Showing posts with label mobile marketing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mobile marketing. Show all posts

Thursday, November 14, 2013

The Engagement and Revenue Potential of Mobile Alerts

To drive greater mobile banking adoption and engagement, banks and credit unions need to take a more active role in helping customers proactively manage their finances through real-time notification of events that impact their accounts.


Beyond simple balance and transaction updates, alerts can provide the foundation for greater interaction with your customers, increasing engagement, lowering servicing costs and even providing potential revenue opportunities.


As discussed in my post, Is Your Bank Ready for Customer 3.0, today's mobile-savvy customer expects their bank to provide instantaneous feedback as to their financial position and to move from being a financial facilitator to being part of their everyday, always-on digital ecosystem. A new white paper from Fiserv entitled, Enterprise Alerts: The Superhighway to Delighting Customers With Timely, Relevant and Actionable Information discusses how financial institutions can develop a comprehensive alert strategy that can take advantage of this opportunity while also meeting regulatory requirements related to customer notifications.

Despite the benefits of alerts to financial institutions, adoption of alerts (similar to online banking and bill pay) have flatlined according to Javelin Strategy and Research. In a recent study entitled, Road Map to Alerts 3.0: A New Channel Emerges for Interactive Finance, Javelin predicts that the number of consumers who receive email or text alerts is only 34% currently, and will only grow by 4% annually through 2016 unless the industry deepens the pool of users by upgrading alert technology, providing more real-time insight and making alerts more useful and relevant.


Source: Javelin Strategy & Research (2012)
As could be expected, the banks with the most successful alert strategies (based on households receiving alerts) are the larger banks, while community bank and credit union customers/members are the least likely to have received an alert according to Javelin research. While Bank of America customers are the most likely to have received an email alert, Chase customers were the most likely to receive a text alert in the past 30 days.



Bank of America Mobile and Online Banking Alert Selection Pages


Alert Channel Preference


At a time when the vast majority of interaction with online and mobile banking involves simplistic balance inquiries or funds transfer, expanding the number and variety of alerts can lead to a significantly higher level of engagement that can deepen the relationship with the customer.

According to the Javelin research, while email continues to be the primary delivery channel for alerts, text alerts are the fastest growing type of alert even though this form is usually used to supplement the email variety. As mobile banking downloadable app usage continues to grow (currently at about 50% of mobile banking users), opt-out push notification alerts continue to grow.

In early 2013, Varolii Corporation did research on mobile banking preferences entitled, Can You Bank On Your Banking App, which found that consumers differ significantly in the way they want to be contacted regarding their account. Some of these preferences may be correlated with the way in which they are currently being notified by their financial institution.

Source: Can You Bank on Your Banking App?, Varolii Corporation (Jan. 2013) 

With such a wide variety of preferences, banks and credit unions must find a way to economically tie their alert system to a unified system of engagement that does not confuse the customer with too many notifications but still allow the customer a degree of customization. The key is to ensure that time-critical information is delivered to the customer in a manner that both informs and allows for immediate action.

"An enterprise alert strategy should include a wide variety of alerts distributed via multiple end points and devices," says Jim Tobin, senior vice president and general manager, Mobile Solutions from Fiserv. "This will enable financial institutions to serve customers at different stages in their lives while keeping pace with regulatory demands."

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Types of Alerts


While the origin of alerts were to notify customers of overdrafts or potential fraud potential, the variety of alerts within downloadable applications has expanded significantly over the past 18 months resulting in an increase in engagement and a better potential customer experience. In the past, the majority of alerts have involved a one-directional flow of information from the bank to the customer. Examples include:

        • Balance alerts: these could include overdraft or NSF alerts
        • Scheduled alerts: could be balance or other insight delivered on a scheduled basis
        • Event-based alerts: Could be based on a bill payment or potential fraudulent activity
While the majority of the above were usually done via email, the movement to using SMS channels opened the door for potential conversations between the bank and the customer. This expanded to 'push' notifications that allowed customers to instantly take action on an alert.

