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Mobile Payment Strategies Report: Opportunities & Markets 2011-2015

July 5, 2012 by Mobile Payment Magazine

Mobile Payment ReportA new study from Juniper Research has determined that the total value of mobile payments for digital and physical goods, money transfers and NFC (Near Field Communications) transactions will reach $670bn by 2015, up from $240bn this year. These forecasts represent the gross merchandise value of all purchases or the value of money being transferred.

The new Mobile Payment Strategies report revealed that all segments will exhibit 2x to 3x growth over the next five years. This growth will be driven by the rapid adoption of mobile ticketing, NFC contactless payments, physical goods purchases and money transfers as people in both developed and developing countries use their devices for everyday transactions. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Research Tagged With: 1-800 Flowers.com, Absa Bank, accells, Access Group, Aepona, Air Kenya, airG, Airtel, AIS, Alloy Ventures, Alternet, Amadeus, Amadeus Capital Partners, Amazon.com, Appium, Apple, Arriva Bus, Aruba Networks, AT&T, ATMU, Avea, Axis, Axis Bank, Babies “R” Us, Badoo, Banco de Oro Universal Bank, bango, Bank of Ceylon, Bank of Commerce and Development, Barclays, Battery Ventures, Bell Canada, Bell ID, Bharti, Bharti Airtel, Bharti Telesoft, BICS, BilltoMobile, bitWallet, BKM, BlackBerry Partners Fund, Bouygues, BPI, Brooks Brothers, BSI, BT, C-Sam, Cabela’s, Cebu Pacific, Celpay, Central Bank, CHARGE Anywhere, Citi, Citibank, Ciudad Mexico, Claro Group, Comviva, Copenhagen Metro, Cosmote, Credit Agricole, Credit Saison, Danal, Daylight Partners, DBS Bank, DeviceFidelity, Digby, Digby Chengdu Technology, Digital China, DN Capital, Draper Fisher Juvertson, DSB, DSB S-trains, Eagle Eye Solutions, EastNets, Easypaisa, eBay, eBay Mobile, EnStream, Equity Bank, Ericsson, Ericsson IPX, eServGlobal, EVN, EZ-Link, Ezuza, Facebook, Faulu Kenya, FINNAIR, First Data Corporation, France Telecom, Fundamo, G&D, Gameloft, Garanti Bank, Gemalto, Giesecke & Devrient, Globe, Globe Telecom, Golfsmith, google, Gtel, HBD Venture Capital, Hutch, Hypercom, IBM, ICC, ICICI, Idea, Indosat, ING, Ingenico, Intuit, IPX, Jamster, Jet Airways, JR East, JR West, Juniper Research, KASIKORNBANK, KDDI, Kenya Airways, KPN, KT, la Caixa, LG, Liberty Mutual, LINK Mobility, LMT, Lufthansa Systems, Luup, Maldives Monetary Authority, Maritz Real-Time, MasterCard, Maxis, MCB Bank, McDonalds, MCell, mChek, Meditel, Metro Company, MFIC, MGL, Minick, Miven, Mobifone, Mobilink, MobiVending, Mocapay, Monitise, MoreMagic, Morpho, Motorola, Movaya Chengdu Technology, Movaya Wireless, Movia, Movincom, Mozido, mService, mSolutions, MTN Group, MTS, MTV, Multiply, Myway, Naivas, NCR, Nearbuy Systems, NETS, Netsize, Neustar, NFO Hold, ngpay, Nokia, Nokia Siemens Network, NRJ Mobile, NTT docomo, NXP Semiconductors, Obopay, OpenMarket, Oracle, Orange, Orange Group, Orascom, Orient Corporation, Orvis, PayForIt, Paymate, PayPal, PayPal Mobile, Paytong, PesaPoint, PETCO, Philippine Airlines, Playphone, PLDT, Polaris, Polaris Ventures, PPC, PROSA, Quest Diagnostics, Rakuten, Reliance, Remgro, RIM, RiskSecure, Rogers Communications, S1 Corporation, S3 Ventures, Safaricom, Safarilink, Samsung, Sanlam, Santander, SAP Ventures, SBB, SEAIR, Sfone, SFR, Skype, SMART, Smart Communications, SmartPay, SoftBank, Softbank Mobile, Sony, Sony Ericsson, Sprint, StarHub, State Bank of India, State Bank of Vietnam, Sulake, Sumitomo Mitsui Card Co., Sun Oracle, Sybase 365, T+, TATA, Tata AIG Insurance, TDC, Tech Process Solutions, Telcel, Tele2, Telefonica, Telefonica O2, Telenor, TeliaSonera, Telma, Telus, TELUS Corp, Tetherball, The Home Depot, The NASDAQ OMX Group, The World Bank, Tigo, TIM, Toys “R” Us, Transoft, Tre, TRUE, True Move, TSYS, Twinlinx, Twitter, Uchumi, Ugg Australia, Uninor, Unwire, Utiba, Utiba Americas, Vagverket, Valista, Venda, VenFin, Venyon, VeriFone, Verisign, Vietcombank, Vietnamobile, Viettel, Vimpelcom, VinaPhone, Virgin Media, Virgin Mobile, Visa, Vision Capital, ViVOtech, Vodafone, Vodafone Qatar, Watchdata, Western Union, WIZZIT, World Bank, Yahoo!, YellowPepper, Yoigo, ZAPA, Zest Airways, Zong

