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21 July 2008

Slightly faster payments

[Dave Birch] Well, the Faster Payment Service (FPS) is up and running and I was thinking about it because I happened to have had a couple of meetings with APACS last week. I made mental note that next time I log in to my home banking I shall attempt an FPS transfer in the spirit of first hand investigation and report back, but I don't think it will have much of an impact on day-to-day life for me in the short term. Where I think it will have an impact is in using secure mobile applications as a 2FA front-end to FPS transfers. If it is simple -- and I mean really simply -- to instruct an FPS transfer from the phone then it may become an established alternative to some other payment mechanisms. Clearly, one of those will be cheques. The Payments Council are studying mobile-based bank account to bank account transfers as we speak, guided by the focus given to mobile in the National Payments Plan published by the Payments Council (I interviewed the head of the Payments Council, Brian Pomeroy, in our podcast series), alongside further consultation on the future of cheques. These subjects are certainly related, since mobile (rather than Internet) payments are the only viable way to replace cheques as far as I can see.

Continue reading "Slightly faster payments" »

08 July 2008

Contactless trajectory

[Dave Birch] It looks as if the roll-out of contactless payment cards is not going as well as the industry had hoped. Our good friends at CPP commissioned a survey and found out that

two thirds (77 percent) of respondents are worried about card fraud, as no PIN is required for contactless purchases below £10. Other concerns include a fear of increased crime levels (48 percent) and of criminals hacking into personal details (34 percent).

[From ePaynews.com - the payment news and resource Center]

So people are scared of using contactless cards because of fraud, retailers are surcharging to cut down use and terminals are not good enough. What with one thing and another, it's a surprise to discover that there are any contactless retail transactions in London at all. Is it therefore reasonable for James van Dyke to say that

I’m coming around on contactless.

[From Javelin Strategy and Research » Coming Around on Contactless]

I'm genuinely wondering. But is this the usual post-hype dip or has contactless just taken too long to move into the marketplace? I've heard more and more people -- on the issuing side -- talk about skipping over contactless cards completely and just moving directly to phones of one form or another, either NFC phones or phones with NFC stickers on them. The argument is, essentially, that it's hard to deliver enough added-value to compete with the cash just using a card whereas a phone can be a platform for more services for the both the payments and retail sectors.

Continue reading "Contactless trajectory" »

30 June 2008

Text usury

[Dave Birch] In the April E-Finance and Payments Law and Policy (a fine journal), I read about text message loans in Finland (and the rest of Scandinavia), a subject about which I knew absolutely nothing but found absolutely fascinating. Here's what's going on. The consumer sends a text message to the company offering the loan (these are typically in the range 50 to 200 euros). The message contains the consumers ID number and bank account details as well as the amount of the loan. The company checks the consumer's credit and, if it is acceptable, sends back a link to web site with the terms and conditions. Once the consumer accepts these (by hitting "OK" on the relevant web page) the money is sent to their account. The companies do not charge explicit interest, but instead charge an arrangement fee (which is the equivalent, often, of an APR of several hundred percent). Wow.

Continue reading "Text usury" »

26 June 2008

It's the future, I tell you, the future!

[Dave Birch] I was down at SMi's Contactless Cards conference in London this week (I ran the NFC payments workshop there -- remember our competition?) and picked up the impression that the London contactless roll-out is not going entirely as smoothly as it might. The cards are rolling out, but the terminals are not following the same trajectory. And where the terminals are out there, they're not transforming customer behaviour. The small transaction focus may be hampering deployment...

Yo Sushi has found that the £10 limit greatly reduces the number of transactions it takes and it also said that the lack of portable contactless terminals was a problem as was the accreditation process.

[From Payments Industry Thoughts: London Contactless Payments Stuttering]

Yet I'm sure I detected more enthusiasm from some of the bigger retailers who were thinking about setting aside under £10 terminals or lanes.

Sainsbury’s is to start a contactless payments trial as part of a multimillion-pound revenue protection programme. The retailer is selecting a vendor for the in-store reading equipment and will begin testing the devices in the coming weeks. “The introduction of chip-and-PIN has reduced the number of card-based scams considerably, but we have seen a substantial increase in cash fraud,” said Sainsbury’s national crime and investigations manager Phil Wilson.

[From Sainsbury's checks out secure payments systems - 08 May 2008 - Computing]

That's a perspective I hadn't looked at for a while. Since there is a fair bit of theft in the retail world -- I think they call it shrinkage -- reducing the amount in the till also reduces the amount of cash being pilfered. Another line in the business case.

Continue reading "It's the future, I tell you, the future!" »

24 June 2008

Charmaine Oak, Orange UK

[Dave Birch] Charmaine Oak manages Billing and Payments within Products & Innovations, Consumer Marketing for Orange UK. Having created a strategy for Orange UK to enter the Payments and Contactless sector, she is currently working on creation of new products for International Money Transfer, Domestic P2P, Mobile Wallet and support for other contactless applications. In this podcast, she talks about the importance of payments to the Orange strategy and shares some of the vision for payments businesses in the mobile world.