Push notifications enable customers to not only view an alert, but initiate a transaction in response to an alert within a secure app . . . in real time. For example, instead of simply getting notified that there is a low balance on an account, the alert can include a response option that allows for a transfer to be made using the mobile device. This deepens the engagement level, provides the customer more control and ultimately increases customer satisfaction.

As the use of smartphones continues to grow, push notifications are the expected level of engagement for 'Customer 3.0'.

"With push notification, financial institutions have an opportunity to transform their existing alerts offering from a reactive, event-driven service to a proactive personal financial management (PFM) tool," says Fiserv's Tobin.

According to Fiserv, Push notification uniquely provide the ability for financial institutions to evaluate and measure alert programs. Unlike text and SMS, push notifications within the mobile banking app are not limited by carrier policy restrictions. For this reason, push notifications open the door for innovation and facilitate Enterprise Process Management (EPM) with the ability to measure the value of alerts.

Bottom line, an expanded alert strategy with the resultant engagement by customers can transform a one-way, static alert offering into a proactive personal financial management tool.

Not surprisingly, the new digital banks (Moven, GoBank and Simple) as well as several banks overseas have leveraged the power of mobile push alerts the most effectively. The options available and the ability to personalize the alert 'experience' can be seen below.



Monetizing Alerts


I have covered the potential for financial institutions to charge a fee for services that provide 'added value' to banking and credit union customers. While most banks have been reluctant to charge a fee for almost anything since the Occupy movement, some institutions (most notably U.S. Bank and Regions Bank) have built a strategy around charging fees for 'premium' services. (see my post on monetizing mobile and building a fee-based strategy here and here).

In a report from Market Rates Insight entitled, Growth and Revenue Potential of Emerging Financial Services, evidence is provided that banks and credit unions are missing an opportunity to charge for services that go beyond basic. While not covering push notifications per se, this 168-page study covers 13 different emerging financial services, with insights into fee optimization, targeting, institutional differences and bundling options.

One of the services they do cover is the ability to charge for identity theft notifications which could be one of the many push notifications offered by a financial institution. According to the research, 82% of the households surveyed said they were likely to use identity theft alerts, with an average acceptable monthly fee of $4.07. The level of acceptance and perceived value of the service was not impacted significantly by either type of institution or type of customer (while women did value the alert slightly more than men).

According to Dr. Dan Geller from Market Rates Insight, “Staying informed through alerts is highly desired and valued by consumers. Nearly nine of ten banking customers want identity theft alerts, and nearly eight of ten banking customers desire low balance alerts.”

While I realize the value of an identity theft alert is definitely more than a basic alert, I believe there are alerts that the customer could receive that could be charged for as part of a bundle. For instance, the ability to charge a small monthly fee (let's say $2.00) for the following expanded set of alerts could be tested:
        • Credit card or checking account low threshold alert
        • Upcoming bill (within 2 days) where available funds are not sufficient
        • Large recurring bill notification (15 day notice) for mortgage, rent, car payment, tax bill, etc.
        • Customized personal notification (owe a friend, non-financial promise made)
        • Integrated personal calendar

Developing an Enterprise Alert Strategy


According to Fiserv, an enterprise alert strategy should include two way information flow and should be seamlessly integrated with all banking channels to support information access and management reporting. It should be both easy to enroll for and easy for the customer to make changes to preferences or to opt-out.

Since the potential for a broad-based alert strategy can be difficult to implement, Fiserv recommends a phased approach with different stages to implementation including:


        • Step 1: Account-centered alerts that are specific to account activity (low balance, direct deposit, large debits)
        • Step 2: Event-based alerts that indicate when an event may prompt a follow-up action (bill payment due, P2P request)
        • Step 3: Security-related alerts that notify the customer when accounts may be compromised (international charges, password change)
        • Step 4: Customer care information that can be initiated by the customer or the financial institution (CD maturing, lease up for renewal)
        • Step 5: Actionable insights that provide financial management tips and guidance based on the customer's activity (changes in financial activity compared to historical data)

While it may be difficult for some banks or credit unions to reach the final stage of implementation, digitally savvy and mobile-first 'Customer 3.0' expects this level of partnership from their financial institution. While providing such an array of alerts may seem like we could bombard the customer with communication, today's alert strategy keeps the customer in control of what they want to see and what they don't find important. The key element is providing choice.

