Categoría: Blog

  • PagoRUT: la app de BancoEstado cumple un año y alcanza 1.4 millones de usuarios.

    The 2018 World Cup is fast approaching, with national sides making their final preparations ahead of this summer’s tournament.

    We now know the groups after December’s draw. England have been put together with Belgium, Tunisia and Panama in Group G.

    Gareth Southgate’s side were not among the top seeds, meaning they featured in pot two during the proceedings.

    And with England’s route now mapped out, Southgate will be able to ramp up preparations for the 2018 tournament. 2018 World cup, football News ,Gaming ,Betscore ,Casino …..Sports.vin

  • Voice Payments is the Next BIG Thing

    Voice Payments is the Next BIG Thing

    Further to my post earlier today, I would like to expand a bit more with regards to this topic. It is not only a very interesting thing to discuss, but also it can (and most definitely will) change many things that we do today.

    Voice Assistants will change many things as we now them today.

    Briefly about Voice Assistants

    Due to the advancements in technology, and Artificial Intelligence (AI) in particular, Voice Assistants (VA) are getting more and more accurate. Graph below visually illustrates the differences in accuracy among most popular VAs on the market today – namely Google Assistant, Microsoft’s Cortana, Apple’s Siri, and Amazon’s Alexa.

    As it is visible from the figures provided above, Google currently is leading the race with 91% accuracy (which is really good).

    Better accuracy simply means that VAs are better at performing their tasks and answering specific inquiries. This in effect suggests that they should be more useful on our daily basis. Indeed, two graphs below support this hypothesis quite well.

    As it is visible from the provided statistics, most people find VAs useful due to the ability to have a hands-free control – hence, at home or in the car. And it makes perfect sense. While driving, the VA allows you to perform many tasks while still keeping your focus on the road. At (smart) home, with VA you can have a full (to the extent that is currently available) control of your house, and thus switch on/off lights, (un)lock door, order food via Amazon etc.

    Voice Assistants & Payments = Voice Payments

    VAs are inevitably coming to the payments industry as well, marking the beginning of yet another revolution. Already, Siri can help users make peer-to-peer (P2P) transfers with Venmo, Alexa can pay off Capital One Credit Card bills, and Google Assistant can let users shop with their voice from the nearby stores.

    And this is just a beginning. Today, 18 million US consumers have made a voice payment. Having the pace of technological development in mind, it is not surprising at all that this figure is expected to quadruple over the next five years.

    As it is seen from the figure provided above, by 2022 about 1/3 of population should have be familiar with making voice payments.

    KEY drivers of Voice Payments

    The essential factor driving the adoption of voice payments is convenience and hands-free experience. It is easy, saves you time, and is a fun thing to do (at least now, later it will be business-as-usual). Other important factors:

    • Explosion of voice-enabled devices, generational gains in AI, and a strong consumer value proposition for voice payments.
    • Payment providers are moving in: Amazon, Apple, Google, and PayPal are part of the growing list of companies making these next-generation payments possible.
    • Banks are increasingly interested in AI too. VAs would obviously increase efficiency & reduce costs.
    • Next-generation voice assistants will blow the current generation away. Voice payments will evolve from clunky and poorly scripted sessions to interactions as natural as one might have with a personal shopper or bank employee.

    Bringing it all together

    All in all, we can once again stress that Voice Payments will definitely change the current payments landscape. More advanced and accurate VAs will bring enjoyable customer experience, convenience and save us time.

    Also, this is another good example illustrating how technology companies are disrupting yet another industry. I have briefly covered GAFA (Google, Apple, Facebook and Amazon), and their approach to banking in my last 3 pieces.

    Source: Linas Beliūnas

  • The GAFA approach to Banking.

    The GAFA approach to Banking.

    It is important to comprehend that due to digital technologies and digitization as such, the banking industry is ultimately becoming a consumer-to-business (C2B) industry, driven by exceptional customer experience (CX) standards being set and (most importantly!) delivered by Google, Apple, Facebook, and Amazon (GAFA).

    I have briefly explored this topic in my earlier article – “Would you like to set Facebook as your default Bank Account?” Yes, please.” -, however, given the importance of the matter, there is so much more to add.

    Ultimately, the goal for banks should be to be and stay relevant at all times, for all financial and non-financial services, with reliable and enjoyable customer experiences in both the digital and physical spaces. To accomplish this, banks need to become technology companies. They have to think, act, and operate like GAFA does.

    The shift to C2B era

    Powerful trends have been restructuring the banking industry, forever shifting the competitive landscape. One of the most significant trends is the rise of the importance of the consumer and his experience (I’m not saying that consumers weren’t important earlier, they most definitely were, but now they’re more important than ever) – consumers are increasingly in control, engaging with businesses when and where they want to, often creating value in multiple ways.

