The tech industry’s been talking about mobile payments for years, and I find the whole discussion fascinating. Not just the potential and the rhetoric, but the gap that exists between the two. I even spent a year working at a yet-to-launch mobile payments company, BillToMobile. But to be honest, we’re still at least about five years away from seeing mobile payments go mainstream. We’re at “the wind at your back stage,” where the possibilities seem endless, and will soon enter “the wind in your face stage,” where reality kicks in. And on the way from one stage to the other, we’ll see a number of companies fall by the wayside and a few legitimate contenders survive. There is already a long history of road kill in the alternative payment space (PayByTouch, Revolution Money, DigiCash, and PepperCoin to name a few).
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This is a more complicated question than you think. There are at least half a dozen different definitions. A lot of existing alternative payment companies, entrepreneurs, and VCs are attempting to associate whatever it is they’re doing with the buzz around mobile payments. In my opinion, a real mobile payment is one where the obligation to pay ends up as a line item on your mobile phone bill regardless of the access device or location. However, many would argue that the use of your mobile phone as a proxy for one of your regular credit/debit card accounts or perhaps your prepaid card also qualifies.
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The Starbucks app is very well done and cool, sure, but it’s just using my phone instead of a card to access my prepaid account. There is no guarantee that having this will open up a new revenue stream for Starbucks. And to run the program, the company has to outfit its stores with new technology. So where’s the payoff?
The valuable lesson here is that the Starbucks card and all the infrastructure to support it already existed and adding this feature is a benefit that some customers will really appreciate. In general, experience has taught me that the best chances for success are when you combine two things that already exist rather than creating something completely new. This is especially true in payments, because there are a lot of details involved that are difficult to change but readily available to leverage. (There would be no PayPal today if there didn’t already exist an entire credit card system, automated clearinghouse for echecks, and a whole community of eBay users needing a payment option.) So, any new offering that requires users to download an application, get a new device, or open a new account is probably doomed to fail. This applies not just to the end user side of the equation but also to the merchant side. In the case of Revolution Money, users had to open a new account and then find a place to use it. The company made a lot of noise about having lots of merchants, but in reality they had just signed (and paid) processors to link to their card. The merchants still had to opt in, and most did not because there were not enough consumers to bother. So what does Revolution Money have to do with mobile payments? Numerous mobile payment companies require users to establish a new account or carry a specific device. Unless you can build up a significant number of users and places to use the service within a very short period of time, you’re toast.
So what about all the players on the e-commerce side of mobile payments — providers like Zong or Boku that have been drawing a lot of attention lately. These services enable SMS payments for digital goods and services. Want to buy a $1.00 virtual flower to send to your friend’s Facebook account? These services will let you charge that to your mobile phone account. But, again, there’s no strong incentive here for merchants. It costs them 50% off the top to enable such a transaction, most of which goes to the mobile carrier. As a side note, even if you paid with PayPal, it would cost most merchants around 33%. So, until the time comes when the cost of having a payment pushed to your mobile phone bill drops (like it has in S. Korea, to the 5-7% range), the only people likely to use these SMS payment services are the under/un-banked and purchasers of digital goods and services, where the merchants marginal costs are near zero. If the merchant fee does come down for direct-to-mobile billing, we would be looking at a seismic shift in the payments landscape. The other side of e-commerce such as the Amazon app on my iPhone, in my opinion, does not count as a mobile payment, but that’s certainly open for debate.
So if the objective in this industry is to effect a paradigm shift, then mobile carriers have to appreciate the fact that they have the opportunity to become the “everyday” payment processors of the future, especially for the under $10 payment market. This is a huge opportunity for them to generate incremental revenue and become more relevant than just a “browser on the hip”. They also have to be willing to perform this incremental service for a competitive fee. Every consumer that matters has a mobile phone with them everywhere they go, they have been credit checked, and the device can be leveraged to dramatically reduce risk. With the addition of additional authentication, fraud risk can almost completely be eliminated. They don’t have to be in the credit granting business, since debit is the preferred way to pay today anyway, especially for small value transactions.