Research Report: Positioning for Payments in the New Mobile-Social Technology Era

March 23, 2012 by Mobile Payment Magazine

We are at the beginning of a new technology cycle as consumer adoption of mobile and social media extends the reach of the web and integrates those media into the physical world.

Facebook is only eight years old, and yet its planned $5 billion IPO is the largest Internet IPO ever. As in every new technology cycle, network effects make room for new players and the creation—and destruction—of vast amounts of wealth.

The Gang of Four—Apple, Amazon, Facebook, and Google—is a group of network players entering the banking and payments environment. How will the strengths and weaknesses of the Gang of Four play against those of major financial institutions, payment networks, and wireless carriers? Surprisingly, PayPal rates on equal footing with the Gang of Four when it comes to innovation and emerges as a possible leader in the next tech cycle.

Research & Markets recently released a report entitled Positioning for Payments in the New Mobile-Social Technology Erathat  focuses on the relationship of brands to consumer perceptions of trust, innovation, and privacy in order to identify opportunities and threats.

Primary Questions

  • What is the newest technology cycle? Which brands are positioned to take advantage of the next cycle?
  • What models are developing that will intersect with the financial services space?
  • How will the strengths and weaknesses of the Gang of Four play against those of major financial institutions, payment networks, and wireless carriers?
  • How well do consumers trust the Gang of Four compared with the major financial institution, payment network, and wireless carrier brands when it comes to their financial information?
  • How do consumers rate the Gang of Four compared with the major financial institution, payment network and wireless carrier brands when it comes to protecting their private information?
  • Which brands are viewed as most innovative?
  • How do customers of the primary financial institutions rate their own institutions on the issues of trust, innovation, and privacy?
  • How should brands position themselves to best compete in the new technology cycle?


Methodology
The report is based mainly on data collected online from a random-sample bank benchmark panel of 5,878 consumers in December 2011. The survey targeted respondents based on proportions of gender, ethnicity, age, and income representative of those of the overall U.S. online population. The margin of sampling error is ±1.28% at the 95% confidence level.

It is also based on a survey of 5,211 consumers conducted online in October 2011 on KnowledgePanel. This sample is representative of the U.S. census demographics distribution and is recruited from the Knowledge Networks panel. Data is weighted using 18+ U.S. Population Benchmarks for age, gender, race/ethnicity, education, census region, and metropolitan status from the September 2011 Current Population Survey (CPS) and household Internet access from the October 2010 CPS Supplement. The margin of sampling error is ±1.73% at the 95% confidence level.