    Information is everything.

    This new type of value is encoded in enormous amounts of data that tech giants are able to capture. Think of Facebook likes or Amazon product reviews here. Having such information (and information is everything!), the tech juggernauts are then able to exploit it to further grow their business, increase market domination, and disrupt various industries (see the graph below).

    The dominance of GAFA

    As the world evolves more towards the C2B relationships, the major players in this area – GAFA – have been increasingly encroaching on the territory of traditional banks as well. As noted earlier, Google, among other things, has Google Pay & Android Pay; Apple has Apple Pay; Facebook enables you to send peer-to-peer payments via Facebook Messenger; while Amazon, among other things, offers business loans and takes the loan payments out of the sales proceeds of the merchants.

    GAFA wants to become relevant in every aspect of your life.

    These GAFA moves are part of their broader strategy. They want to become even more relevant in the lives of their consumers, hence, they have been naturally developing the full range of their offerings to include not just shopping, entertainment, or marketing, but also products and services that address people’s health, their homes, and most importantly – their money.

    Such an approach has generated even more data that can be analyzed in real-time to obtain customer insights that can be later used to create opportunities for both cross-selling and up-selling additional and/or complementary products.

    The threat is real

    Having the above stated in mind, banks nowadays are more vulnerable than ever. If they will not re-invent themselves, they are risking to become a mere back-office utility, or alternatively – component suppliers, while all valuable customer interactions will be controlled by GAFA.

    By 2020, 80% of existing banking revenues might extinct.

    In fact, according to Accenture, by 2020, it is estimated that different business models could impact up to 80% of existing banking revenues. Revenue streams with a high degree of impact could include current accounts, consumer finance, cash management, and small-and-medium-enterprise (SME) payments.

    The good thing though is that banks as well have vast amounts of data, established trust (see the graph below; source: Accenture), and necessary capital to play a leading role in the digital transformation of financial services.

    On the other hand, despite trust, consumers – especially those in their 20s and early 30s – are becoming increasingly receptive to having their banking services provided by a non-traditional financial service company. Not surprisingly, here we again see Amazon, Google, and Apple.

    Therefore, given such a competitive pressure, banks need to move fast and make the right decisions in several crucial areas.

    Source:

  • What is Sublimation and How Do I Avoid It?

    Credit unions should step up rewards programs and member communications.

    When anything solid turns into a gas without first becoming liquid, that’s sublimation, according to Wikipedia. When the surface layer of snow or ice turns into fog or steam without melting, this is an example of sublimation. What does this have to do with payments? If the topic is Internet of Things (IoT) then sublimation is the word thrown around a lot to describe the disappearance of the financial institutions’ branding.

    The IoT is pushing the payment to the background. Once a person sets up a card in the IoT to use for payments (like pushing the Amazon dash button to reorder detergent, or asking Alexa to order a pizza), then every time you want something, the payment is already in place – which is a great convenience for the consumer, but a major challenge to a credit union that wants to move up their card in the virtual or digital wallet. And even more importantly, not only is the payment already in place, but it’s “hidden” during the transaction, changeable only through a buried menu item.  The physical plastic card has been turned into a concealed payment capability – sublimation has occurred! When a consumer is ready to make a purchase, how does the credit union ensure that their payment card, be it credit, debit or virtual card or tokenized payment, is top of mind or top of wallet?

    Anyone who uses Uber or Lyft knows that “paying” for a ride consists simply of stepping out of the vehicle. That’s it. No card, no payment options displayed. In fact, the time to choose payment is before requesting a ride. But as FIS Chief Product Officer Bob Legters points out, “once a card is loaded into that first-place spot, it’s very hard to dislodge.” “Consumers don’t care how it works. They just don’t want anything to stop the payments process and neither do the merchants.”

    How does a credit union avoid sublimation? “Take every opportunity to show that you are their financial advocate every moment you can” according to Tom Davis, CSCU’s SVP finance and technology. “Provide reminders to members on the website and in mobile banking apps to let members know that their credit union card is the safest and best option for loading into any ecommerce app they encounter.”

    Legters says: “The best way to overcome this challenge (of sublimation) is through rewards, and through communication. Credit unions are sitting on the most valuable asset in the payments world – the trusted brand of the credit union is embedded in the concept of trusted banking in the general population. Go to just about anyone in the U.S. and ask about credit unions, and you’ll hear about home town, local, connected to the community. Credit union members think of people, not a financial institution. Culturally that’s the biggest thing that needs to be leveraged to defeat sublimation. “

    Lou Grilli Lou Grilli

    Lou is the Director of Payments Strategy at CSCU and is responsible for providing leadership to the organization for emerging payments and industry trends, as well as managing the product portfolio.

