mobile phone.

Mobile banking is simply putting your old Internet or online-banking onto your mobile as well. Add to it some of the abilities that the technologies on your smartphone gives you, for example a digital camera to image your cheque for deposit, or you for that matter to have a live chat with your own personal banker, plus all the old standbys of bank balances, statements, transfers and payments and the like and – hey presto! We now have a ‘new’ animal called ‘digital banking’ (which of course can all be done from your old fashioned desktop or shiny new tablet too).

About a year ago Apple Inc. announced the development of its mobile payment solution, Apple Pay. Apple Pay is a mobile payment and digital wallet service that allows users to make payments using limited range of Apple iPhone models. Apple Pay will work with Visa's PayWave, MasterCard's PayPass, and American Express's ExpressPay contactless terminals. Users do have to preregister their credit cards for inclusion in the service. Once this is done the service allows use of the credit card or cards without the plastic needing to be present.

Apple Pay is not a new payment system but simply a new way of presenting ones credit/debit card with some high tech validation routines thrown in.

So-far-so good. No need for bulky physical wallets crammed with dozens of plastic cards. Stick them in your iPhone and you are set to go…or are you?

So you don’t have an iPhone (or the right model). Well, two options present themselves. Buy an iPhone or wait until a similar Android mobile payment mechanism appears. Samsung has just unveiled ‘Samsung Pay’. While similar it is not the same as Apple Pay; and it has yet to be launched. No doubt many Samsung mobile models won’t work with their new payment service. So one way or another it’s going to cost you a lot of money.

Other gremlins are lurking too. Battery life on your iPhone (or other smartphone) could prove to be a major headache. After the recent UK launch of Apple Pay TfL (Transport for London) issued a warning to tube, train and bus passengers paying with Apple Pay on iPhones and Apple Watches not to let their batteries go flat or they could get stuck at gates and face penalty fares. Other problems were in evidence too like the speed at which Apple Pay operates and the time it took for the system to authenticate the user and open the gates. This is slower than the less high-tech Oyster card.

As for me? Well I am going to hang onto my credit card a while longer yet.

 

Wednesday, 18 November 2015

Should banks build or buy their payment apps?


Banks at a crossroads: Build or buy mobile payment apps

From Mobile Payments Today –

“Commerce has evolved over the 10,000-plus year history of society. The Internet age introduced online banking 20 years ago and now 80 percent of bank consumers in the developed world are using it. In addition, in the span of just the past four years or so, mobile banking has grown to 52 percent of smartphone owners. And now, mobile payment applications have taken the market by storm and are the hottest area in commerce today.

Today, most bank and major card issuers are at a crossroads and asking themselves a question, whether to launch a standalone payment app or add mobile HCE payment capabilities to an existing bank-branded app. Although this integration may not necessarily bring instant success for mobile payments, it does offer some indication as to how mobile payments are evolving. In the midst of all this mobile-banking hoopla, some of the banks are contemplating whether they have to participate in third-party wallets such as Apple Pay, Android Pay, Samsung Pay and CurrentC.”

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