Marketing of Alerts


As I have said in previous posts, "If you build it, they won't come." In other words, just because you have a robust, interactive alert capability doesn't mean that customers will take advantage of this opportunity (assuming they can find the option on their online and/or mobile banking site.

Banks and credit unions should focus early efforts on those customers most likely to want and use alerts actively (low hanging fruit). These would most likely be those customers who already are using online and/or mobile banking actively and would best understand the benefits of customizable alerts. 

Messaging within the online and mobile banking platforms is the least expensive and most effective way to begin. Fiserv suggests segmenting the target audience by digital personas to determine which alert(s) would be most valuable for each segment.

Beyond messaging within the online and mobile banking sites, other effective ways to communicate the benefits and use of alerts include:
        • Frontline staff: leveraging the referral power of customer-facing personnel
        • Email: a series of email communication regarding alerts with direct links to preference pages on the customer's online banking site (Don't forget the power of engaging offline customers as well)
        • Ad campaign: Because of the innovative nature of robust alerts, ad campaigns have been used as a way to acquire new mobile-first customers
        • Branch and ATM signage: While branch traffic is less than in the past, branch and ATM signage is still effective at raising the awareness of customers who may or may not use online or mobile banking
        • ATM receipts: One of my perennial favorites is the use of QR codes on ATM receipts to encourage both the sign-up for mobile banking but the selection of alert preferences. Linking to the alert marketing page of a bank, these receipts are an inexpensive way to reach mobile customers and prospects.

Banks and credit unions have a unique opportunity to expand the functionality and engagement of both online and mobile banking by developing an enterprise approach to alerts that satisfies customer needs, addresses regulatory issues and can generate revenue. Since the implementation of a robust alert strategy is still in formative stages, financial institutions have a unique opportunity to develop both a standard (free) set of alerts along with premium (fee-based) alerts that customers value and are willing to pay for.

This is a great time for banks to step up to the plate to provide a service customers will value and to generate needed fees at the same time. The question is . . . will we give another innovative set of services away for free?

Additional Resources


Thursday, October 10, 2013

Money2020 Attendees Share Insights and Takeaways at Bank of America Twitter Chat

On Wednesday, October 9 from 7:30 - 8:30 am, Bank of America hosted a twitter chat at Money2020


The live chat was designed to look back at the first few days of the conference, discussing important themes and takeaways, memorable moments, and issues facing the payments industry – essentially an opportunity to connect the dots.



The chat was aimed at conference attendees and people who weren’t able to attend, and was designed to focus on thought leadership around payments. Unlike most chats, this event had a live audience who participated on site along with others who participated in absentia. On the live panel moderated by Peter Osborne were Farhan Siddiqi from Bank of America, Cherian Abraham from Experian, David Birch from Consult Hyperion, consultant Tom NoyesElizabeth Dias from Perficient, Jim Issokson from MasterCard and myself (remotely).


The following transcript captures comments made during the Bank of America Money2020 Twitter chat. This transcript was edited to keep the answers to questions together. Retweets were also deleted that did not include additional content to shorten the transcript and show the flow of conversation. 

Metrics for the twitter chat were as follows: 
          • Total Participants: 187 
          • Total Number of Tweets: 711 
          • Total Reach: 574,623 
          • Total Impressions: 6,787,715 
          • Total Number of Retweets: 318 




Bank of America @BofA_News: Welcome to the Future of Payments Innovation chat, live from #Money2020 in Las Vegas. #BofA_News is pleased to host this opportunity to connect the dots from the #Money2020 conference. My name is @peter_osborne and I’m a communications executive for #BofA. I’m joined by @FarhanSiddiqi, #BofA Strategic Planning Executive for Digital Banking.