     

    Source: http://www.thepaymentsreview.com/

  • Pagar la compra con la palma de la mano: la idea que 7-Eleven ha comenzado a probar en Corea del Sur

    Ni dinero en metálico, ni tarjeta de crédito, ni pago móvil, la cadena de supermercados 7-Eleven ha introducido un novedoso sistema de pago en una de sus tiendas de Corea del Sur: pagar con la palma de la mano.

    El sistema ha sido implantado en la nueva tienda que la compañía ha abierto en el edificio más alto del país, la Lotte World Tower. En este edificio -comercial y de oficinas – tan transitado la compañía ha comenzado a probar la lectura de la palma de la mano como fórmula de pago, según ha anunciado en un comunicado.

    El sistema de pago sólo está disponible para aquellos clientes que trabajen en el servicio financiero Lotte, aunque en agosto comenzará a abrirse a una serie de compañías afiliadas, según informa Cnet.

    Con este nuevo sistema de pago, Lotte se introduce en las técnicas de biopagos más allá de las huellas digitales, y es que el lector de la palma de la mano derecha, con la que se podrá efectuar el pago, diferenciaría los capilares de las venas para identificar y diferenciar a cada persona.

    La palma de la mano ha sido registrada previamente por la compañía y la información de las venas se convierten en un número aleatorio que se vinculan directamente con una tarjeta de pago.

    Lo más curioso del nuevo método de pago es que las tiendas no contarán con personal en las cajas registradoras sino que un sistema de inteligencia artificial será capaz de identificar qué productos ha seleccionado cada cliente con una técnica de exploración de 360 grados. Eso sí, la identificación de la mano será necesaria para ingresar y salir de la tienda.

    Fuente: ww.eleconomista.es

  • Nace el primer banco de una Fintech para romper el modelo tradicional de banca.

    Tras la autorización del Banco de España, estos emprendedores se lanzan para adecuarse a las necesidades de los ecommerce españoles.

    Los emprendedores españoles de PAYTPV, hasta ahora una revolucionaria pasarela de pago que optimiza el proceso de cobro, arrancan su actividad como entidad de pago tras obtener la autorización del Banco de España (BdE). A diferencia de los bancos tradicionales, sus principales ventajas residen, además de en su adaptabilidad, en su capacidad de split de pago de las operaciones (cobros para Marketplaces), cobros por IVR, y también en su avanzado sistema antifraude, para evitar falsas transacciones, tarjetas robadas, etc.
    “Tras un trabajo tedioso, complejo y que requiere infinidad de trámites, hemos logrado convertirnos en un equivalente a la banca online y podemos llegar con nuestros POSs donde las entidades tradicionales no pueden. Las entidades financieras son instituciones con mucha burocracia y poco adecuadas a la velocidad de crecimiento actual del ecommerce en España, cuarto país de Europa en ventas online. Trabajamos para ofrecer condiciones mucho más favorables para las empresas, mejor conversión, cumplimiento de la normativa, una velocidad mayor de respuesta y una optimización del fraude”, asegura Javier García, CEO de PAYTPV.
    Esta nueva modalidad de banco tiene el objetivo de permitir a empresas y negocios optimizar al máximo el proceso de cobro para que puedan incrementar su rentabilidad. La gestión de estos procesos a través de la plataforma es versátil y escalable a las necesidades de cada empresa y sector. Para ello, ofrece un conjunto completo de soluciones de cobros online y presencial que pueden ser inmediatamente implementados por negocios de comercio electrónico, venta telefónica y venta presencial a través de terminales físicos y online, así como gestionar el cobro por e-mail, mensaje de texto (SMS) o teléfono.
    Esta nueva modalidad de banco tiene el objetivo de permitir a empresas y negocios optimizar al máximo el proceso de cobro para que puedan incrementar su rentabilidad.
    El pago por tarjeta está integrado al sistema de venta permitiendo la transferencia automática del importe a cobrar. El sistema permite recibir, comprobar y gestionar las ventas y/o devoluciones de todos los terminales en un solo panel administrativo. PAYTPV incorpora las nuevas tecnologías de pago sin contacto (NFC) y a través del móvil, así como un sistema multibanco que optimiza las comisiones bancarias enviando operaciones a un banco u otro en función de las negociaciones establecidas con ellos o las monedas locales. Con el objetivo de proteger a los comercios frente a cualquier problema de conexión, su operativa offline permite seguir cobrando con tarjeta aunque se caiga la red, gracias a un backup de procesamiento.
    Además, se podrá obtener en tiempo real información de las transacciones procesadas por el sistema, tanto en comercio físico como online. Con un solo clic, se pueden solventar dudas o discrepancias con los abonos recibidos por parte de los bancos y conocer qué tipo de tarjetas usan los clientes. Además, ofrece un control total de la transacción que incluye scoring de la operación e incluso tipología de la tarjeta utilizada y el número de veces usada en su comercio, contrastando el nivel de veracidad con el resto de comercios de la plataforma.
    Todos los productos de PAYTPV cumplen con las exigentes normativas PCI-DSS Nivel 1 versión 3.2, los estándares de seguridad de la información de la industria de tarjetas de pago, para garantizar que todas las transacciones son procesadas con total seguridad. La ventaja que supone a las empresas trabajar con esta certificación es que pueden desarrollar negocios que necesiten guardar o almacenar los datos de las tarjetas de sus clientes y proporcionar la seguridad de todas las transacciones cumpliendo la normativa Visa, Mastercard, American Express, JCB, Discover.
    Fuente: empresaexterior.com

