7. So what are mobile
payments?
Five things:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Buying stuff from apps and sites
Transferring money to friends
Using a mobile wallet to buy stuff in shops
Paying for things with your phone bill
Plugging a card reader into your phone to take payments
10. 1. People will buy bulldozers
from their mobile phones
Last year, PayPal‟s largest transaction via mobile app
was a $48,000 bulldozer.
11. 2. There’s big business giving app
makers easy access to
card payments
Give merchants an API to embed card payments in multiple
currencies – in return a transaction fee.
Examples: Zooz, Stripe, Judo, Braintree
PayPal paid $800m for Braintree.
12. 3. Why fill out long checkout payment
forms when you
could snap a barcode?
Wrap up all the billing and delivery info in an app.
Snap a barcode on a compatible site and the payment is
made.
Examples: MPayMe, Paddle, Ensygnia, SEKURme
13. 4. Don’t bank a cheque or card payment.
Photograph it
Jumio PORT lets you photo a card to make an instant
payment on a mobile site.
Then stores it in Passbook, Samsung Wallet for next time.
Also see PicturePay, Malauzai Software, Card.io
14. 5. Visa V.Me, MasterPass –
PayPal killers?
Visa and MasterCard have created wallets that require a
PIN only to complete a online/mobile payment.
15. 6. Pay With Amazon or Facebook
How to make payments quicker on mobile sites?
Use existing payments systems like Amazon.
Or „auto-fill with Facebook‟…
16. 7. Maybe it’s better for your phone to be
your credit card than to store your credit
card
ARM‟s Trustzone wants to embed card details into the
chipset of your phone.
That way, your phone would not access your card, it would
be your card.
18. 8. ‘Pay by M-Pesa’ is coming to apps and
sites
M-Pesa – 15 million customers in Kenya, more than 165
million transactions per month.
Now, Safaricom will open up its API to see how developers
can integrate M-Pesa into their own apps and sites.
19. 9. Kenyans are doing
‘save by M-Pesa’ too
M-Shwari launched in November 2012 to add savings and loans.
Customers sign up for a savings account directly through the M-Pesa
menu.
No forms to complete and no need to visit a bank branch.
In two months, the scheme banked $11.6m.
20. 10. Mobile Money is scaling – kind of
GSMA: there are now 208 live „mobile money for the unbanked‟
services in 83 countries.
But card makers and governments are resisting.
Mexico‟s Transfer – América Móvil Banamex, Banco Inbursa and
Gemalto link bank accounts to phones.
21. 11. Mobile Money for the unbanked could
work in the UK
1.25 million unbanked households in the UK – 4.5 million
unbanked individuals.
Mobile money distributes credit faster and more cost-effectively.
Government is working on pilots.
22. 12. PingIt
Pingit started out as a banking app for paying your mates.
You only need to know their mobile number.
1.2m downloads.
Now it‟s also Buy It – for buying retail products.
23. 13. Pay by email
Attach money to your emails – like an image or word doc –
using Google Wallet/Gmail
Or use Square Cash – CC @Square.com in the email
menu
24. 14. Pay by Twitter comment
What if you could just write „buy‟ as a Tweet or Facebook
update to order a product you like.
You can.
Examples: Chirpify, Soldsie, Yandex.
25. 15. Social media payments #1:
Pay by BBM
IM apps are now sending payments.
Monitise, BlackBerry and Permatabank teamed up, so
Indonesian users can now pay by BBM
26. 16. The P2P payments app – Venmo
Load it up with funds.
Pay other Venmo users.
Zero fees and lots of amusing comments.
28. 17. ‘Easy’ – more important than cheap or
clever: Starbucks
Starbucks‟ single-purpose app is the most popular m-payments
service in the US.
4m mobile transactions a week from 10m users – 10 per cent of all
US revs.
Why? Because it‟s simple. It just works.