Q1: What speakers or topics have most resonated so far at Money2020


Jim Marous @JimMarous: A1: Highlight - #Amazon #PayPal #Citi #AmEx #Discover #MasterCard rocked! Showed that payments innovation never sleeps. #Money2020

Elizabeth Dias @techmktggirl: A1: Standout #Money2020 Speakers: @thefriley of @Square & @PayPal. Topics: #TomorrowsBank, Consumerization of Data & Retail 3.0

Kevin Boglarsky @kmbx2ind: #money2020A1. The keynotes even if they went a bit long.

Thomas Noyes @noyesclt: A1: I thought amazon MCX and Amex did a fantastic job.

Bank Innovation @BankInnovation: I enjoyed the bullishness on Bitcoin and loved the Square and Amex keynotes. - Phil Ryan, Bank Innovation #money2020

Aaron McPherson @aaronmcpherson: A1: Tokens are BIG #money2020

Jim Marous @JimMarous: A1: Loved the tweets Monday "#Bitcoin will do to money, what the internet did for information" #Money2020

Bank of America @BofA_News: A1: Sarah Friar was impressive explaining Square’s lofty mission and its simple approach – Start-Run-Grow. ^fs #money2020

Dave Birch @dgwbirch: #money2020 A1: liked the Amex stuff about the unbanked, the Zapp direct to bank account retail proposition, new PayPal stuff


MasterCard @MasterCardNews: A1 - #money2020 - payments is strong. More technology to drive consumer shopping experience - making it easier to transact

ngenuity Journal @ngenuityjournal: Square and Stripe -- the sweetheart keynotes of #money2020

Bank of America @BofA_News: A1: Square continues to create value propositions for customers, innovates quickly, and is making an impact ^fs #money2020

James Ray @Rockhopper08: A1 - #Money2020 presentations by #PayPal and #ISIS were most illuminating as we move into 2014. Competing visions, but must coexist.

Thomas Noyes @noyesclt: #money2020 I agree that Square had the best product demo hands down... The BIGGEST play in all of commerce

Jim Marous @JimMarous: A1: Enjoyed the sparring of alternative payments solutions. The gloves actually came off at times. #Money2020

Scott Dueweke @Scott_Dueweke: Most important trend at #money2020 is the huge number of VCs here!

Xenophon Dimopoulos @XenophonD: A1: The speakers whom I was most impressed with #PayPal, #Amazon & #Stripe. Very informative!! #Money2020

Jon Stotts @JonathanStotts: #Money2020 global-focused panels yesterday were great, covering #banking, #payments & more in China, Russia India

Digital Retail Apps @digitalretail: A1: I am keen on Amazon payments - they are off to a fast start with a trusted brand. Will be adding to my app methods of payment #Money2020

vadhri @vadhri: #money2020 square, PayPal and stripe keynotes were good

Danny Alpizar @drat717: Funny thing square CFO produce such a good impression, she didn't show nothing new #money2020 #AmEx was the better for me

Cherian Abraham @cherian_abraham: #Money2020 - MCX panel was as predictable as the Kadarshian marriage. What did we all expect would happen?

Thomas Noyes @noyesclt: #money2020 MCX is NOT a shell... It is real

Aaron McPherson @aaronmcpherson: @noyesclt Agree that MCX has made impressive progress - panel had a messaging issue. Where are the opportunities for #money2020 attendees?

Jim Marous @JimMarous: @cherian_abraham MCX may last as long as the marriage as well. #Money2020

Aaron McPherson @aaronmcpherson: Looking forward to @noyesclt panel on tokenization - 1:40pm PST in Pinyon 4 #money2020

Paul F. Doyle @pfdvv: Concur, one of the better talks was Amex addressing the unbanked and underbanked #money2020

wadearnold @wadearnold: The quote of the year for #Money2020 - "Google is really good at collecting money from every country in the world"

Thomas Noyes @noyesclt: #money2020 room agrees that the best pure presentation was Dan Schulman from #AmEx

Bank of America @BofA_News: A1: Have you seen any products or services at #money2020 that seem particularly interesting

Elizabeth Dias @techmktggirl: the @Stripe session as a top #Money2020 track as well with "FIs needing to transform into tech companies".