     

  • Payments VALUE or HYPE – Real Opportunities vs Distractions

    Payments VALUE or HYPE – Real Opportunities vs Distractions

    Payments VALUE or HYPE – Real Opportunities vs Distractions

    This article is intended for those pragmatically focused on growing mainstream sustainable payments businesses now. If you want to consider sexy or outside chance plays, then perhaps this is not for you.

    This article lists what we see as the top key payments industry value add initiatives for the next few years, and lists some common distractions (that appear key to some).

    Our top 3 winning initiatives in payments 2017:

    1. New Revenue Streams Creation
    2. Customer Retention/Expansion
    3. Profitability Optimisation

    Yes, payments is changing radically, but every year for over 10 years now we have heard: “Next year is THE year of Mobile Payments” … did it even come yet? We do not think so, but it is certainly getting closer. So while payments is radically changing it is certainly not changing in all the ways the noise suggests.

    At PayX we spend a lot of time each year with top tier Banks and Payments Organisations in markets globally working through the (trendy) subjects cutting the wheat from the chaff, or in other words, identifying what to really invest in versus what is hype (we classify hype as ideas that given time may or may not ever materialise into the sustainable business mainstream).

    Clarity in the payments ecosystem helps enormously as people can then focus on achieving real net value initiatives results, rather than wasting vast cycles on hype listening to sales pitches or watching yet another promotion of a ‘PowerPoint product’.

    One distinction before we start. We regard only two types of initiatives as adding real value for a payments organisation:

    a) Net new revenue/profit generators; and
    b) Big enough industry topics that cannot be ignored.

    The real search is for the type (a) that generate directly or indirectly net new revenue/profit in a relatively short timeframe (e.g. merchant small loans offerings based on card volume). The second type (b) hold enough major (payments industry) interest (e.g. mobile wallet or P2P offering) such that a top tier organisation has to have a presence in it (i.e. marketing) or risk being branded a dinosaur. The second type (b) may or may not develop into type (a) eventually.

    Often what is of value in payments is not sexy, but more subtle and takes patience

    In some cases, a trendy subject has wide cross industry (infrastructure) meaning, like API Economy or Mining Big Data. These names cleverly catch wide mass reader appeal which then generates noise equivalent to being the answer to all things. Interpreting these into payments value is trickier, less sexy and subtle. In payments organisations we see many examples of people jumping on the trendy cross industry buzz and chirp statements repeatedly such as “we must have open APIs” but not really understanding the why or goals to set/achieve related to them. Whether we agree or disagree with the statement, the point is the topic is misleading in that it often misses the value statement to the payment organisation’s business. Many times what is of value in payments is not sexy but more subtle, takes patience, and is all about understanding the organisation’s specific business segmentation coupled with superb and consistent execution. Those payments business fundamentals have not changed and by definition are unfortunately not new and sexy to talk about.

    Top themes that will deliver high value and be a focus in 2017 for payments organisations:

    1. New Revenue Streams Created: A plethora of new customer products/offerings will come to market, assembled by coopertition of Banks and FinTech

    More than ever consumers have power of choice. Business customers, who are also of course consumers, are increasingly realising options and demanding offerings that meet their needs. Gone are the days of defining 3 products and giving millions of customers a choice of a, b or c.
    In fact, an accurate description of today’s product definition for a supplier is to build a product that is flexible enough so customers can “self-serve” its characteristics to shape it to their own unique requirements. The concept is the product builder provides a flexible and adaptive platform, rather than one which assumes what the end customer product looks like. This change of mentality in payments (and far wider) of product management is a culture shift and a new approach which is crucial to consistent growth.