Continue reading "Charmaine Oak, Orange UK" »

17 June 2008

Out of Africa

[Dave Birch] The news that M-PESA in Kenya now has more than 2.7 million users -- with 50,000 more joining every week -- reminds me that sometimes new technology can not only make payment systems more efficient, more effective or more profitable, but also genuinely life-changing. But with ATMs getting more expensive, bank branches thinning out, petrol prices making it expensive to get to towns, Post Offices closing left and right... how long will it be before the successful non-bank mobile-based transaction-oriented pre-paid services being launched in developing countries find their way back to the U.K.? After all,

Any new rival to Visa and Mastercard should seriously consider ditching the card concept altogether and utilising customer's mobile phones.

[From Rival to Visa and Mastercard without cards? - Mobilisation]

Now, it may seem far-fetched to imagine that G-Cash, M-PESA, Cellpay and others might have Europe in their sites, but it must be surely be a line of thinking that as SEPA has failed to deliver the (Commission's) desired result -- in that it has led to low-cost national debit schemes being abandoned and replaced by international schemes -- perhaps another approach might be considered? What if the so-called "third scheme" were not some boring old-fashioned hello-1949 thing with accounts, cards, statements and the like but M-PESA? Any financial institution could provide the line of credit used to fund the pre-paid account at the heart of the scheme. Now, obviously I'm not the only person to be thinking this way...

A new dedicated mCommerce account may be the way to go. Remember that when credit cards (a new payment system) were launched in the 1970's, it came with its own dedicated account management system. Why should that not be the case for mobile payments?

[From Mobile Banking: Where is the money?]

I wonder if we aren't heading for more change than the Commission and the banking industry could possibly have imagined when setting off on the SEPA path. Anyway, let's stop for a moment and celebrate M-PESA's achievement: a win-win-win for consumers, Safaricom and microfinance. Payments really can change peoples' lives.

Continue reading "Out of Africa" »

23 May 2008

Mobile security modality

[Dave Birch] No, I'm not sure what it means either, but we have a project helping a customer in the field of security, so I've been looking at the issue of perception and reality. In particular, I've been looking at the way that consumers see mobile (in the context of activities that require security, such as banking). I came across this:

Security concerns were found to be a major hindrance to take-up of mobile services, with just five per cent considering mobile handsets offer a "very secure modality".

[From Finextra: UK consumers shunning m-payments]

I doubt that 0.5 percent of U.K. consumers know what a "very secure modality" is -- I know I don't: my dictionary says that "modality" means "a particular mode in which something exists or is experienced or expressed" -- so we probably shouldn't read too much into the absolute figures. But, nevertheless, there is concern about security in the mobile world (not just for payments) and we need to address the issue if we want to see a growth in m-transactions. Pointing out to people that mobile phone transactions are more secure than, say, credit card transactions on the web, isn't the right way forward. The people interviewed are not carrying out a detailed risk analysis and coming to an informed view of countermeasures, they are reacting to their perceptions. By this reasoning, perhaps we should be developing some "security theatre" to make mobile deliver the right feedback, the right image, the right modality. I don't think a little picture of a padlock is going to do it. I rather like the old proxmity payment demo we had on the original Nokia 3220s: the lights flash green when it's ready for a transaction, the light flashes as it's making a transaction and the lights go green or red depending on the outcome.

Continue reading "Mobile security modality" »

20 May 2008

Peter Comben, Vivotech

[Dave Birch] As is often discussed on this blog, there is a new ecosystem emerging around the combination of mobile and contactless technology. NFC is of limited use as a standalone: we need to be able to get applications into the phone and manage them when they're there. There are a number of suppliers and service providers looking to support this over-the-air (OTA) market, and one of them is Vivotech. Peter Comben in this Business Development Director for Vivotech in the EMEA region. In this podcast, he talks about how he see the contactless payment market evolving and then how new proposition mights come together in the mobile Trusted Service Manager (TSM) space, where service providers use the OTA platform to intermediate banks and other organisations to mobile operators.

Continue reading "Peter Comben, Vivotech" »

16 May 2008

Red, yellow and green alert

[Dave Birch] I saw a post about Celent's current payment advisory:

Celent expects some major shake-ups to occur in the payments industry in the near future. A new report, Disruption in the Payments World, examines the storms brewing that could have dire consequences for many issuers and offers insight into strategies that could help them weather these storms.

[From CELENT :: Strategy Consulting for Financial Institutions]

Just for "fun", I thought I'd compare my view of the advisories with theirs so I spent some time on the train putting it all together in the same format. Here's the combined result:

Payment system disruption

Continue reading "Red, yellow and green alert" »

15 May 2008

More mobile chat

[Dave Birch] I was talking to a client yesterday when the subject of mobile payment security came up. I was explaining some ideas for bringing some new ways to pay to the mobile phone, and one of the client team asked about security and so we went through some high-level risk analysis. The concerns expressed were perfectly reasonable and widespread, as consumer surveys confirm:

Convenience is the most compelling feature of both mobile banking and mobile payment at the point-of-sale. Participants cited the ability to perform banking functions, such as check balances and pay bills, from anywhere without the need of a computer as the major convenience of mobile banking, and the prospect of no longer carrying a wallet as the major convenience of mobile payment at the point-of-sale. Conversely, participants indicated security and fraud were their main concerns regarding these mobile applications, wondering what would happen if their mobile devices were lost or stolen.