Digital Retail Apps @digitalretail: A1 Loving the new Google Wallet approach - huge shift from a year ago; will be adding google wallet to my app method of pymnt #Money2020

vadhri @vadhri: #money2020 - demo by Loop - very impactful

Bank Innovation @BankInnovation: Loop was very cool, and the session poorly attended! RT @thinkpayments: #Money2020 Good morning! I thought loop was cool.

ngenuity Journal @ngenuityjournal: @BankInnovation Agree - they stood out to us too. Wasn't fair to the LP360s to put them right after 7 long keynotes w/ no break. #Money2020

Scott Dueweke @Scott_Dueweke: Impressed by the Chinese and Russian energy behind alternative payments. Easy for us to think its all about us! #money2020

vadhri @vadhri: #money2020 any presentation with less slides more demo (need to see what is possible than visionary statements) is what is needed

Dave Birch @dgwbirch: #money2020 there is a long-term inexorable shift toward direct access to the funds

Dave Birch @dgwbirch: #money2020 maybe in a decade Visa/MC will be switching identity instead of payments

Jason A. Cobb @jasonacobb: What about the elephant in the room- offer fatigue? If offers are the driver to move from plastic & people are sick of offers… #money2020

Dun & Bradstreet @DnBUS: @jasonacobb Terrific pt. Encouraging consumers to define the offer types that interest them may help, but timing also important. #Money2020

PrairieCloudware @PrairieClouds: #money2020 skeptical of MCX as zombie apocalypse for Visa et al. Not easy to do what they are trying to do without committees/competitor

Thomas Noyes @noyesclt: #money2020 retailers are tired of playing by someone else's rules... The are forming the NFL of retail.

Dave Birch @dgwbirch: #money2020 good point about the BRICs, who are all developing their own debit systems

Jim Marous @JimMarous: Given innovations by big players, no more standing on sideline. Need to place payments solution bets. #paymentsroulette #Money2020

David W Pipe @DavidWPipe: China mobile commerce will explode as 3rd/4th tier cities come online, while so many players are only focused on the US market. #money2020

Cherian Abraham @cherian_abraham::#Money2020 - MCX is treasury groups leading the efforts. Without Marketing involvement, the customer value prop will be missing

Sam Maule @sammaule: So the morning TwitterChat jumps right into #MCX - as Tom Noyes put it - MCX is real. Might take 5 yrs but it is real.#money2020

Thomas Noyes @noyesclt: #money2020 MCX addresses loyalty by agreeing every retailer is different. They can support unique loyalty services in a common way

Jason A. Cobb @jasonacobb: Big innovation coming up will be more focused on access to banking 4 under served & to payments & credit for starting businesses. #Money2020

Dun & Bradstreet @DnBUS: @jasonacobb Definitely an area for startups...and also for traditional finserv players (via acquisitions). #Money2020

Sara Abernethy @saritasla: @jasonacobb @money2020 Agreed. Big data needs to be about creating experiences. Sole focus on offers is a race to the bottom. #money2020


Q2: What has been your biggest takeaway from Money2020


Jim Marous @JimMarous: A2: Takeaway - #NFC was declared dead . . . again, and again, and again #Money2020

James Wester @jameswester: You can keep saying "it's not about payments," but you still have to do payments flawlessly. That's not a parlor trick #money2020

Paul F. Doyle @pfdvv: @BofA_News biggest take away...the people, the connections, the meetings #money2020

Thomas Noyes @noyesclt: #money2020 this event is the best networking event I've ever attended.. Fantastic.

Elizabeth Dias @techmktggirl: A2: In the words of Sinatra, "the best is yet to come" w/ #Payments yet Q's still remain (strategy, fintech, penetration). #money2020

Dave Birch @dgwbirch: #money2020 a2 I think it's too big this year! It's hard to fit in all of the meetings and still see some of the sessions

Aaron McPherson @aaronmcpherson: A2: Presenters playing it safer this year #money2020

PrairieCloudware @PrairieClouds: #money2020 Biggest takeaway is the networking done. Would come again for that alone.

