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I was invited to participate in the "Mobile wallets" panel at the Europe's Customer Festival. I don't exactly know what we will be discussing as the truth is: there are no mobile wallets...
There are individual single-issuer apps; there are generic empty "containers"; there are "walled gardens"; but there are no true mobile wallets as such. The closest attempt was made by Google - they even tried to extend their pure mobile wallet to the physical world via a card (smart move!). However, they were shot in the knee...
What is a killer mobile wallet? Mobile payments industry should learn lessons from the successful mobile music industry. Let's look at Apple's iPod - after all, it defines and owns the "mobile music" category.
iPod is all about unparalleled user experience. It's (a) open - iPod owner (and not Apple or record companies or somebody else) decides what nonpirated music is stored on it, (b) flexible - music can be downloaded from iTunes or CDs; and (c) ubiquitous - iTunes allows you to buy almost any music you want.
[As a side note, it took Apple - and Steve Jobs personally - incredible effort and dedication to deliver that user experience.]*
Open, flexible, ubiquitous To become the turning point in mobile payments, the killer mobile wallet has to be similar to iPod+iTunes: (a) open - it's the consumer, i.e. wallet owner (and not a bank, mobile operator or handset manufacturer) who should be able to decide what goes into his/her wallet; (b) flexible - we store much more than just payment cards in our wallets (think of receipts, for example) and, most importantly, (c) ubiquitous.
As for "open", have a closer look at what MasterPass has to offer, especially in physical retail. "Flexible": that requires merchants to move away from physical receipts and physical loyalty cards - consumer made it clear that's what they want/expect; some good solutions for all that are already available (btw, MasterPass is one of them, to a degree). "Ubiquitous" is the simplest task - please read on.
Who is capable of developing the killer mobile wallet? Not banks - they are too big and slow, too narrow-minded, and they don't work well in a group (after all, mobile wallet is a multi-issuer product); not mobile operators - they are simply not part of the equation (the same goes for Apple, Google, Facebook et al.) If someone stands a chance, it has to be an entity connected or related to merchants. Not the acquirers - too many of them, and in direct competition with each other.
And the winner is... EMV, i.e. Visa, MasterCard, Amex and China Union Pay. They control the "rails" between the retailers and the issuers. If they do unite (to prevent "contactless EMV madness" situation from happening again), they can build a truly open and ubiquitous mobile wallet. Worldwide. Most importantly - they can do that using existing infrastructure!
The secret sauce It's dead simple: a physical uber-card with EMV-owned 16-digit token. Talking about ubiquity - there are over 50m retail outlets worldwide that accept payment cards.
That physical uber-card is controlled via the "mobile wallet" app. Simples!
How it works Consumer registers his/her bank cards with the mobile wallet; then it's "business as usual", both for the consumer and the retailer - no change of habit or modus operandi.
Via a mobile app, consumer chooses one of the registered bank cards for a given transaction - just as you would with a conventional leather wallet. Consumer then presents the physical uber-card - again, a familiar step, both for the consumer and the retailer. Transaction is routed to the corresponding scheme first where the uber-card's token is mapped to the bank card which consumer chose for that transaction during the previous step. Details of that chosen bank card are then sent to the appropriate issuer in the normal way. The transactions are treated as "cardholder present" (rates/rules is the EMV's call).
The killer mobile wallet A smartphone and a single physical card, that's your iTunes and iPod. Open, ubiquitous, simple and convenient. What's not to love?
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* According to Walter Isaacson, to ensure that no other company could replicate iPod, Apple signed an exclusive deal with Toshiba - at that time, the only manufacturer of miniature hard drives suited for that application.
To secure industry's participation (i.e. content), Jobs personally courted and sweat-talked record companies into agreeing to sell music via his platform.
When they agreed, the task was far from over. Jobs knew that to succeed he had to offer music as individual tracks, not as albums. Resistance from the music industry was huge. Even after Jobs managed to overcome the objections of record companies, he still had to seek personal consent from individual artists too to split up the albums.
He personally (!) persuaded top artists including Madonna, Bono, Mick Jagger and Dr Dre. He even met with "niche" musicians, such as trumpeter Wynton Marsalis.
Only then Apple was able to deliver the "turning point for the music industry", to use Jobs' own words. Following the launch, even Apple expected to sell one million songs in six months. They sold a million songs in six... days.
This content is provided by an external author without editing by Finextra. It expresses the views and opinions of the author.
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