Table of Contents

  • Overview
  • Methodology
  • Executive Summary
  • Platforms That Are Able to Gather the Biggest User Base Usually Gain the Most Power and Wealth in Each
  • Technology Cycle
  • Mobile + Social Defines the Newest Technology Cycle
  • Wealth Is Created—and Destroyed—During Each New Technology Cycle
  • Apple, Amazon, Google, and Facebook
  • Platforms That Gather the Biggest User Base Usually Gain the Most Power and Wealth in Each Technology Cycle
  • Mobile Platform
  • Two Diverging Views of Mobile Success—Open (Google) vs Protected (Apple)
  • Social Media Platform
  • Mobile-Social Integration Opens Opportunity for Competitor to Move on Facebook
  • Game-Changing Business Models Rapidly Emerge During Times of Technological Upheaval
  • Tablets
  • Alliances Can Use Mutual Strengths and Weaknesses Can Fill Gaps to Respond Faster and with Better Products
  • Javelin TIP Model for Mobile Wallets
  • Trust
  • Apple Leads in Innovation—at Least for Now
  • Innovation
  • Privacy
  • Don’t Count out the Financial Institution’s Primary Relationship with the Consumer
  • No Brand Reaches the Gold Zone—Without an Alliance
  • Appendix
  • Related Research
  • Companies Mentioned

– Amazon, American Express, Apple, AT&T, Bank of America, Chase, Citibank, Discover, Facebook, Google, MasterCard, Microsoft, PayPal, Research In Motion, Sprint, Twitter, U.S. Bank, Verizon, Visa, Wells Fargo, zvelo

More information: Research and Markets

Filed Under: Research Tagged With: Amazon, American Express, Apple, AT&T, Bank of America, Chase, Citibank, Discover, Facebook, google, MasterCard, Microsoft, PayPal, Research in Motion, Sprint, Twitter, U.S. Bank, Verizon, Visa, Wells Fargo, zvelo

35 Million Phones Sold in 2011 Can Make NFC Mobile Payments

December 19, 2011 by Mobile Payment Magazine

According to a new report by IMS Research, a leading independent supplier of market research and consultancy to the global electronics industry the number of Near Field Communications (NFC)-enabled phones shipped in 2011 totaled 35 million globally. IMS Research forecasts that significant market events and the enablement of other cellular handsets will drive that number to nearly 80 million by the end of 2012.

“After seven or so years of false dawns and frequent disappointment, 2011 has proved to be something of a breakthrough year,” says Don Tait, senior analyst at IMS Research. Most of the leading cellular handset manufacturers have launched NFC-enabled handsets over the last 12 months. They include Samsung, RIM, Nokia and HTC. Apple is the main player yet to release an NFC-enabled handset.”

As well as a stream of launches of NFC-enabled handsets in 2011, there have also been an increasing number of joint ventures and collaborations between different players of the NFC ecosystem. Significant examples include:

  • The launch of Google Wallet in the US
  • The French Government funding NFC in the following cities in France (Paris, Bordeaux, Caen, Lille, Marseille, Rennes, Strasbourg, Toulouse and Nice). Orange plans to sell 500,000 NFC-enabled cellular handsets in France by the end of 2011
  • Orange UK and Barclaycard’s “Quick Tap” contactless payment solution, which was launched in May 2011 in the UK. Retailers that have signed up to this service includes McDonald’s, EAT, Pret-a-Manger and Boots.

Looking forward to 2012, the market for NFC looks even more promising. Sales of NFC-enabled cellular handsets are projected to accelerate during the next twelve months to reach 80 million handsets. Additionally, showcase events such as the Summer Olympic Games in London will help to promote the technology and its benefits. For instance, NFC will be available at the Olympic Park, with Everything Everywhere, Telefonica UK, Visa Europe and Samsung involved in the project. The launch of the ISIS-initiative in Austin Texas and Salt Lake City in Utah in the first half of 2012 will also boost the profile of NFC.

Source: IMS Research

Filed Under: Research Tagged With: Apple, BarclayCard, Don Tait, Google Wallet, HTC, IMS Research, Nokia, Orange, RIM, Samsung

Collective POS Launches Mobile Payment Solution for Apple, Blackberry and Android Smartphone Devices

December 16, 2011 by Mobile Payment Magazine

Collective Point of Sale Solutions, a Canadian provider of payment processing services, has launched VirtualMerchant Mobile, a mobile P.O.S solution that allows small and medium-sized businesses to process credit card payments using an existing smartphone device.

“We worked very hard to deliver a payment solution that enables businesses to utilize their existing hardware, technical infrastructures and communications providers,” said Michael Back, CEO and President of Collective POS. “With this product, merchants can turn any iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, Android or Blackberry device into a secure, affordable point of sale terminal.”