[From Consumer Interest in Mobile Commerce Extends Beyond Banking]

As it happens, I had a ready-to-roll Powerpoint presentation on security in mobile payments so I was able to walk through it show the client how we would deal with these concerns and manage the risk down. Afterwards, I was thinking that we (ie, people who are bullish about mobile proximity payments, in this case) should be more upfront about security, because the truth is that there is more security overall in a mobile payment than a card payment.

“There’s a whole lot of upside and security advantages to mobile devices,” says James Van Dyke, president of Javelin Strategy and Research,

[From Javelin Strategy and Research » Safest way to bank online? Your cell phone]

Apart from the often-repeated point about noticing a missing phone much sooner than you notice a missing card, there's also the issue of communications. You know where phones are and you can communicate with them, which greatly changes the risk and countermeasure situation when compared with cards. I think the question should be the other way around: from a security point of view, does it make sense to carry on with cards?

Continue reading "More mobile chat" »

13 May 2008

Start off your reading list for the beach this summer

[Dave Birch] I'll admit that my summer reading is probably a few standard deviations from the mean, in that I'm currently half way through Tim Park's accessible story of the Medicis and will then move on to "Money Tales". Not for me the guilty pleasure of thumbing Jackie Collins while sipping pina coladas by the pool. If it's not about money or identity, then I'm not interested: if you don't find the evolution of early European bills of exchange into near-money substitutes (to avoid church rulings against usury) thrilling, then I don't know what a thriller is!

So, bearing my deranged perspective in mind, here are three recommendations for you. They are papers from CHI 2008, held on April 5 – April 10 2008 in Florence, Italy (ACM 978-1-60558-012-8/08/04). Each makes excellent beach reading for Digital Money Denizens and, in my case anyway, will generate half-a-dozen ideas per pages as you read through. You can download them individually from the ACM and they are well worth the $10 each in my opinion.

Continue reading "Start off your reading list for the beach this summer" »

24 April 2008

We should have such problems

[Dave Birch] Well, I have to start this post by saying a big thank you: actually, a set of big thank yous. Thank you to Visa Europe and Webmoney for sponsoring this year's Digital Money Forum: I've already received some exceedingly complimentary e-mails about the event and it just wouldn't be possible without the support of sponsors like these (ie, sponsors who share the Forum's goals for discussion, debate and learning). Thank you to everyone who came: as always we cut it off at 100 people, and all of them joined in the conversation. Thank you to ACI Worldwide for sponsoring the pub quiz and drinks, which were tremendous fun: the Digital Money Mastermind 2008 was Dominic Peachey from the Financial Service Authority. And a special thanks to my blogpals: Chris Skinner (UK), Scott Loftesness (USA), Colin Henderson (Canada) and Aneace Haddad (Singapore). It was a pleasure to sit on a panel with them today on the "Meet the Bloggers" panel moderated by Steve Bowbrick.

Anyway, in the mobile panel session at the Digital Money Forum today, there was a debate over the use of contactless mobiles in Japan. I've just looked up the figures that were in my head in the report I was thinking about. I love the tone of this report -- someone sent me the link a couple of days ago. It concerns a survey (last month) of Japanese mobile phone users which found that:

Meanwhile, the ratios of respondents who have used "GPS (global positioning services)" and the "Osaifu-Keitai/FeliCa (contactless mobile IC card)" functions were low at 18.7 and 15.5%, respectively.

[From Survey: Less Than 20% Japanese Use Cellphone as Contactless IC Card, GPS -- Tech-On!]

Only a sixth of mobile phone subscribers use their handsets as contactless wallets! ONLY A SIXTH!! Well, here in the U.K. it's about 0.001% so I'm quite jealous. Not just of Japan, but of lots of other places. One of Consult Hyperion's newest clients is based in Georgia, where the People's Bank has already started rolling out an NFC service:

In 2008 our clients will be able to use this service in more than 1 000 locations. We plan to equip more than 150 billboards with RFID tags for NFC mobiles. People’s Bank is starting an instalment payment plan to make NFC mobile phones available to substantial parts of the population. Iberia Business Group made the decision to award everyone who buys a car at their company an NFC mobile for free.

[From The FINANCIAL, News That Makes Money, Business News & Multimedia - NFC Mobile Phones Now in Georgia]

Continue reading "We should have such problems" »

18 April 2008

Prepaid trajectory

[Dave Birch] It seems that the prepaid cards market may be smaller than we have been led to believe. According to the Federal Reserve, the U.S. open- and closed-loop prepaid card markets reached $50 billion in total transaction value in 2006 with roughly 3.4 billion transactions -- much lower than industry estimates, but still a far-sized market. The potential for growth is vast, seeing that prepaid transaction value is one percent of debit transaction value and that only 10% of prepaid transactions are on open-loop (eg, Visa/MC) cards despite the volume of open-loop cards being proportionately much higher. This suggests to me that the consumers see far greater utility -- still -- in closed-loop cards, presumably becuase may of them are retailer-issued and offer loyalty schemes etc. Anyway,

The Federal Reserve’s prepaid numbers are lower than many industry estimates, which vary greatly. The discrepancy resulted because the Fed’s study focuses on purchase transactions with prepaid cards and not on fund-load amounts, as some industry studies have done, according to the Federal Reserve. The size of the prepaid market “is dramatically lower than anybody expected,” says Tony Hayes, a partner in the Retail Banking practice of Oliver Wyman, a New York-based management consulting firm.