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Carriers already have billing relationships with the roughly 90% of us that choose post-pay accounts, and by adding payment processing services, they’d increase the utility for their customers, rather than asking them to establish, manage and carry something new. While it was neat to use my iPhone with the Starbuck’s Card app on it, if this concept is going to revolutionize the way I pay, it has to become ubiquitous – one to many. There need to be as few mouths to feed between the consumer and the merchant as possible, and if the carriers don’t step in and fill the gap, then PayPal has the best chance of adding mobile as an incremental piece of its ever expanding puzzle, since the hard part — the existence of the account and the primary utility — has already been established.
THE COMMUNITY RESPONDS:
Steve makes a lot of good points here, and there are very few people in the industry more qualified to speak on this topic. We at Zong agree that building a payment network hinges on creating ubiquity. Consumers and merchants alike must have easy access to the payment method. The salient question here is, how do you define “mainstream”? Zong has carrier connections that allow over 1.5 billion consumers instant access to use Zong to pay online and have the charge appear on their mobile bill. This is no small feat. We’ve spent the better part of the last 10 years building out direct carrier connections with mobile operators around the world. We also have a merchant network which provides our payment option to over 500 million online consumers worldwide. We are also making great strides on the merchant side, powering mobile payments for some of the leaders in social networking and online gaming, including Facebook. Our merchants often serve tens of millions of customers each month. Facebook alone reports over 400 million monthly active monthly users! Today, almost all of these users can use their mobile phone to buy virtual goods with Zong via Facebook Credits, the company’s latest platform payments initiative. Is Zong’s mobile payment network considered mainstream? We think so, but we’re not remotely satisfied yet. Our mobile payment platform processed mobile payments for well over 10 million unique users in 2009, and we’re ramping even faster in 2010. So, while we’re not yet 100% ubiquitous, it’s certainly our goal, and we’re clearly on the right path.
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–Redg Snodgrass, Director of Digital Distribution, Alcatel-Lucent
While I respect Steve’s experience, it is time we all stop thinking of payments as a problem and start looking at payments as an opportunity. The smart companies are. The companies I talk to know all too well the challenges they face. What I’m seeing more and more, though, are service providers who no longer look at half-empty glasses. In fact, they see glasses that are increasingly half-full. Take mobile payments. Service providers see it. They want it. But they know it also comes with a cost. That cost, at least to those I’ve spoken to, comes in the form of the high costs associated with customer service calls (at an average of roughly $35 per call from what I can tell). To many, the idea of opening this to exponentially higher numbers of mobile users is, well, a wee bit frightening. But what if they could turn this cost into revenue (or at least offset the cost)? And this is where I fundamentally agree with where Steve is coming from. We’ve been working hard (really hard) at Alcatel-Lucent to deliver a program to bring relevance to those programming to the pipes (stay tuned later this week for more details…for a sneak peak, take a look at what we announced a few weeks back in Barcelona at Mobile World Congress…or look at the work going on at TouchaTag). Relevance is important. If everything a service provider makes money on becomes commoditized – things like location based services, SMS, payment, presence and, potentially, data – we all lose. If data becomes commoditized, suddenly there is no more money to spend on infrastructure. If there is no money to spend on infrastructure, we all suffer (or get powned by our new Google overlord). We want to make it easy for our customers to take advantage of payments as a revenue stream (hint: it has to do with commercially bundling APIs). So while many look at mobile payments as something to fear, we think we’re cutting a path for the industry to see revenue rather than cost.
What do you say? Who will drive mobile payments in the US?online surveys
Steve Klebe has over 25 years of experience in electronic payments, fraud prevention and authentication. He is a former member of the board of directors of the Electronic Transactions Association and advisory boards of the Direct Response Forum and the Electronic Funds Transfer Assoc. He has held a variety of senior management roles at VeriFone, CyberCash, CyberSource and PassMark Security (now part of EMC/RSA). He’s currently a member of two private company advisory boards and works as SVP, Business Development for Vindicia, a leading provider of a SaaS based recurring subscription billing solution.
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