To set up, merchants who have been approved for credit card processing download an application from the relevant app store and enter the account information provided to them by Collective POS.

VirtualMerchant Mobile includes both hardware and software features to ensure complete end-to-end transaction security. To protect merchants and cardholders, no payment information is stored on the mobile device. At the time of swipe, card data is encrypted through the provided card encryption sleeve and immediately sent to a firewall-protected, secure hosting environment.

“This solution is perfect for taxi and livery services, companies that offer delivery, participate in trade shows or flea markets, home-based businesses and any other business that wishes to accept credit cards on the go,” said Michael Back.

In addition to portability and information security, VirtualMerchant Mobile offers the reliability that is synonymous with all Collective POS offerings, making it an ideal solution for any on-the-go business or service.

Collective POS serves more than 10,000 businesses across Canada, including retail stores, restaurants, hospitality providers, mobile services, e-commerce merchants, mail order/telephone order businesses, professional firms/clinics/practitioners, B2B product/service providers, tradespeople and many other industries.

Source: Collective Point of Sale Solutions, Ltd.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: android, Apple, BlackBerry, Canada, Collective Point of Sale Solutions, Collective POS, Michael Back, PoS Terminal, VirtualMerchant Mobile

Mobile Industry Predictions Report: 2012

December 15, 2011 by Mobile Payment Magazine

The Yankee Group has just released its free 17-page 2012 Annual Predictions Report, which looks into what the future has in store for the ever-growing mobility landscape.

Overview:

The world is in transition and in the year ahead, mobile will be both the protagonist and the subject of this instability. During the last five years, networks and the information they carry have plugged more than 2 billion new participants into the mobile economy. The winners in this landscape will be those players that can scale quickly and treat each user as a unique customer.

Report Highlights:

  • The mobile gold rush is global in scale a and touches all customers. In the last five years, 2 billion new users joined the mobile revolution. Looking ahead, mobile workers and consumers will embrace tablets, mobile content and personal cloud services. At the infrastructure level, the operator imperative to monetize all-IP networks will drive investment in policy solutions.
  • Asia-Pacific takes the lead in tablet sales. Yankee Group forecasts U.S. tablet sales will total 17 million in 2011 and almost 25 million in 2012. Similarly, tablet sales in all of Europe will exceed 15 million in 2011 and reach more than 26 million in 2012. And tablet sales in the Asia-Pacific region will total 20 million this year and reach almost 39 million in 2012, more than 50 percent above the U.S.
  • Diameter signaling is taking off. Yankee Group has seen significant request for proposal/request for information (RFP/RFI) activity and expects spending on IP-based Diameter signaling to more than double between 2011 and 2012—growing from U.S.$22 million to U.S.$45 million. And overall, we see the market mushrooming to U.S.$212 million in 2015, for a whopping CAGR of 57.2 percent.
  • Personal cloud services are hitting the high-growth phase. We forecast 17 percent of professionals with three or more devices will adopt a personal cloud service for online storage, backup and synching.
  • Economic woes threaten operators. Western European operators will see churn increase from approximately 2.3 percent per month today to 2.4 percent by the end of 2012, despite operators’ ongoing efforts to migrate customers to postpaid services and long-term contracts linked to new smartphone purchases. The world is in transition and in the year ahead, mobile will be both the protagonist and the subject of this instability. During the last five years, networks and the information they carry have plugged more than 2 billion new participants into the mobile economy. The winners in this landscape will be those players that can scale quickly and treat each user as a unique customer.