[From CardForum | PREPAID MARKET NOT AS LARGE AS INDUSTRY BELIEVES, FED SAYS]

There doesn't seem to be any shortage of new prepaid products coming into the market though. Payments News picked up another one only last week: a colour-coded pre-paid card in the U.K., aiming to solve the problem of age verification and convenience together:

The UreLife card is available at launch for five age groups; 12-15 years, 16-17 years, 18-20 years, 21+ years and 60+ years. Cards are colour-coded according to the age category of the cardholder and a colour photograph, PASS hologram and printed date of birth makes the card unique.

[From Payments News: UK's First Prepaid Debit Card With Built-In Proof-of-Age - April 16, 2008]

This is one of those odd cases whether the users (ie, teenagers) are not the target market: it's the parents (and, to some extent, retailers) who will create the demand. Let's hope it's more cost-effective than the raft of other prepaid cards in the U.K. market at the moment.

Continue reading "Prepaid trajectory" »

09 April 2008

Retail not-banking

[Dave Birch] The relationship between payments and banking is, generally speaking, under some pressure from both developments in technology and wider cultural and business changes. Although these pressures exist in the developed world, they are most visible in the developing world where the lack of existing infrastructure means that technology and business change come together unencumbered. The result is called by some "branchless banking", although in the payments space "bankless banking" might be more appropriate. Anyway, the essence of the concept is access for the financial excluded through non-bank distribution channels. Why? Well, in many (if not most) countries, most people don't have bank accounts:

Statistics from the Central Bank shows that banks currently hold less than 3 million accounts, both current and savings across the country. The present development which is not healthy for the economy means that less than 15 percent of the about 22 million population in the country saves with the banks. According to the data, while the economy is cash based, 80 percent of cash is outside the universal banks.

[From 18m Ghanaians Shun Banks - ModernGhana.com]

Look at the example of Brazil to see how the technology, business and social factors can co-evolve: In Brazil, payments account for nearly four-fifths of bankless banking transactions. In other words, transactions that are performed over electronic channels (in countries like Brazil, this almost always means mobile, not the internet) are overwhelmingly payments transactions. Again in Brazil, 90% of the people who use some form of branchless banking, use it to make utility payments and other non-interpersonal payments. And of those people, only 5% have a bank account. This market shape is unlikely to change because the cost of providing these people with bank accounts that have the potential to deliver a wide range of financial services, but the cost base to go with that is simply too high. In fact, I would go further and say that it seems to me entirely likely that of the small number of people who do have bank accounts, many of them only really want payments accounts (if we can them that). Therefore if technology makes it cost-effective to deliver payment accounts into mass markets, then the demand for bank accounts at the low end will fall further.

The role of the mobile phone in all of this is critical. Mobile banking providers have now both the products and the implementation experiences needed to open up much wider markets. They are held back or constrained in one rather obvious way, which is that they depend on the handset manufacturers and mobile operators to provide the platform for the functionality that they need, and this often constrains the customer experience, but nevertheless they are taking transactions to the masses.

Continue reading "Retail not-banking" »

31 March 2008

What have we learned about NFC recently?

[Dave Birch] I've been looking at some NFC-related business cases for customers in different countries and noticing -- without giving away anything confidential -- how different they are: some are focussed on retail, some on transit, some on operators etc. Yet they are all founded on what I think is a reasonable consensus on the narrative to date: that is, customers like NFC (a lot), operators aren't sure how to cash in and banks aren't sure whether the operators are on their side or not. One thing they all agree on though is that handset availability shapes the critical path. This is because it seems highly unlikely that consumers will hammer down the doors of mobile phone shops to get NFC handsets to use for boring things like payments. Once they have the handsets I'm sure they will use them for payments, but payments isn't interesting enough to drive them down to the mall. What consumers will want NFC for is the simple stuff -- smart posters, exchanging numbers, that sort of thing -- and (in certain urban markets) for transit.

Yet while some commentators (eg, me) bemoan the lack of handsets -- largely a reflection of the convoluted standardisation process around the location of the "secure element" in the mobile handset (ie, on the SIM or not) -- there are big banks out there who are making big bets...

 

Citigroup Inc. has an NFC mobile phone under development that it plans to brand with the Citi logo according to a lab report filed with the U.S. Federal Communications Commission. The report clearly shows the Citi logo on the front of the tiny handset. Citi has been rumored to be considering issuing or distributing a branded phone to customers.

[From CardForum | CITIGROUP DEVELOPING A CITI-BRANDED NFC MOBILE PHONE]

Frankly, I'm not sure if I believe this to be the winning strategy, but I'm not an expert on Citi's markets and I'm sure they are. Personally, I don't want a Barclays phone: I want my Barclaycard OnePulse to be loaded to whichever phone takes my fancy (I'm currently very happy with my N82, thanks). It seems to me further confirmation that the move to NFC is gathering momentum despite the natural reaction to early hype. Yes, there won't be as many handsets out there as quickly as people hoped, but still as James van Dyke of Javelin Strategy put it

 

[I] find myself wondering how long it will be before we all start to turn in our personal carrion-enclosed container o’ credit, debit and identification cards for a chip-enabled mobile payment device.