    2. Customer Retention and Extension: Workflow excellence taking customer experience up another league

    Business payments customers, defined as either corporates or merchants, still do not typically enjoy a superb customer experience today when interacting with suppliers for payment services. Especially in applying/adding new services, the experience is often hindered by regulation (e.g. KYC) and credit risk policies to make it at best onerous and at worst very frustrating. While these checks and workflows exist for good reason there appears far too many old style one product fits all approaches by payments suppliers which could be streamlined dramatically. More commercial payments providers such as Square and PayPal demonstrate features like rapid on-boarding, staged credit risk (under a limit there is a fast and low number of checks done which slowly increase), and these organisations communicate effectively multi-channel according to the customer’s choice then keep the customer updated, almost transparently, on progress, etc.

    Another league of customer experience emerging is delivered by some payments providers guiding customers to achieving a better payments capability for the customer’s own business. Examples being offering physical bricks and mortar merchants extra products like small business loans and also offering ecommerce support with a hand holding role by the payments provider to enable the customer to not only have an ecommerce merchant agreement but also linking them with web enablement, chargeback insurance/processing and essentially providing a comprehensive easy step by step route to all aspects of web ecommerce enablement of their business. From a retail merchant customer perspective this improves their revenue and profits and is a win-win.

    We predict more players will take on the full customer experience perspective resulting in a dramatic upturn in merchants getting ecommerce enabled with comprehensive trading services, including payments. The winners will be those that do this a-z for customers with a superb experience.

    3. Profitability Optimisation

    The good old days of simple payments processing with high margins were left behind a long time ago. The best payments processing businesses are the ones that are deeply segmented, know their customers and their customers’ business dynamics really well, and are optimised for their own maximum profit at smart market pricing.

    Regulators have pushed for more transparency to customers, both business merchants and consumers, but in reality, the pricing in many cases has become more complex. Certain fees have been eliminated but then new fees have been added elsewhere in the equation (to counter). Overall, the whole payments ecosystem of types of business models, players, roles, transaction types have all increased in number and have changed. Ultimately the permutations, pricing and profitability are all more complex, opening opportunity, and the winners will be the best pro-active dynamic managers of the various factors.

    As the (margin) pressures inevitably continue to increase, organisations will spend more time on their business and operational analysis working out how to refine models and improve their profitability to a level of fine tuning that we have not seen before (in payments but common in many other industries). For years there have been high risk segments addressed by specialists, now we foresee a far more granular approach with sophisticated dynamic segmented models to maximise profitability.

    Top misleading topics in payments.

    In contrast to the above the following are, in our opinion, mainly distracting. It is not to say they can’t deliver value but many people are addressing them as an entire solution or change drivers, whereas we see them as tools of the trade:

    1. APIs

    – APIs have been around for decades, yes decades! Today, conversations on APIs have two levels; technology and business. On the technology level yes there have been some major advances in recent years and momentum coupled with ease/speed of implementation which now means we are in a new and very powerful place; the net result being the interconnectivity of disparate entities (internal and external) can be achieved reliably at low cost so enabling the acceleration of new products/trade. On the business level the API Economy holds a suite of clearer defined cooperation business models between parties (over 40 models e.g. referrals, affiliates, resellers etc.). Organisations like Expedia have managed to utilise these API business models to generate additional billions of revenue, literally. Both these progressions are infrastructure cross industry not payments specific.

    To make the statements; “we need our payments systems to be API enabled”, or “our next generation revenue streams will use API business models” seems to be the classic solutions looking for a problem cliche. In payments yes these two solution types may have relevance to future developments of a business, but they are not going to solve any problem starting from this perspective. In fact, it would be fair to say that payments businesses adopting these starting points would generate disruption and noise that actually hurts a business rather than aids it. That is not to say gaining experience in these areas is not valuable, but APIs on both the technology and business levels are TOOLS to be used to implement a business strategy or initiative, not answers in themselves.

    2. Big Data, machine learning, analytics

    The capabilities and trends in these technologies, just like APIs, are gaining notable traction and fast paced evolution. Again these are wide cross industry capabilities and not just payments specific, and similarly starting initiatives off from these solutions perspectives are looking for problems to solve, and so in themselves do not drive payments organisations strategy and net new revenue/profit. In essence you need to know what you want, and when is appropriate to gain value from these capabilities before they will deliver high value. There is little doubt these will become embedded in the mainstream of businesses to come, it is the timing and expected outcomes that need to be driven correctly.

    3. Faster Payments/Instant Payments/Real Time Payments/SEPA Inst

    We are surprised by the global uptake of Faster Payments. At the last count there were now 5 countries with a Faster Payments infrastructure in production, and 5 projects ongoing. The reason we are surprised is that from a bank perspective there appears little business case plus a significant cost associated with implementation. We can clearly see the national interests typically driven by the central bank in that it increases liquidity in corporates and hence overall trade activity. Such large initiatives typically take many years to gain traction but it seems Faster Payments is a hot topic for nations.