For more information and to download the report: 2012 Annual Predictions Report: Mobile

Filed Under: Featured, Research Tagged With: Acer, Acme Packet, AirWatch, Alcatel-Lucent, Antenna, Apple, Asus, AT&T, BelAir, Belgacom, BoxTone, China Mobile, Cinterion, Cisco, Comcast, CorFire, Cricket, Deutsche Telekom, DeviceFidelity, DirecTV, Dropbox, Ericsson, FeedHenry, Fujitsu, Funambol, Gemalto, Giesecke & Devrient, google, Hewlett-Packard, Huawei, IBM, Intel, Kaspersky Lab, Lebara Mobile, MetroPCS, Microsoft, Motorola, Nokia, Nokia Siemens Networks, Oberthur, Openet, Orange, Pyxis, Research in Motion, Salesforce.com, Samsung, Sequent, Sierra Wireless, Sony, Sprint, Straight Talk, Symantec, Tekelec, Telecom Italia, Telefonica, Tesco, Tracfone, Traffix Systems, Tyfone, Verizon Wireless, Virgin Mobile, Vodafone, Wal-Mart, Yankee Group, Yoigo, ZTE

comScore Reports U.S. Mobile Subscriber Market Share for July, 2011

August 30, 2011 by Mobile Payment Magazine

comScore, Inc. has released data from the comScore MobiLens service, reporting key trends in the U.S. mobile phone industry during the three month average period ending July 2011. The study surveyed more than 30,000 U.S. mobile subscribers and found Samsung to be the top handset manufacturer overall with 25.5 percent market share. Google Android continued to gain ground in the smartphone market reaching 41.8 percent market share.

OEM Market Share

For the three month average period ending in July, 234 million Americans ages 13 and older used mobile devices. Device manufacturer Samsung ranked as the top OEM with 25.5 percent of U.S. mobile subscribers (up 1.0 percentage points), followed by LG with 20.9 percent share and Motorola with 14.1 percent share. Apple strengthened its position at #4 with 9.5 percent share of mobile subscribers (up 1.2 percentage points), while RIM rounded out the top five with 7.6 percent share.

Top Mobile OEMs
3 Month Avg. Ending Jul. 2011 vs. 3 Month Avg. Ending Apr. 2011
Total U.S. Mobile Subscribers (Smartphone & Non-Smartphone) Ages 13+
Source: comScore MobiLens
Share (%) of Mobile Subscribers
Apr-11 Jul-11 Point Change
Total Mobile Subscribers 100.0% 100.0% N/A
Samsung 24.5% 25.5% 1.0
LG 20.9% 20.9% 0.0
Motorola 15.6% 14.1% -1.5
Apple 8.3% 9.5% 1.2
RIM 8.2% 7.6% -0.6

Smartphone Platform Market Share

82.2 million people in the U.S. owned smartphones during the three months ending in July 2011, up 10 percent from the preceding three month period. Google Android ranked as the top smartphone platform with 41.8 percent market share, up 5.4 percentage points. Apple strengthened its #2 position with 27.0 percent of the smartphone market, up 1.0 percentage points from the prior reporting period. RIM ranked third with 21.7 percent share, followed by Microsoft (5.7 percent) and Symbian (1.9 percent).

Top Smartphone Platforms
3 Month Avg. Ending Jul. 2011 vs. 3 Month Avg. Ending Apr. 2011
Total U.S. Smartphone Subscribers Ages 13+
Source: comScore MobiLens
Share (%) of Smartphone Subscribers
Apr-11 Jul-11 Point Change
Total Smartphone Subscribers 100.0% 100.0% N/A
Google 36.4% 41.8% 5.4
Apple 26.0% 27.0% 1.0
RIM 25.7% 21.7% -4.0
Microsoft 6.7% 5.7% -1.0
Symbian 2.3% 1.9% -0.4

Mobile Content Usage

In July, 70 percent of U.S. mobile subscribers used text messaging on their mobile device, up 1.2 percentage points. Browsers were used by 41.1 percent of subscribers (up 2.0 percentage points), while downloaded applications were used by 40.6 percent (up 2.8 percentage points). Accessing of social networking sites or blogs increased 2.1 percentage points to 30.1 percent of mobile subscribers. Game-playing was done by 27.8 percent of the mobile audience (up 1.6 percentage points), while 20.3 percent listened to music on their phones (up 2.3 percentage points).