[From Javelin Strategy and Research » When too tired to be coherent, use props]

Continue reading "What have we learned about NFC recently?" »

20 March 2008

Mirek Kula, MPay

[Dave Birch] Mirek Kula is the Director of International Business Development for MPay, based in Poland. One of the co-founders of the company, Mirek comes from a transaction processing background. In this podcast, he explains the MPay proposition and explains how it has learned from past attempts to create m-payment systems for developing economies.

Continue reading "Mirek Kula, MPay" »

18 March 2008

The bond that fell to Earth

[Dave Birch] This isn't really about payments, but about the monetisation of intellectual property, which is a topic that will appear in the future of payments for sure. Anyway,

When the back catalogue of David Bowie was offered on Wall Street, the $55 million deal for future royalties on classics like The Man Who Sold The World was hailed as a new form of intellectual property securitisation and the idea of artists raising funds secured by future royalties of their work became known as Pullman Bonds, named after the banker David Pullman who drove the Bowie deal. Now, however, citing weak sales of recorded music and a downgrade to an unnamed company guarantor, Moody's Investors Service downgraded the Bowie bonds. They have gone from an A3 rating to Baa3 – one notch above junk status.

[From Bowie bonds nearing junk status | OUT-LAW.COM]

Well, his bonds may be junk but his music isn't: Aladdin Sane was the first album I ever purchased with my own money! Whenever I've seen David Bowie interviewed on TV, he's always come across as smart. I can remember him talking about music becoming a utility, like water, and he'd obviously formulated a strategy for the future of music well ahead of record companies or, for that matter, investment bankers. Having seen the writing on the wall for the artificially high price of recorded music, Bowie decided against the "farmers path" (of demanding government support to keep prices high) and instead went down the "market path" (of selling an asset with a declining future to bankers). Good for him.

Continue reading "The bond that fell to Earth" »

14 March 2008

Dutch lessons

[Dave Birch] I saw a presentation in Amsterdam about an NFC pilot going on in the C1000 supermarket chain (check out this video) with real consumers.

 

One hundred consumers who shop at the C1000 grocery store in Molenaarsgraaf, the Netherlands, have begun paying for transactions with mobile phones equipped with Near Field Communications (NFC) RFID chips. The group is participating in a six-month pilot conducted by Schuitema, the nation's second largest retail chain,

[From RFID Journal - - RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) Technology News & Features]

Well, the pilot is now complete and the results are in. The guy from the retailer who was presenting said that he was extremely surprised because he had "never, never" seen such a positive results from consumers and that they never had a single technical problem in six months. Wow.

The market research contained, I think, an interesting nugget of information that will be grit in the oyster of someone's business plan. It turned out that the service was a fantastic success with the customers, and 49% of them said that if the service were offered then they would buy a new handset to get it! More than half, and I suspect this is the important figure at the current state of evolution, said that they would switch operators to get an NFC service. Overall, there was a something like 90% approval rating for the service.

Yet, when pressed on costs, 78% of those consumers said they would not use their NFC payment "card" if they had to pay more than they do for using their existing payment card. Just to reiterate: they would be happy to spend money on buying a new phone, but not on a paying a bank a little more.

Continue reading "Dutch lessons" »

06 March 2008

M-Pound?

[Dave Birch] I was in a discussion the other day -- the circumstances aren't relevant -- when one of the participants (from a regulatory background) suggested that "third world" payment schemes (such as our very favourite mobile payment scheme, Vodafone's M-PESA) might actually be suitable for places in U.K. where people lack access to conventional financial services. So might Vodafone be prepared to try M-PESA out in a lawless wasteland, where life expectancy is 54 and falling (in Iraq, it's 67), where 170 gangs roam the mean streets and where a quarter of a million children are living in poverty? No, they're not ready for Glasgow yet, so they're going to Kabul...

Afghanistan GSM network operator, Roshan is to launch a mobile payments service, based on Vodafone's M-PESA service. The service, branded M-Paisa, is a mobile technology platform that provides financial services for those without access to banking and aims to facilitate economic activity in the region.

[From Vodafone Launches Mobile Payments in Afghanistan]

I'm sure this will be the first of many launches. The M-PESA model works, the technology works and the business works, so I'm sure it's going to go from strength to strength, especially given the size of the potential opportunity.

Mobile transactions carried out by 612 million mobile phone users will generate $587 billion by 2011, according to 'Mobile Financial Services: Banking & payment markets 2007-2011', a report released by Juniper Research on 30 January.

[From E-COMLAW.COM]

This is a colossal market, whichever way you look at it. And a great many of these potential users are people who are excluded from conventional banking and payment networks, so the impact of the mobile is very transformational.