    The reason we put this as a distracting topic is that from an individual bank payments perspective we believe Faster Payments is an infrastructure project rather than one that will deliver any net new revenue/profit anytime soon, and in fact given its size of programme and cost levels then the initiatives will likely have a negative short term impact distracting and constraining available investment funds for operational business.

    We do not dispute Faster Payments is a good thing for nations and consumers, and ultimately when matured, for banks generally. Next generation real time products like Peer to Peer payments (P2P) need a Faster Payments infrastructure, or maybe actually a Faster Payments Plus (really real time not the 15-30 seconds of many of today’s faster payments capabilities) to work properly and no doubt as payments gets consumed by commerce more and more then instant real time payments will become an expectation not a new feature. As ever it’s all about timing and Faster Payments to us is a longer term play that does not assist with shorter term challenges and opportunities.

    4. PSD2/XS2A

    Open banking, Open Platforms and Open interconnecting “coopertition” in our opinion are all inevitable. No one big mass anything can serve all things to all people; so for many years the direction towards selecting and reusing best of breed components was compelling, but many technological and business barriers existed. Going forward, multi parties (who cooperate and also compete) will form an almost infinite portfolio of offerings out to market that address every segment and niche with fine detailed attention servicing their customer experience and needs. The classic successes we have seen so far along these lines are Uber, AirBnB generally and Square, Klarna and Kabbage in payments. Barriers still exist but a lot of progress has been made. PSD2/XS2A to us is just a European regulator getting behind the inevitable which is great news as it means progress is fast tracked. We warn though that treating PSD2/XSA2 as merely another compliance project (especially if implemented on a bare bones basis as many are) is missing the point. Labelling the initiative Open Banking on an Open Platform would be a more appropriate title, with a suitable major initiative behind it. The simple statement going forward is that no one organisation is going to be able to have a large comprehensive offering to customers consisting of products they themselves create alone, it will all be about highly segmented multi party portfolios presented seamlessly.

    The drivers should be the already mentioned quest for new revenue streams, however they are created. In our opinion driving on the basis of PSD2/ XSA2 remit will distract and likely deliver little true value, along with a lot of cost.

    5. Mobile Payments & Wallets

    So far Apple Pay has taken the biggest run at getting this right, and in our opinion has so far failed. True, it has significantly improved consumer understanding and even consumer usage but you could almost argue that even Apple never thought they could get true mass. In essence the challenge with mobile payments/wallets, or whatever you want to call it, is that none of these actually add a true net new reason why any consumer should change from cash/card which they instinctively use without conscious thought. Without some net value add of mass appeal to consumers then consumer habits will not be moved.

    One day the solutions in this area will come forward. In the meantime this is one of those areas where all banks have to have at least an image layer of market offering even if they do not have the right solution; so market presence but not limited investment/focus until the real winners emerge.

    6. Blockchain

    We believe there is substance in what we would call the “financial internet” of Blockchain, however as with many emerging trends it is all about getting the timing right to benefit. In our opinion in regards to mid/low value high volume payments Blockchain is just too new to engage with, but definitely a space to watch.

    PayX works end to end from analysing market changes & developing new market propositions, through to delivery project implementations. Our global customer base plus market analyst position within payments and investment communities helps us fine tune through constant updates where true value and who the winners and losers in the payments are and likely will be. We work with our customers contrasting their environments with global experiences to assist with initiatives that make a real difference, be that of divesting from a line of business or adopting new partners/technologies.

    Over the coming year we will deliver a series of focus articles/blogs on the 3 key themes mentioned in the beginning.

    Contact us for more information on what we are doing, including finding out when PayX will hold the next industry seminar near you. Email us at info@payxintl.com or www.payxintl.com and arrange a complementary consultation.

    Enjoy 2017 and we look forward to working with you.

    Source: http://payxintl.com

  • Why data science is the future of the payments industry.

    Why data science is the future of the payments industry.

    Back in 2013, IBM told the world that 90% of its data had been created during the previous two year period. Three years later, it is clear that the era of Big Data is here to stay. What is less certain, however, is what the average business should be doing to take advantage of the situation.

    For those of us in the omnichannel payments industry, however, there can be no hesitation. Data science gives us the chance to offer a new standard of payment services to merchants, with solutions that adapt based on systematic analysis of the oceans of key data accrued from the long list of potential sources: from sales channels to public government information to social media data and more.

    Merchants have a right to demand solutions from PSPs that use every possible tool to improve revenue and reduce risk. If you are not taking data science seriously, you simply can’t claim to be doing everything in your power to support your clients. So, how does data science fit into the modern payment mix? And what should merchants be expecting from PSPs in the Big Data age?

    matrix-1735640_640

    The power of information

    While the potential uses of data in the payments industry are many, two areas in particular stand out as benefiting the most from intelligent data science: security and authorization. Let’s take the latter issue first.