29. 18. Bank of Wal-Mart: retailers
do their own thing in m-commerce
In 2012, 14 US retailers formed the Merchant Customer Exchange a single QR code based wallet
MCX represents merchants with more than $1 trillion in annual
sales across nearly every merchant vertical.
30. 19. Mobile vouchers are redeemed 20x
more than paper coupons
Sweden‟s Mobilabs says paper coupons generate an average
one or two per cent redemption rate, while mobile does 33 per
cent.
And when the offer is free, mobile can hit 66 per cent.
31. 20. Mobile NFC – Not Fecking Coming?
No Fecking Chance?
Berg Insight: 3 NFC mobile wallets have an addressable
market of more than 100,000 people.
Still, big hitters committed to it: Isis, Google, Weve,
Samsung, Vodafone…
32. 21. NFC m-payment – who owns the
secure element?
Operators want to charge to host the „secure element‟
inside the SIM.
Some banks prefer to work with OEMs: “Because by
having deals with Samsung, BlackBerry, Nokia and
Apple you‟ve covered the world.”
33. 22. You can put an NFC wallet
in the cloud
NFC tech needs to be embedded in your device, right?
Not necessarily.
A few firms – RBC, Bankinter – have launched platforms that put the
security features of NFC in the cloud.
It‟s NFC by app.
34. 23. Push message + loyalty + payment =
the Weve dream…
The UK operator JV wants to push you messages that are
stored automatically in your loyalty wallet and can be paid
for instantly via NFC.
35. 24. Droplet/Wi-Py/Zync
Simple idea: top up a wallet and use the balance to pay a
registered merchant.
App uses GPS to present you with payment screen.
Tap in amount – and „pay‟.
No fees for anyone.
36. 25. PayPal – pay with your face
Check in with your app via hi-speed Bluetooth „beacons‟.
At the counter, they compare your face with your PayPal profile.
If it matches, you‟re done.
37. 26. Pay by squeal
You need a channel that can transmit data to make
payments.
So how about audio?
Alipay, Cinkle and Naratte are all using inaudible sound to
send payment information.
39. 27. You can pay for parking, wi-fi and ebooks with
phone credit
Research has shown operator billing increases transactions by
up to 13 times.
Used to be for ringtones… now wi-fi access, parking, premium
access to flat sharing schemes, console gaming „points‟ and
more.
40. 28. You can buy digital goods
with phone credit – even when you’re on
a desktop site
Thanks to firms like Boku, Mopay, Zong, OneBip, Payvia, Bango,
BillToMobile and Payone.
Typing your phone number into a box is much faster than filling
out a card payment form.
41. 29. You can use NFC to make a payment
from your phone bill
txtNation is using RapidNFC tags to do just this.
43. 30. Phones will replace cash tills before
they replace wallets
“Paying is not exciting; getting paid is”
This year, Square expects to transact $15bn across its
network.
Urban Outfitters doesn‟t have any tills.
It has iPads.
44. 31. Chip and PIN is a problem for mPOS
in Europe
Vendors are using Bluetooth to get around it.
Expensive and unreliable.
46. 32. Operators could forget about
payments and focus on identity
If payment details are stored on the cloud, then mobile
transaction equals authentication.
Your phone contains your SIM ID, photos, a certain amount of
memory use, songs, texts.
All these elements combined with PIN create a single unique
identifier of YOU.
47. 33. Apple won’t do payments.
It’s too risky
Refunds, regulation, customer care, rev shares…
But it might let payments firms
use its fingerprint APIs.
48. 34. Banking apps could make you more
careful with your money
It‟s a long time since we knew at a moment‟s notice how much money
we had left till payday.
Mobile banking apps cab use graphs to illustrate how much we have in
our accounts, where the money has gone, how our spending compares
with last month/year…
It could change the way we behave.
49. 35. Anonymity could be a USP – if
anyone bothered to offer it
Digital currency is great for keeping records of transactions. But
what about when people don‟t want a record kept?
Amazon may be aware if this.
It filed a patent filing for an anonymous mobile payments system
that supports transactions with no name, email address, or other
personal details.