Continue reading "M-Pound?" »

05 March 2008

Dave Parratt, MTN Mobile Money

[Dave Birch] Dave Parratt is with MTN Mobile Money in South Africa, and as such is in the forefront of the mobile revolution in developing markets. Working out how banks and operators should co-operate and compete in this kind of environment is a fascinating challenge. In this podcast, Dave talks about the South African environment and Mobile Money's experiences. You'll enjoy, as I did, hearing about the challenges to launching new mobile-based products in such a different environment. I apologise for the poor sound quality (someone decided to start drilling next door to us!).

Continue reading "Dave Parratt, MTN Mobile Money" »

21 February 2008

Decoupling the small print

[Dave Birch] I went to Germany for a couple of days. Amongst other things, I saw a presentation from of Vodafone Germany, talking about the new retail payment scheme that they are launching in partnership with O2...

The new payment system combines the direct debiting system (German: Lastschriftverfahren) with SMS payment confirmation through mobile phones. That means:

1. you order a product on a mobile portal or web shop
2. then you type in your mobile phone number and password
3. following you will receive a text message (SMS), which you have to confirm in order to debit the amount from your bank account via direct debiting system.

[From PavingWays - web applications on (mobile) devices : O2 and Vodafone starting new payment system]

The system is open to all mobile phone users and anyone can register but of course the registration is much simplified for Vodaone and O2 subscribers who already have bank details filed with their operators ready for direct debiting (because there existing phone subscription works that way). I spoke to Vodafone about it and they said that they anticipated two revenue streams: additional text messaging for one, a merchant service charge for the other. I got the impression that the MSC would be pitched around the same as for credit card acceptance. As for the future, they said that

We hope to have more NFC-enabled POS-Systems in the future to combine both technologies.

and furthermore

Security is the key requirement in germany

This might well be the way in for mobile phones: yes, they are more functional than cards but they are potentially far more secure as well. Look at Japan again: remote application locking, 24/7 shutdown, location services. These are all security capabilities that come with the mobile environment to deliver a level of security far above the card platform. It's 9am, do you know where your cards are?

Continue reading "Decoupling the small print" »

05 February 2008

Samee Zafar, Edgar Dunn

[Dave Birch] Samee Zafar is a Director in Edgar Dunn's London office. His expertise covers retail banking, card issuing and acquiring, electronic payments including Internet and mobile payments. Samee has deep experience in helping clients set-up Internet and telephone based direct banking and brokerage operations including the selection and management of technology providers and outsourcing partners. Previously Samee has worked with PricewaterhouseCoopers and Visa International in London and New York. Samee holds a B.Sc in Physics and Mathematics from University of the Punjab in Pakistan, is a chartered accountant, and was a Commonwealth Scholar at the Cass Business School of the City University in London where he received his MBA in Finance. In this podcast, he talks about the evolution of the mobile payments marketplace and reflects on Edgar Dunn's survey on Mobile Financial Services. Samee is also the co-author of "Developing and Managing a Successful Payment Cards Business".

Continue reading "Samee Zafar, Edgar Dunn" »

04 February 2008

That niche web thing

[Dave Birch] Reading a whole series of announcements about mobile banking and mobile payments has once again led me to note the fundamental difference between the US approach and the approach in other countries. In the US, mobile banking and payments are about moving web applications into the mobile channel. Elsewhere, the web doesn't feature: the products and services are mobile-centric and try to use the characteristics of the mobile channel more effectively to deliver new services. I'm not saying that the US approach is worse, or unsuccessful. Far from it:

The mobile banking race is on. Bank of America has announced that, six months after rolling out its Mobile Banking service to consumers nationwide, it has reached a record 500,000 active mobile customers.

[From Payments News: Bank of America's Mobile Banking Grows to 500,000 Active Users - November 28, 2007]

That's not bad: they have 23 million active online customers, so a fair few of them have gone mobile web. I saw Thomas Meyer of Deutsche Bank eResearch give a good overview of the mobile banking situation at a seminar recently. As is pointed out in that research note, 72% of U.S. consumers say that they are not interested in mobile banking at all. I can see where the drag comes from. Banking just isn't very interesting. You can give me the ability to view mini-statements on my mobile phone, sure, but to me it doesn't seem enough: I don't just want to look at my Internet banking through a small window, I want more mobile specific services. Proximity payments, interface with ATMs, location services, text message loads. Hold on, text message loans?

The new legislation covers loans from €200 to €75 000. It does not cover mortgages and charge cards. The lower limit was set to cover quick loans made by mobile phone text messages. This practice, which means money can be transferred to the borrower within 15 minutes, is on the rise and is particularly popular in Sweden and Estonia.

[From Instant small loans via text message « The Bankwatch]

Now that's what I call innovation: simple text messages can get you a long way. Still, text messages are ultimately limited. To do more sophisticated (and offline) things, and in a user-friendly fashion, one suspects that there's no way forward other than having a client application on the phone. ANZ, for example, have gone this way in Australia.

M-Banking requires a device that can install Java applications and has GPRS internet access. On its website, ANZ lists 76 phones compatible with M-Banking. After installing the application and activating their mobile accounts, users of M-Banking can view account balances and past transactions or transfer money to an account at another bank.