Mobile Content Usage
3 Month Avg. Ending Jul. 2011 vs. 3 Month Avg. Ending Apr. 2011
Total U.S. Mobile Subscribers (Smartphone & Non-Smartphone) Ages 13+
Source: comScore MobiLens
Share (%) of Mobile Subscribers
Apr-11 Jul-11 Point Change
Total Mobile Subscribers 100.0% 100.0% N/A
Sent text message to another phone 68.8% 70.0% 1.2
Used browser 39.1% 41.1% 2.0
Used downloaded apps 37.8% 40.6% 2.8
Accessed social networking site or blog 28.0% 30.1% 2.1
Played Games 26.2% 27.8% 1.6
Listened to music on mobile phone 18.0% 20.3% 2.3

 

Source: comScore

Filed Under: Research Tagged With: android, Apple, comScore, LG, Mobile Market Share, MobiLens, Motorola, RIM, Samsung

Research: Smartphone Banking Security

July 30, 2011 by Mobile Payment Magazine

Javelin Strategy Research has release a new report entitled: “Smartphone Banking Security: Mobile Banking Utilization Stalls On Consumer Fears.”

Mobile banking adoption has stagnated despite explosive growth in smartphone adoption from 2009 to 2011.

In 2009, one in four smartphone owners considered mobile banking unsafe. One year later, 40% of smartphone owners felt the same way.

As financial institutions push forward, offering innovative and convenient financial options to a new mobile generation, consumers are left questioning whether security was sacrificed in the rush toward innovation. In the context of the recent infiltration of malware into the Android Market, it is imperative that FIs reassure consumers that mobile security is a priority.

Primary Questions

  • What is the rate of smartphone adoption?
  • What is the growth rate of mobile banking and purchasing?
  • What are some factors that are inhibiting the adoption of mobile financial activities?
  • How can FIs encourage mobile financial activity?

For more information please click on:
http://www.researchandmarkets.com/product/704e3c/smartphone_banking_security_mobile_banking_u

Methodology

For this report, Javelin gathered data from three different surveys administered in 2010 – 2011. Each survey collected data from a base of 3,000 to 5,000 consumers, representative of the general U.S. population. They were interviewed on a range of topics including, but not limited to, fraud, security services, and technology adoption.

  • For questions answered by all 5,102 consumers in the March 2011 Financial Services Channel survey, the margin of error is &Plusmn;1.37 percentage points at the 95% confidence level. The margin error is higher for questions answered by subsegments. For longitudinal comparison, data from 2009 and 2010 was reweighted to the latest census targets according to the U.S. Census Current Population Survey (CPS).
  • For questions answered by all 5,211 consumers in the March 2010 Financial Services Channel survey, the margin of sampling error is &Plusmn;1.39 percentage points at the 95% confidence level.
  • For questions answered by all 3,100 consumers in the July 2010 Mobile survey, the margin of error is &Plusmn;1.76 percentage points at the 95% confidence level.

Audience: Financial institutions, mobile banking and marketing departments, credit card networks, credit card issuers, payment processors, mobile banking vendors, mobile payment vendors, mobile network operators, authentication technology vendors, authentication platform vendors.

For more information please click on:
http://www.researchandmarkets.com/product/704e3c/smartphone_banking_security_mobile_banking_u

Title Index:

– Overview
– Methodology
– Executive Summary and Recommendations
– Smartphone Adoption
– Stagnation of Mobile Financial Activities
– Security Concerns with Mobile Banking

What is a Killer App?

– Consumers Prefer Mobile Optimized Browser Sites
– Companies Mentioned

Table of Figures

– Figure 1: Smartphone Ownership, 2009 – 2011
– Figure 2: Consumers Who Have Mobile Banked in the Past 90 Days by Primary Bank
– Figure 3: Mobile Banking Use by Smartphone Users, 2010 – 2011
– Figure 4: Purchases Made via Mobile Devices by Smartphone Users, 2009 – 2010
– Figure 5: Smartphone Owners’ Perception of Mobile Banking Safety, 2009 – 2010
– Figure 6: Smartphone Owners’ Perception of Mobile Banking Channels, 2009 – 2010

For more information please click on:
http://www.researchandmarkets.com/product/704e3c/smartphone_banking_security_mobile_banking_u


Filed Under: Research Tagged With: Apple, Bank of America, BB&T Bank, Chase, Citibank, Citizens, Fifth Third Bank, google, HSBC, IBM, Key Bank, Microsoft, PNC, Regions, RIM, SunTrust, TD Bank, US Bank, USAA, Wachovia, Wells Fargo

Smartphone Banking Security: mBanking Susceptible to Consumer Fears

July 29, 2011 by Mobile Payment Magazine

According to Research and Markets, mobile banking adoption has stagnated despite explosive growth in smartphone adoption from 2009 to 2011, and the company attributes the slowdown to consumer fears over mobile banking security.

