Categories
Close
Menu
Menu
Close
Search
Search

Featured Articles

RSS
123

Opinion Articles

News

Almost a billion people are expected to be using mobile ticketing by 2018

Mark

Share:

Print

Rate article:

No rating
Rate this article:
No rating

A new report from Juniper Research has forecast that 954 million mobile phone users will be using their handsets for mobile ticketing by 2018. That’s more than double this year’s anticipated total of 458 million people worldwide, with most of the growth coming from transport-related services.

Image

The report notes that the adoption of mobile boarding passes by airlines has risen dramatically since Barcoded Boarding Passes (BCBPs) were adopted internationally in 2010. It also notes that mTickets have been adopted by metro rail services in Europe and the USA, although Scandinavian metro services have used mobile tickets for several years. Boston’s MBTA, which introduced mobile ticketing late last year in partnership with Masabi, found that mobile transactions accounted for 10% of ticket sales within seven weeks of launch.

However, the report pointed out that the short-term outlook for mobile NFC ticketing was less optimistic, with a lack of implementation standards and relatively slow transaction speeds causing a problem.

Dr Windsor Holden, author of the report and Research Director with Juniper Research, said “We had already scaled back our forecasts for NFC Ticketing deployments in the wake of Apple’s decision not to include an NFC chipset in the iPhone 5. Given the outstanding technical issues and the continuing failure of NFC stakeholders to communicate the value proposition to transport operators, further downward revisions were required; we do not envisage anything other than ad hoc deployments in the immediate future.”

[Whitepaper; report]

Comments

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

Recent Podcasts

ExclusiveTesco gets into smartphones, Facebook gets into advertising... and O2 gets into trouble

We start this week's podcast with Tesco's plans for a Hudl-branded smartphone. Next comes some potentially good news about the 'patent wars' affecting the mobile industry - although there's certainly no sign of a ceasefire.

Later we discuss an announcement from Facebook about its mobile advertising scheme, an unfortunate mistake for O2's Travel service, a new 20 megapixel camera-phone and an automotive investment by Nokia.

ExclusiveSeven days of mobile industry news, from money transfers to monster tracking

Telefonica sets up its own mobile advertising business, Mozilla puts an interim CEO in place and Nokia suspends sales of its flagship Windows 8.1 RT tablet: all topics for discussion in this week's podcast.

We're also talking about the future growth of Orange Money, EE's online activity, mobile broadband growth and the Loch Ness monster being spotted on Apple iPhones.

ExclusiveAn introduction to embedded mobile security with Loic Hamon of Inside Secure

When the topics of mobile technology and security are discussed, the conversation can end up focussing on third-party software solutions.

Inside Secure has a different perspective. It's a specialist in embedded security; building protection in from the start. To learn more, Mark Bridge caught up with Loic Hamon, Vice President of Corporate Development at Inside Secure, at the company's hospitality suite during Mobile World Congress.

RSS
First34568101112Last

Follow thefonecast.com

Archive Calendar

«July 2026»
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
293012345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
272829303112
3456789

Archive