David W Pipe @DavidWPipe: A2: Too many players still trying to solve payment - while payment isn't broken. It's about solving other problems. #money2020

Adam Snyder @snyderstrategy: A2: In the words of Sinatra, "the best is yet to come" w/ #Payments yet Q's still remain (strategy fintech penetration) #money2020

James Ray @Rockhopper08: A2: #Money2020 insights? Consumers aren't seeking to "pay" for transactions, they are seeking to transact. Payments are ancillary.

Jim Marous @JimMarous: A2: Takeaway - Conference proved that among more than 4000 #fintech followers, nobody has all the answers #Money2020

Paul F. Doyle @pfdvv: It is TOO Big? Yes, this was said today in Vegas...but it is about the conference, not what you might imagine #money2020

Norman Guadagno @ThinkTone: My biggest disappointment with #Money2020 was not enough bling. Needed more gold $ necklaces. Oh, and that consumers are still confused.

ngenuity Journal @ngenuityjournal: @dgwbirch compares #money2020 to SXSW's growth -- need to make sure the media presence and corporatism doesn't overshadow authentic convos

Kevin Boglarsky @kmbx2ind: #money2020A2. Size of the event might have exceeded a comfortable size. Both in number of sessions and keynotesmore time for networking

Jim Marous @JimMarous: A2: Size of event dictated by size of challenge and opportunity in payments today. I wish I could have added one more. #Money2020

Xenophon Dimopoulos @XenophonD: A2: My takeaway is simple, if your business is in emerging payments and financial services, you should attend #money2020

Dave Birch @dgwbirch: #money2020 there's a limit to what the technologists can do in payments, there are regulatory contexts that need to be shifted

Sam Maule @sammaule: There are structural and regulatory blockers inhibiting major innovation in payments. Good point from @dgwbirch #money2020

Paul F. Doyle @pfdvv: Point about regulators preventing banks from innovation...very good point #money2020

Digital Retail Apps @digitalretail: A2: shopping and paying flow will be seamless & integrated - not disjointed as it is today #Money2020

Social Network Woman @Donnaantoniadis: I was impressed with @AmericanExpress and their @serve product #Money2020


Q3: What does the shopper of the future look like?


Jim Marous @JimMarous: A3: Shopper is no longer a follower, but is leading the charge with a mobile-first mentality. We need to keep up. #Money2020

Cherian Abraham @cherian_abraham: #Money2020 - Paypal defaulting to Bill Me Later as funding source in app was smart, towards building a compelling merchant value prop.

Cherian Abraham @cherian_abraham: #Money2020 - Paypal knows how to manage risk, sometimes at the expense of cust experience. Bill Me Later is Paypal finetuning its economics

Aaron McPherson @aaronmcpherson: A3: Shopper of the future will have vast information (some of it false) - challenge is going to be to penetrate the cloud #money2020

David W Pipe @DavidWPipe: A3: Shopper of the future will expect identical, seamless experience across all channels - at warp speed. #money2020

Thomas Noyes @noyesclt: #money2020 consumers and merchants will migrate toward value... Payments will evolve to dumb pipes... Something that should work.. Value

Elizabeth Dias @techmktggirl: A3: I use the term “omnichannel shopper”: digital, frictionless #CX, value & meaningful engagement during commerce exp. #money2020

Dave Birch @dgwbirch: #money2020 i do think that payments will begin to vanish from the consumer shopping experience

Perficient Fin Serv @Perficient_FS: @dgwbirch Agreed, it's all about putting it in context for the consumer or biz. #money2020

Kevin Boglarsky @kmbx2ind: #money2020 Q3. They will be more connected via apps and expectations for payments will be higher. Behind the scenes but easier

D3 Banking @D3Banking: #money2020 consumer of the future will be like consumer of today. Convenience, choice and security will direct their behavior.

Dave Birch @dgwbirch: .@aaronmcpherson visa/MC could switch merchant identities too and therefore anchor distributed reputation management #money2020

Thomas Noyes @noyesclt: #money2020 banks and V/MA are NOT the center of commerce.. They should work to support it. Few large companies excel at helping others

Bank of America @BofA_News: A3: Connected. Informed. Having an abundance of choices. ^fs #Money2020

Dun & Bradstreet @DnBUS: High expectations: "Know me"--very location & platform. RT @BofA_News A3: Connected. Informed. Having an abundance of choices. #Money2020

D3 Banking @D3Banking: #money2020 consumer of the future will more and more expect FIs to behave as retailers. This is not good news for many FIs.

