Categories
Close
Menu
Menu
Close
Search
Search

Featured Articles

RSS
123

Opinion Articles

Opinion

'Mobile Money Monday' at Mobile World Congress

Mark

Share:

Print

Rate article:

No rating
Rate this article:
No rating

James Rosewell writes:

Monday’s Mobile World Congress conference agenda dedicated one of 4 streams to Mobile Money - Transfers, Transactions and Technology allowing all stakeholders to share experiences and debate the future of Mobile and Money.

Two types of service dominated presentations and panel discussions; Near Field Communication (NFC) technology enabling payment at traditional Point of Sale (PoS), and the Mobile Wallet replacing plastic or cash.

The Mobile Wallet is gaining traction in the developing world as a means of securely receiving money sent from relatives who’ve emigrated to the developed world, needing to send money home for relatives. Once established money can be transferred in country, bills paid and financial affairs managed via the small screen of the mobile.

Ultimately this replaces the need for cash and an agent to handle it improving security, reducing fraud and lowering costs. Focus on the large unbanked population and their need is driving transaction growth and customer adoption. MCB Mobile and Fundamo have partnered in Pakistan to bring such services to a potential 90m people who’ve never held a bank account but either do or in the near future will have access to a mobile phone. Nokia announced Nokia Money and a trial in Pune, India, bringing financial services to both banked and unbanked before national deployment later in the year.

In the developed world NFC still dominates the agenda. Japan have deployed 60m NFC capable handsets into the market. However only 20m are being used for NFC. Where they are being used coupons and direct marketing is the application rather than paying for main stream goods and services. Transport related payments for parking and tolls also represent a significant niche. Retailers reluctance to deploy NFC capable POS equipment is surely a key barrier to growth. Even in Japan it is only the high volume, high speed retailers such as McDonalds that are prepared to make the investment.

A trusted brand is an important component for success when deploying mobile money services. Nokia are the number one brand of all brands in India, a key factor in their decision to start in India. MCB are a trusted brand in Pakistan whilst Fundamo are unheard of. Zain Group a Kuwait based telecoms company have secured 12m customers in 8 countries in just over 1 year from launch through partnerships with existing brands. Trusted brands in the developed world will need to work together to drive adoption.

Whilst enabling technology is well established standards are essential to ensure interoperability between different organisations and ultimately providing customers the ability to move money without limitations. Ultimately companies that have not worked with each other before need to form strong partnerships as no one organisation is in a position to provide the end to end service. Forming such strong partnerships in the face of very long lead times to yield a return on investment is providing particularly difficult in some markets and preventing growth. A strong regulator is needed to prioritise Mobile Money, mandate interoperability and provide a framework that allows all parties to benefit.

With so many companies involved in the provision of Mobile Money services the key questions that remains unanswered is “how can everyone make a profit without charging the customer more?” A partial answer is in the form of lower operating costs. However there will need to be an acceptance in developed markets among the financial industry that cannibalisation of existing services will occur and lower margins will be the result.

For NFC to be successful the top selling mobile phones will need to include NFC as standard. It’s clear the general public are not going to purchase a mobile because it supports NFC. This means mobile networks and handset manufactures will need an incentive to make the investment. Apple, HTC, Samsung, Noka, LG, Motorola to name but a few are unlikely to increase the price of their top selling handsets to include NFC without a compelling business case. Such a business case appears a long way away.

Mobile World Congress 2010

 

Comments

Collapse Expand Comments (0)
You don't have permission to post comments.

Recent Podcasts

ExclusiveJohan Lodenius of MediaTek talks about wearable devices, smartphone evolution and the importance of driving costs down

This year's Mobile World Congress was notable for the number of product launches by handset manufacturers. To get a better understanding of smartphone manufacturing, we spoke to Johan Lodenius of semiconductor company MediaTek.

He gave us a simple overview of how 'fabless' manufacturing works, discussed developments in smartphones and wearable devices, contemplated the end of the PC era and talked about the importance of driving costs down.

ExclusiveMobile payments, new smartphones, wearable devices, connected cars, CeBIT and David Cameron

This week's programme opens with a quick look at David Cameron's commitment to 5G technology and the Internet of Things, which was made in a speech at CeBIT.

Iain and Mark then move on to talk about the other big mobile news headlines from the past few days, including the forthcoming Paym m-payment service, new HTC and LG smartphones, the growth of Chinese handset manufacturers, wearable devices, in-car connectivity and damaged iPhones.

ExclusiveThe rise of OTT messaging and the future of SMS: we talk to Stacy Adams of mBlox

Messaging was very much on the agenda at Mobile World Congress this year, following Facebook's announcement that it was planning to acquire WhatsApp in a 19 billion dollar deal. So if the future for this type of internet-based 'over the top' messaging service looks good, what does this mean for SMS?

To find out more, we spoke to Stacy Adams of mBlox to learn what was happening in the messaging world, to find out how SMS is being integrated with mobile apps - and to discover some of the other ways SMS was being used by businesses today.

ExclusiveWe talk about 4G LTE coverage and device sensors with OpenSignal at Mobile World Congress

Even at Mobile World Congress, the relevance of the mobile network operator can sometimes be forgotten. So for a different perspective on this year's event, we spoke to Samuel Johnston from British mobile crowd-sourcing firm OpenSignal.

Samuel discussed the announcements from MWC14 and OpenSignal's latest report into 4G LTE coverage around the world, as well as giving us an exclusive insight into OpenSignal's next research subject.

RSS
First567810121314Last

Follow thefonecast.com

Archive Calendar

«May 2026»
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
27282930123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
1234567

Archive