Friday, November 25, 2011

Mobile Payment volume picks up onThanksgiving Day And Black Friday


Here are some latest stats on mobile payments

·         PayPal  -  Thanksgiving saw a 511 percent increase in global mobile payment volume over 2010

·         Mostly  shoppers in New York, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami and Chicago used mobile payments  via Paypal

·         Mobile traffic visiting retailer’s site

1.    iPhone  - 6.77%

2.    Android - 5.37%

3.    iPad – 4.6%

 More at ….

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Are bank branches becoming obsolete?


http://www.americanbanker.com/bankthink/Are-bank-branches-becoming-obsolete-Brett-King-Movenbank-1043219-1.html

Great article by Brett King;  But I dont fully agree ; Here are my thoughts

Brett - I think as you have pointed out internet and mobile technology have greatly changed customers' banking experience. Yes , there has been a big drop in customer traffic as also banks have closed a lot of their branches. But I am not sure that this is due to customers moving away from branches. Here are some of my thoughts -
a) BoFa, HSBC and JPMC have closed their branches or have put off plans for branch expansion; this is largely due to the economy ; Branches are the first casualty in cost reduction;

b) In Europe and UK in particular, the conditions are not that different. Overall bank profitability is in the dumps.

c) Overall branch activity in the last 3 years or so has been on the decline due to a variety of reasons - most important being credit contraction. 

d) Branch traffic is also geographical; warmer states see more people going to branches to transact business

e) As you have pointed out, branches continue to provide great cross sell opportunities to the banks.

I think given all this, I certainly do not believe branches will be history; Yes , banks will continue to close them in poor economy; Will they open more branches if the economy improve - well I don't know; But certainly we have not seen the last days of branch banking;

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Mobile Banking hits Critical Mass


This week industry observers saw Mobile banking reach key milestones. According to Javelin Strategies, consumer adoption of mobile banking jumped 60% in 2011. This is because a large number of banks and financial institutions launched their mobile apps for their customers.  Bulk of these apps has been in retail banking – helping customers manage their checking and savings banking. The chart below shows customer used their mobile devices for checking and savings transactions – like viewing their balances, bill pay and simple fund transfer.


The second important milestone is that in 2011, 50% of US cell phone users will switch to Smartphones. This is a very key development because it offers unprecedented opportunities for banks, credit card companies and other players in financial services to reconfigure their service offerings to their customers.



Expansion in Mobile banking is also happening globally.  According to TNS MobileLife, global use of mobile finance surged in the past year as the spread of new technology and mobile banking infrastructure drove a huge increase in take-up rates around the world. In the UK the proportion of people using mobile banking increased from 9.7% in 2010 to 20.4% in 2011, while in the USA the rates from 11.4% to 21.9%. In Sweden it was greater still: 8.1% to 20%.

What is the takeaway for Banks, Financial Services and other key players in the sector?  What are the implications for technology companies that offer mobile technology and sell solutions to their financial services clients?

My personal view is that the data that we have seen above is only the tip of the iceberg. We are witnessing a paradigm shift in Banking and Financial services offerings.  Mobile banking offers a big opportunity for small and mid-tier banks to leapfrog into big league by offering better customer experience. Banks that do not provide mobile services or are late to hit the market will be left behind.  

For technology companies, this represents a golden opportunity.  Companies like MicroStrategy who have invested in mobile solutions - both financially and built key vertical expertise to scale - are in the sweet spot to exploit the huge surge in service opportunities. 

As the saying goes, success happens when preparation meets opportunity.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Monday, September 26, 2011

Starbucks and Mobile Payments


Starbucks launched its mobile app in January 2011. It enables its customers to pay for their Latte in 9000 locations nationwide.

Starbucks mobile apps allow users to operate the mobile payment feature nationally, check their Starbucks Card balance, reload their Starbucks Card account with any major credit card, find nearby Starbucks stores with the store locator feature and check their My Starbucks Rewards status.

Consider the popularity of the mobile app -
 “Within nine weeks of the national launch of mobile payment, customers in stores paid more than 3 million times using our mobile payment app, and this number continues to grow at a steady rate.”

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