Thomas Noyes @noyesclt: #money2020 networks are hard to change. They were formed around an existing value proposition... Agreement... Revenue shares... Rules . .

David W Pipe @DavidWPipe: A3: I also believe any solution that tries to dis-intermediate the banks is doomed to failure. #money2020

Bank of America @BofA_News: A3: Expects simple, seamless experiences across channels and more personalized, relevant propositions. ^fs #money2020

Thomas Noyes @noyesclt: #money2020 new networks are forming and most see them though the lens of what we have today (we do that already). The basis of competition

Kevin Boglarsky @kmbx2ind: #money2020Discover, Am, v & McCoy need to facilitate commerce. Not just payments. There are Benefits in using safe secure infrastructure

Thomas Noyes @noyesclt: #money2020 value proposition is changing.. Consumer trust is not locked in a bank... Just as commerce value is not locked in a card

Bank of America @BofA_News: A3: Data is nothing without insight and analysis. ^fs #Money2020

James Ray @Rockhopper08: A3: Future consumers will be better informed and more efficient, with higher expectations; Payments akin to electricity - utility #Money2020

Dun & Bradstreet @DnBUS: A3: Future shoppers will expect a seamless navigation btwn digital & physical. #Money2020

D3 Banking @D3Banking: Nowhere is the gap between FIs and retailers greater when it comes to serving the consumer than in how data is used.

Paul F. Doyle @pfdvv: What about B2B? ...are we, as an industry giving enough attention to B2B payments at this event? Me think, not! #money2020

Elizabeth Dias @techmktggirl: "@Apple may very well be the leader when it comes to mobile commerce." #money2020

David W Pipe @DavidWPipe: A3: Secure payment will become nothing more than a hygiene factor as solutions focus on other issues. #money2020

Bank Innovation @BankInnovation: Apple, again the elephant in the room #money2020

Dun & Bradstreet @DnBUS: A3: Retailers will have to battle for shoppers' mental space as they seek to reduce irrelevant offers. #Money2020

Thomas Noyes @noyesclt: #money2020 why isn't Apple doing more in payments? They have so much opportunity. They care about great consumer experiences

Aaron McPherson @aaronmcpherson: @noyesclt I used to think Apple had a master plan, but now I wonder if they just have bad management. #money2020

Micah Bergdale @nycmacguy: @aaronmcpherson @noyesclt Apple getting into traditional payments would be a divergence of strategy & is not who they want to be #money2020

Aaron McPherson @aaronmcpherson: @noyesclt @nycmacguy Agreed, but I worry that they're missing the window. #money2020

Jason A. Cobb @jasonacobb: Excellent point, Apple & Google occupy the same mental space as MS and IBM did in the past as the big bullies. #Money2020

Dun & Bradstreet @DnBUS: And analysis is nothing w/out the right ?s. RT @BofA_News: A3: Data is nothing without insight & analysis. ^fs #Money2020 #Money2020

Scott Dueweke @Scott_Dueweke: The aging of the population will force mobile into the mainstream, I believe....#money2020


Q4: What will it take for mobile payments to become truly mainstream?


Elizabeth Dias @techmktggirl: A4: Relevant context around payment exp itself, and creating "openness" with apps & services that solve a true cust problem. #money2020

Jim Marous @JimMarous: A4: #Mobile pymnts need perceived security, ease of use and guarantees of cards. Authentication solution = Tipping point #Money2020

James Ray @Rockhopper08: A4: Mobile payments will become mainstream when "open architecture" permits coexistence - no walled gardens! #Money2020

Paul F. Doyle @pfdvv: Mobile payments becoming mainstream is a function of time avid famiiariyh...and consolidation of methods #money2020

Social Network Woman @Donnaantoniadis: So difficult to change consumer behavior - #money2020

Micah Bergdale @nycmacguy: Juniper Research: mobile ticketing, specifically transport, will drive adoption of mobile payments. We are seeing that in the US #money2020

Arnold Ochoa @a8a: In order to become mainstream mobile payments must be ubiquitous, convenient and add value to current payment methods #money2020

PrairieCloudware @PrairieClouds: Mobile payments tech in its current state is still a solution looking for a problem. Cards are simple, fast and secure enough.