In 2009, one in four smartphone owners considered mobile banking unsafe. One year later, 40% of smartphone owners felt the same way. As financial institutions push forward, offering innovative and convenient financial options to a new mobile generation, consumers are left questioning whether security was sacrificed in the rush toward innovation.

In the context of the recent infiltration of malware into the Android Market, the company notes that it is imperative that FIs reassure consumers that mobile security is a priority.

Research and Markets  has announced the release of a new  Javelin Strategy & Research report entitled “Smartphone Banking Security: Mobile Banking Utilization Stalls On Consumer Fears.”

Primary questions covered:

  • What is the rate of smartphone adoption?
  • What is the growth rate of mobile banking and purchasing?
  • What are some factors that are inhibiting the adoption of mobile financial activities?
  • How can FIs encourage mobile financial activity?

Companies Mentioned:

  • Apple
  • Bank of America
  • BB&T Bank
  • Chase
  • Citibank
  • Citizens
  • Fifth Third Bank
  • Google
  • HSBC
  • IBM
  • Key Bank
  • Microsoft
  • PNC
  • Regions
  • RIM
  • SunTrust
  • TD Bank
  • US Bank
  • USAA
  • Wachovia
  • Wells Fargo

More information: Smartphone Banking Security: Mobile Banking Utilization Stalls On Consumer Fears

 

Source: Business Wire

Filed Under: Research Tagged With: Apple, Bank of America, BB&T Bank, Chase, Citibank, Citizens, Fifth Third Bank, google, HSBC, IBM, Key Bank, Mbanking, Microsoft, MobileBanking, RIM, SunTrust, TD Bank, US Bank, USAA, Wachovia, Wells Fargo

40% of European Smartphone Buyers Plan iPhone Purchase

June 22, 2011 by Mobile Payment Magazine

A  recent survey, entitled, “2011 European Mobile User Study” found that 40 percent of consumers who intend to buy a smartphone as their next mobile device will choose an iPhone. Android-based devices come in second (19 percent), followed by BlackBerry (17 percent) and Nokia (15 percent). [Read more…]

Filed Under: Research Tagged With: Apple, Europe, iPhone

PayPal, Apple and Nokia Lead in Mobile Payments Brand Trust

May 12, 2011 by Mobile Payment Magazine

Trust and familiarity are the key drivers in consumer preference for mobile payment services, according to a new study. The survey by GfK NOP, a global market research agency, covered nine countries (US, UK, France, Italy, Germany, Spain, South Korea, Brazil and China) and included 8,603 online interviews, with each country’s sample designed to represent their online population.

The findings revealed that what consumers are looking for, before they feel comfortable adopting a mobile payment service supplier, is the trust of a financial brand and familiarity of a mobile brand.

Consumer appeal for mobile payment services varies across all countries, which, broadly speaking, fall into two categories: countries with established financial payment infrastructures, and countries whose financial infrastructure is young and still developing.

Of the nine markets where research was conducted, South Korea was the only nation that offered established mobile payment services to the consumer market. Globally, 62% of consumers find mobile payments appealing. This is higher among certain key groups, including: younger consumers aged 16-24 (75%); innovators / early adopters (74%); and current smartphone owners (72%).

There is, however, considerable variation between nations. Developing markets in China (82%) and Brazil (73%) find mobile payment services the most appealing, whereas the more established payment systems in developed markets, like the US and Europe, mean appeal in these nations is more limited (around 50%), since the existing chip-and-PIN systems offer a convenient and already trusted route.

Why the delay in Mobile Payments?

Near Field Communications (NFC), the technology that supports close proximity mobile payment services, has been around for many years. However, the NFC-enabled mobile devices and service support have been delayed year on year. Why, when the service seems so attractive to consumers and businesses alike?