[From ANZ starts rush to mobile banking | Australian IT]

As an aside, I think that while (as per this discussion) we spend a lot of time talking about mobile vs. web, but I have always thought that TV would have a role to play in the future of e-commerce, and that this will be true even in mobile-centric environments. Together mobile phones and digital televisions will form the mass market online banking platform, not the web. Look at India, which has 250 million mobile subscribers and is currently adding about 7 million every month. India is becoming increasingly connected to the Internet, but desktop computers are not playing much of a role, since only the middle and upper classes can afford them. Laptops are common among the educated classes, but mobiles and TVs – both relatively cheap – will form the backbone of India online. This was brought home recently with news that Microsoft is teaming up with Reliance Communications to launch an IPTV service, which will stream TV, the Web, telephone and other content over the Internet to customers' homes. The content is not streamed to a PC but to a set-top box. All of these new channels mean new opportunities for payments.

Continue reading "That niche web thing" »

31 January 2008

The key role of transit

[Dave Birch] At a couple of events I've been too recently, the key role of transit applications in the NFC world has been reinforced. In some markets, it may well be transit rather than payment that is the initial driving application for NFC handset rollout, which means that the payments guys need to work with the transit guys (both at the simple level of auto-topup but also with more complex value-added services, such as transit-based rewards) to bring the customers on board. Yesterday, another transit-centric NFC pilot was announced yesterday, this time in San Francisco.

Beginning today, pre-selected trial participants will exchange their existing mobile phones for the Sprint trial phones embedded with the NFC enabled smart chip - a chip that will allow them to securely pay for both their fares and their fries. “In BART's case, a participant will initially have a stored value of $48 worth of BART rides loaded onto their NFC enabled mobile phone,“ BART Director James Fang said. “Once the stored value drops below $10 the NFC technology automatically reloads the phone “˜over the air' with another $48 worth of rides and the customer will automatically receive our high-value discount, so they will only be charged $45.“

[From => BART Trial First to Use Mobile Phones to Pay for Fares & Food <=]

In case you're interested, here's one of the phones that I was playing around with in our office:

Samsung BART phone

Many, many years ago I used to work at BART, so I couldn't resist posting a picture over on one of my other cyberdens. If you want to see some truly shocking behaviour in the Bay Area in the 1980s, have a look over on my personal work blog.

Continue reading "The key role of transit" »

09 January 2008

More Flash than Cash?

[Dave Griffiths] Have the Mobile Operators missed the mobile payments boat? Time was when the mobile gurus would have us believe that mobile payments were going to be big, so much so that they replaced the “e” in “e-commerce” with “m” for mobile. About 10 years ago they were convinced that people would browse the internet on their WAP phones, and buy fridges (not just fridges though) on the train on their way home from work. The only thing the mobile operators were missing was a payment mechanism they could tickle. The same gurus who had thought that buying fridges on trains was a neat idea, also thought that the mobile operators already had all of the necessary payment mechanisms in place - because they already billed their customers monthly, and because they already settled call charges between themselves both nationally and internationally. However, there was a gap between guru perception and mobile operator reality: analysis soon showed that the billing systems were held together with string, the international settlements were based to a large extent on fingers in the air, and the overall m-commerce proposition was more pie in the sky than fridge on the train.

The brave new m-commerce dream soon became little more than a mechanism for ring-tone purchase based on then concept of the reverse charge SMS (which for consumers, fell into the same perception category as premium rate telephone calls, along with all the associated mis-charging grief). The reverse SMS payment mechanisms did nothing to enhance mainstream mobile telco payment propositions – and they were also associated with sub-prime businesses, advertised in the back of tabloids. Other SMS mechanisms were tried (linked to standard bank accounts as the mobile operators tried to tickle the transactions by enhancing existing transaction security), but these have never managed to catch the international imagination.

The mobile operators cannot deny that they had a flying start. They had relationships with each other, and they also had a technical infrastructure built around the GSM chip that had the potential to bridge the card not present transaction security gap – and since the number of mobile phones in use was rapidly approaching credit card density, there would be no shortage of adopters. Pay-as-you-go (PAYG) also meant that payments need not be restricted to the over 18s and the banked. The development of the PAYG infrastructure, since it dealt primarily with value rather than minutes, could easily have been enhanced to provide a card scheme type payment infrastructure.

Collectively and, to some degree, individually, the telcos were in possession of everything necessary to build a non-bank payment infrastructure - in an area that for the banks was still pre-roadmap. And the banks were pre-occupied; at the time they were working hard to put chips on cards, and chip readers in terminals: they had no immediate interest in mobile payments.

PAYG, and the development of e-top-up vastly enhanced telco ability to manage the movement of real money. Without a doubt, this gave them the edge; it especially gave them the edge because the e-top-up cards were ATM compatible and the transaction switching technology had also been adapted from existing banking systems. However, PAYG also made the phones accessible to the youth market, and sexy because of the accessibility. The more mature phone users still wanted a phone they could use for talking, and maybe the odd new-fangled text thing. The younger user, who by and large had little memory of the old world “dog ‘n’ bone” phones wanted cameras and videos and mp3 players and radios and television and the internet and MSN, and Oh! Yes, a phone too, so that their more pedestrian parents could still communicate with them.