    In the past, a merchant would receive reports back from their PSP with a list of transactions, noting which ones were declined and which ones were approved. No insight was offered into why declines were happening or how they could be prevented from happening again. The results were inflexible facts leaving the merchant with no clue as to how to use them.

    PSPs are now crunching the data behind the numbers, breaking down the patterns and motivations of consumers and how it all relates to whether a transaction was approved or declined. This way, rather than hand back a long list of complex information, they can return concrete advice on technical tweaks that will eliminate obstacles in the authorization process.

    From a security point of view, data science is equally valuable. By tracking and studying the patterns and activities that surround past fraudulent transactions, we can optimize the processes we use to prevent future fraud with a revolutionary level of efficiency and accuracy.

    Human eye with barcode - Big data concept

    Data in action

    Though the results of data science are compelling, in action it is a rigorous, exacting and time-consuming process. That’s why the only way to employ it in your business is as part of a strict, monitored and strategic approach. Plus, you need some specialists on board who are passionate about payments and willing to devote hours to extensive data mining.

    At Acapture, we have deployed our Data Science Team to work on maximizing the revenue of our clients. Through deep analysis, the team identifies what card types or banks might be commonly at the root of declined transactions and assesses the potential causes.

    This allows the merchant to route future transactions differently, so they are more likely to gain acceptance. The team can also report back to the merchant with advice on technical changes that is backed up not only by experience but also by a solid, scientific breakdown of their recent transaction history.

    As well as improving the chances of legitimate buyers being accepted, data is equally useful to ensure that fraudsters are kept at bay. Since the dawn of ecommerce, PSPs have struggled to strike the right balance when it comes to risk management: keeping things loose enough to protect conversion rates while providing enough protection to eliminate fraud.

    By approaching risk scientifically, we can identify customers and track behavior based on website profiles, device usage, network usage, customer behavior and more. This makes it increasingly difficult for online scam artists to operate from their traditional hiding places, while guaranteeing that honest customers are rarely locked out by mistake.

    Data science may even make it possible to minimise many of the costs that merchants face when handling card payments, which are determined by thousands of complex and ever-changing rules. In many cases, we are educating our clients on elements of their payment processing that they didn’t know about. That is the real power of data science – it allows us to tinker with parts of the payment dynamic that were previously off limits. The results? Better authorization rates, improved security and happier merchants.

    As I have already mentioned, data science is not simple. Yet, as the amount of data grows, it will be the PSPs and acquirers that truly understand and utilize information that will take the advantage in the increasingly competitive omnichannel payments arena.

     

    Source:

    Nathan is Director of Strategy & Corporate Development at Acapture, a Payvision company. He works with the founders and department managers across all areas of the firm, including sales strategy, data science and product. He is also responsible for the valuation and analysis of strategic investments and merger & acquisition activity.

     

  • The internet of things is quickly becoming the internet of payments

    What sounds like a sci-fi movie is now playing at a home near you. Are you ready?

    Editor’s Note: CSCU Director of Payments Strategy, Lou Grilli, presented at the Reach Conference in November 2016 on the topic of payments, and how they are changing with the advent of the internet of things. The following is a summary of his presentation.

    The internet of things (IoT) is changing payments, that is, in the IoT, payments «disappear» behind devices or become invisible. What do credit unions need to do to remain relevant in the IoT? First, it’s important to level set on what exactly IoT is.

    IoT is widely misunderstood and has many different definitions. The person credited with coining the phrase, Kevin Ashton, spoke at the Payments Innovation Project earlier in 2016, and provided a thoughtful grounding to understand the concept.

    Ashton pointed out that since computers were first invented, interaction was between the computer and a person. Punch cards, later keypads, and more recently speech, was how humans spoke to the computer, while paper reports and computer monitors were how the computer spoke with us. In 1999 there was research conducted at MIT in which computers independently interacted with other computers. These were not just networked computers, but one computer producing results and another computer independently reacting to those results. This led to devices interacting with other devices, and since then, the growth of these connected devices has been phenomenal. The Wall Street Journal, the Gartner group, and Cisco, each independently provide a prediction that by 2020, there will be 50 billion or more connected devices. And the economic driver behind this growth – according the Wall Street Journal report and the Gartner group is the $1.9 trillion dollars that’s at stake; this number is derived from cost savings, increased productivity, and selling these connected devices which presumably will make all of lives easier.

    Almost any device with an on/off switch and intelligence can connect to IoT

    While connected devices initially were full computers they now consist of seemingly anything that has an on/off button combined with intelligence and communications capability.  The smart refrigerator, for example, is probably the most talked about connected device. The Samsung refrigerator, with an android tablet built-in the door, enables the busy family to remotely see inside, electronically leave notes for each other, and most relevant to payments, keep the current shopping list and with the tap of a button, send the shopping list off, along with payment credentials, to an online grocery delivery service.