One of the reasons for this delay to market is that there are so many brands from different industry sectors interested, posing the critical question: ‘Who should own the relationship with the customer?’ The incentive for financial institutions is that Mobile Payment embodies a critical evolutionary step. It will modernise their service offering and refresh their brand image – things that are much needed after the negativity of the recent financial crisis.  For mobile network operators, the attraction of this fledgling sector is the opportunity to diversify their revenue streams – to branch out from their core business of voice, text and data. And, for Smartphone handset and operating system (or OS) providers, mobile payment services represent an important new data source, that brings together online and offline purchasing behaviour – something that will enhance the value of their ecosystem to advertisers.

Working out how all these different companies work together, and – importantly – who owns the customer relationship, has been the key barrier to rolling mobile payment services out for most countries.

The adoption funnel: trust, consideration and preference

At a category level, GfK’s study shows that the financial brand category has the highest levels of trust, consideration and – importantly – preference among consumers (48%). Within this category, high street banks have the highest levels of trust, consideration and preference. Consumers feel they can be relied upon to safely process payments and manage personal finances, and view the move to mobile payments as a natural next step.

Mobile and telecommunication brands receive significantly lower levels trust, when it comes to controlling financial transactions (10%). Within these brands, mobile network carriers have the highest levels of trust, consideration and preference, although still lag behind financial brands. Within this category, mobile network carriers have the highest levels of trust, consideration and preference out of all the mobile brands, but they are still quite far behind financial brands. Adoption scores for network carriers, mobile handset and OS providers do, however, see significant uplift among smartphone owners, younger consumers and early tech adopters.

Consumer preference for mobile payments providers. Source: GfK NOP

At brand level, PayPal, Nokia and Apple came out very strongly, amongst the brands that we tested. PayPal has experience in delivering remote mobile payment services to consumers and boasts high levels of trust and consideration. Most interestingly, it has the highest brand preference of all those tested in this research. At a global level, trust usually drives mobile payment service preference. However, for PayPal, the drivers are completely different. The fact that consumers have already used PayPal to send or receive remote mobile payments before drives consumer preference for the brand when it comes to proximity based mobile payments. Closely following this familiarity of PayPal’s remote service (30%) comes the fact it is deemed a specialist in processing payments generally (21%).  Trust (17%) remains important for PayPal, but is only the third most important stated purchase driver.

 

Nokia in China is among the most trusted brands of any category in the research, receiving a score of 38% – much higher than its global average of 14%. The reason for this level of Chinese consumer preference is, again, trust – one-in-two people in China stated trust as the main driver of preference. Nokia has built a strong brand in China over the years, based on delivering reliable mobile solutions to a large proportion of the Chinese population.

Apple also has a very strong brand and this has driven higher levels of trust among their existing customer base – raising their global trust average of 11% to 38% among iPhone owners. Those that own iPhones are already used to using their iTunes account to pay for apps and media content, so the step to paying for physical products with their iTunes account is less of a stretch.

These three brand examples show that, whilst financial brands have built up high levels of trust, mobile-based brands such as Nokia and Apple, and relatively new financial brands like PayPal, have the potential to quickly disrupt this seemingly comfortable position.

Ryan Garner, Director in GfK Technology, comments, “Creating a mobile payment service that consumers are comfortable adopting means leveraging the trust placed in financial brands, but it is also vital to have a presence in the mobile sector. By tapping into all of these strengths, a mobile payments solution would quickly gain momentum with consumers and put an end to the delays experienced by NFC-based services in recent years.”

About the Survey

GfK conducted 8603 online interviews in the following countries; UK (n=853), US (n=1004), France (n=1000), Germany (n=999), Italy (n=1103), Spain (n=997), Brazil (n=987), China (n=659) and South Korea (n=1001)

The sample in each country was designed to be representative of the online population. In the UK, US, France, Germany, Italy, Spain and South Korea internet penetration is high enough to capture a sample that is broadly representative of the population as a whole. However, in China and Brazil the interviews collected online will not be representative in the same way. The research conducted in Brazil and China will be representative of the online population, but these people are more advanced in their views on technology, live in more urban areas and are likely to be wealthier, than the population as a whole.

Source: GfK NOP

Filed Under: Featured, Research Tagged With: Apple, GfK, GfK NOP, NFC, Nokia, PayPal

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