Phones that did stuff that wasn’t particularly “phoney” inevitably caught the imagination of the designers, and the marketers. With phone technology riding the Moore’s Law wave, the designers were ever more able to squeeze ever more features into ever smaller boxes, and the race was on to provide an endless supply of phones to satisfy an ever expanding mobile phone market.

Phone manufacturers formed alliances with multi-media corporations, as each recognised the other as a means of expanding their individual markets. History has shown each to have been correct – phone companies sell more phones and media companies sell more media – and the telcos are still selling bandwidth: a commodity product with limited ability to add value to the stand-alone telco proposition. Multi-media corporations and phone manufacturers are selling their products on the back of the high availability, high bandwidth, transport medium provided by the telcos, and now the banks are too. Contactless gizmos can be attached, or built in, to phones that can talk to merchant terminals, and congratulations go to RBS for recently achieving this significant milestone, and thanks for showing it to me. The phone gizmo communicates with the existing bank payment infrastructure, and the transaction just works! The gizmo, however, is also in communication with the customer’s bank, and can be topped up and managed remotely over the phone network – but the telco is still just selling the data bandwidth and is still not in a position to tickle the transaction.

The mobile operators are still selling mobile toys: their market expands (or at least generates new consumers) as new youth come of phone age every year. There will always, it seems, be a market for phones that flash. It’s an exciting world for the designers, for the technologists, for the marketers, for the accountants, and for the customers; and it’s exciting in a way that mobile payments aren’t! The mobile operators had a period of grace from the time that mobile phones became digital to the time when the banks and the payment schemes would catch up and apply their ever increasing payment sophistication to the mobile phone. That grace period was probably in the region of ten years, and it’s over!

04 January 2008

A rising tide lifts all boats

[Dave Birch] Opinion is divided as to viable business models for mobile payments, as it has been for some time. One key issue is, as is well understood, the extent to which operators and banks come to a "settlement" over the cost and benefits of NFC bearing in mind that the operator's big picture is about more than payments. As Diamond put it in their report on business models in the U.S. market,
[mobile operators] will need to play an active role in developing an m-payments value chain to ensure that they capture a fair share of revenue from a payments market sized at $8 trillion in 2009 thereby further monetizing their investments in customer acquisition and retention, and justifying the cost of higher handset subsidies.
But there's a fine line between capturing a "fair share" and stopping a new market from developing. If the mobile proximity payments market is to develop, then surely any attempt by the mobile operators to recover the full cost of NFC deployment from transaction fees (which, from their point of view, means no risk) will simply mean that the transactions will never happen because they will be priced out of reach.

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11 December 2007

The old business model for m-payments

[Dave Birch] I didn't want to bore people with more stuff about mobile payments so soon, but judging from the comments and e-mails that I've been getting, it's a topic that plenty of people want to discuss more. In particular, the issue of business models around mobile payments seems to be a live one. I can't help noticing that the division between those who think that existing business models can be re-applied to the new technology environment and those who expect new business models to emerge is still wide. As an example of this, I note that a recent survey by Aite Group found that mobile network operators say they will derive POS payment revenue chiefly from consumer transaction fees. This seems hard to believe, frankly, especially given the discussion we had here about the lack of margin in the transaction. Yet four-fifths of the carriers who responded to the Aite survey said that per-transaction fees charged to users are the most likely way they will get revenues from mobile-payment services. Aite's Nick Holland points out the contradiction here:
Mobile operators are confident that they will be able to generate revenues from fees per end-user transaction for all forms of mobile transaction services… However, banks and card networks have expressed that they are unlikely to allow this to happen.
As he goes on to point out (and I agree with him)
Operators are much more likely to generate revenues from end-user subscription fees for mobile data access, as well as from mobile advertising and from handset upgrades to support contactless technology.

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08 December 2007

Colin Swain, Barclaycard

[Dave Birch] Colin Swain is the head of Research and Development in Barclaycards' New Product Development team. Barclaycard is the U.K.'s largest credit card issuer, so their R&D activities are of great interest. In this podcast he talks about the mobile/NFC pilot that they have just launched in London with O2 and Transport for London, whereby customers can use their phones to pay at contactless terminals and use the buses and Tube.

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07 December 2007

More mobile business models

[Dave Birch] Mobile payments aren't all about NFC and proximity. As you may recall, some time before RBS and Barclays announced their NFC pilots, the U.K. mobile operators launched a payment scheme allowing customers to pay through their mobile phone accounts for items such as train tickets, and parking fees. The new PayForIt technology scheme mobile phone customers to credit small purchases up to £10 to their mobile phone accounts, a scheme likened (not by me) to turning mobile phones into 'digital wallets'. The reason why I don't like this terminology is because in my distorted world view, a wallet is something that you can put cash in, and cash is something you can use to pay other people, not just merchants. Real m-cash can be transferred from person to person.

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04 December 2007

Mobile, business cases, that sort of thing

[Dave Birch] In the last few days, two of the U.K.'s biggest banks have announced mobile payment projects. Barclays Bank, O2 and Transport for London have announced a combined payment/transit pilot in London and RBS and MasterCard have announced a mobile debit card trial in London and Edinburgh. Still, just because lots of people are going nuts about a new payment technology doesn't make them right. Payments is