    There are many other examples of connected devices, many having nothing to do with payments. The Nest smart thermostat knows when no occupants are home and saves electricity by adjusting the temperature. The smart door lock which allows the owner to get an alert if the door was left unlocked or remotely allow a repairman to enter without having to leave a hidden key under the mat.

    These connected devices aren’t all talking with each other. There’s usually a central hub that acts as the central control point. The most popular home hub is “Alexa”, the name given to the Amazon Echo. If you watched the Super bowl earlier this year, you may remember Alec Baldwin showing off his new Amazon Echo to Dan Marino. He tells Alexa to stop the music, turn up the lights, and order a pair of Bresciani socks. The Amazon Echo has many capabilities. You can say “Alexa, pay my credit card bill in full”, or “Alexa, send $50 to my friend Bill with a note that says, “this is for my half of the golf lesson.”

    Google just launched their version of a connected home hub, the Google Home. So now you can say “Okay Google, did I leave my garage door open” or “Okay Google, did I pay my rent this month?”

    Devices answer questions and learn skills

    These devices answer questions and perform actions by having what are called “skills” – these are application programmatic interfaces (API) provided by the lights, the stereo, the garage door opener, the bill pay vendor, the P2P application, etc, in order to turn up the lights, or send money to a friend, or pay a bill. These last item are a hint as to how the IoT is changing payments. We have always thought of payments in terms of an action made by a person. In the IoT, payments are made by a device. This change probably sounds more profound or futuristic than it really is. We have been using devices to make payments for a while now. Paying at Walgreen’s using Apple watch, or sticking an Amazon Dash button in the laundry room, and pushing the button to order more detergent, are examples of devices making payments.

    But there is a change happening with the way payments are made in the IoT that is far more profound. Up until now, a payment is initiated by a person; it’s a person who is tapping the watch at the terminal in Walgreen’s, or pushing the button to order the detergent.

    Move over humans.  Connected devices are taking over.

    With IoT, devices can initiate payments, without a person involved. A pool pump is monitoring the water flowing through the system and when the pH balance is out of limits, the pool pump requests service from a pool service company, specifies what chemicals are needed, and provides payment. The owner doesn’t need to be home. The owners may be gone for the summer, and the device is requesting service and making payments.

    Many technologies still need to mature to make it easy to set up a connected home and allow compatibility across devices. With that said, there are a few technologies that are highly relevant to financial institutions that need to happen to make the payments price of the puzzle come together.

    Three of those are tokenization, embedded commerce, and APIs.

    1. Tokenization. I don’t want my credit card number stored by my refrigerator. Security of the connected devices is still relatively immature. But replacing the credit card number (the PAN) with a limited use token, one that can only be used by that specific fridge, to only buy groceries, is a way to secure that payment.
    2. Embedded commerce. The fridge requires an app that can make payments. The pool pump need an interface to provide payment credentials to pay for service.
    3. APIs. There needs to be interfaces provided by the pool service company to receive the request from the connected pool pump for service, and more importantly, to receive the payment.

    What steps can credit unions take to remain relevant in the IoT? 

    • Tokenization. Many credit unions have already tokenized their credit and debit BINs, but many more have not. Tokenization, which allows the credit card number be replaced with a limited use token to be used for authorization for payments, is typically a matter of completing paperwork with your processor to enroll your BINs with the token service providers: Visa and MasterCard. This is a prerequisite for the next step.
    • Credit unions need to be enrolled in all of the “Pays”, Apple/Android/Samsung Pay are in use today, Microsoft is nearing readiness, and IBM Pay was just announced at Money 20/20, with likely more to come. These mobile wallets, along with the online and digital wallets, Visa Checkout, MasterPass, and Amazon, will be the most common wallets that connected devices will use for payments.
    • Assess your vendors’ readiness to support the “skills” needed by the connected home hubs. Bill pay vendors need to provide the API to allow Alexa and the Google Home and the many other similar hubs to query and to initiate payments. P2P application need to accept requests to pay another person.

    This holiday shopping season some of your tech-savvy members will purchasing connected devices and home hubs. It is likely that the most financially savvy and your younger members will also jump in as early adopters of the technology. And if your members are not asking for this now, they soon will be. Because the internet of things, is quickly becoming the internet of payments.

  • Fraude de tarjetas de consumidores globales en 2016.

    Fraude de tarjetas de consumidores globales en 2016: Procedencia de las actividades fraudulentas en el uso de tarjetas (resumen sobre el continente americano)

    Descargar documento: fraude-de-tarjetas-de-consumidores-globales-en-2016

    Fuente: Aite Group