Jim Marous @JimMarous: A4: #Mobile Pymnts Mainstream: Friction needs to be eliminated for the merchant, the consumer and the bank #Money2020

Aaron McPherson @aaronmcpherson: Q4: when will mobile payments be mainstream? A4: in digital media, it already is. #money2020

Lanny Byers @lannybyers: Dave Birch at the BofA chat says mobile app is not about payment but about the experience. I agree! #money2020 @chyppings @BofA_News

Thomas Noyes @noyesclt: #money2020 mobile pos pmts are dependent on value... And changing consumer behavior. Apple has highest trust to change behavior

Bank of America @BofA_News: A4: Simpler, faster, secure & more value-add for the shopper & economically beneficial for merchants & financial institutions ^fs #money2020

Kevin Boglarsky @kmbx2ind: #money2020 Mobile going mainstream: have to remove a pain point for consumer or remove friction is a process. Value for the consumer?

Sam Maule @sammaule: Technology impacts payments. Visa's CMO on payments strategy "We design around the flick". #money2020

Bank of America @BofA_News: A4: When we have a business model that retailers and banks can get behind… ^fs #money2020

JamesRonca @jamesronca: Mobile payments will be mainstream when they are as easy and convenient as pulling a card from your wallet. #Money2020

Dun & Bradstreet @DnBUS: A4: For mobile payments to go mainstream, need cooperation among the mobile carriers, merchants & financial institutions. #Money2020

Jim Marous @JimMarous: A4: 'Simple' is the new black with mobile. Mobile payments become mainstream when all processes are streamlined. #Money2020

Cherian Abraham @cherian_abraham: #Money2020 - To deliver customer value, one needs context..and lots of it. Which is what makes Banks and Google for example irreplaceable.

Sara Abernethy @saritasla: Mobile payment alone does not change the process of checkout in retail. Shopper still waits in line with existing wallets. #money2020

Bank of America @BofA_News: A4: AND there is a compelling enough use case to incent customers to change their behavior (beyond the payment) ^fs #money2020

Bank of America @BofA_News: For mobile payments to succeed they need to be universally accepted. ^fs #money2020

Social Network Woman @Donnaantoniadis: Consumer education is key to changing consumer behavior - #money2020

Bank Innovation @BankInnovation: Huge gap in customer awareness to be overcome to advance mobile payments @techmktggirl #money2020

Cherian Abraham @cherian_abraham: #Money2020 Banks & Google are positioned in a way to capture a lot of customer context and can deliver value if & when they make use of it.

Paul F. Doyle @pfdvv: If I have to think about the payment instead about the purchase, then there is a big problem with the payment system #money2020

James Wester @jameswester: Educating consumers IS important. But sometimes, maybe frequently, it's not dumb consumers. Sometimes the product just sucks. #money2020

D3 Banking @D3Banking: #money2020 How will mobile payments overcome the app apocalypse? Asking consumers to open multiple apps ultimately fails.

Dun & Bradstreet @DnBUS: A4: Must have a value prop that resonates: what does this do that my card doesn't do today? #Money2020

Arnold Ochoa @a8a:I don't need different kinds of banknotes to buy in different places, why should I need a diff app to pay on different venues #money2020

PrairieCloudware @PrairieClouds: #money2020 Mobile payment apps are a failed strategy at least in the USA. Too many and too irritating to search through apps, find, use.

John Muller @jmuller: @noyesclt makes the point: even with strong product, persuading consumers to change behavior is hard and slow. #money2020

Micah Bergdale @nycmacguy: @bytemarkinc processing millions of $ in mobile payments with ticketing. Amazing we are doing more than Isis & PayPal/HomeDepot #money2020


Bank of America @BofA_News: Thanks to everyone who got up early here in Vegas to join the #Money2020 Future of Payments Innovation chat.

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