USA TODAY International Edition

The next big thing?

Smartphone payments are still waiting to take off, but momentum is building

- Talking Tech Jefferson Graham

According to 451 Research, less than 10% of U.S. consumers pay with mobile, and only 25% of U.S. retailers even offer the contactles­s terminals.

LAS VEGAS – Paying with your phone at a retailer is faster than pulling out and swiping a credit card, yet despite an aggressive rollout by companies such as Apple, Samsung and Google, it has never taken off, with just 10% of consumers paying with mobile. The reason? Not enough incentive for consumers to make the switch and set up their phones to pay. That hasn’t stopped hundreds of companies from trying to tweak the technology that will get consumers to ditch plastic when they’re at the grocery store, mall or gas station. When consumers use mobile payments, they can be pitched deals while they shop, thanks to the location to in a part, credit data a card) giants smartphone provides. like McDonald’s, (as That’s opposed why, Whole Foods, Trader Joe’s, Chevron Gas stations, Walgreens and Panera Bread offer contactles­s payment systems at their stores. “Every year, we say this is the year mobile pay will really take off,” says Jordan McKee of 451 Research. “But the credit card still works well. There’s nothing wrong with it.” According to 451, only 25% of U.S. retailers even offer the contactles­s terminals that accept mobile payments. (Missing in action — giants like CVS, Home Depot, Target and Burger King.) If the recent Money2020 conference is any indication, tech companies clearly are not giving up:

❚ Biometrics. The new iPhone X, out in November, unlocks the device with facial recognitio­n, which Apple says is safer and more reliable than the old way, the thumbprint. Many of the firms exhibiting here say facial recognitio­n just isn’t enough. Like two-factor authentica­tion, in which you have to log in twice with passwords to connect to a website, they believe the even more effective way to connect is a combinatio­n of signing in with your eyes, facial expression­s and voice. “A single biometric does not work,” says Rob Douglas, CEO of Torontobas­ed start-up BioConnect. His firm showed off a platform that registers a user of a phone by blinking the eyes, moving the face back and forth and reading numbers and words aloud. With traditiona­l biometrics, a person could add his fingerprin­t to someone else’s phone. “We make sure it really is you,” Douglas says.

❚ Fingerprin­t. An entreprene­ur from the United Kingdom brought his “FingoPay,” a fingerprin­t reader for those who don’t want to bother with having their phones or even credit cards nearby. After your finger is matched to the credit card, you’re in business. “If someone takes your mobile phone, you’ve lost the ability to pay” with traditiona­l methods, says Nick Dryden of FingoPay. With his system, “you become the wallet.”

❚ Implanted chips. The Wisconsin team that implanted microchips in their employees over the summer were at Money2020, saying their way to pay — by sensor placing — was your more implanted efficient hand than mobile over a pay. “Way easier,” says Third Square Market president Patrick McMullen.

❚ Siri. Royal Bank of Canada recently launched a service using Apple’s voiceenabl­ed assistant Siri to pay bills by ordering it to do so on the phone. Rami Thabet, RBC’s vice president of mobile, said that since dipping its toes into voice pay, “we’ve seen consistent growth.”

❚ Traditiona­l credit card firms. Visa and Mastercard were at the conference, showing concept solutions that use biometrics and voice to authentica­te a transactio­n to a consumer base weary of incidents of massive retail fraud in the past few years at everywhere from Target and TJ Maxx to Sonic and Chipotle. Mastercard, which just announced that it was ditching the relic of another era — the signature — to authentica­te a transactio­n in April, displayed new concepts in shopping via augmented reality (mixing animation and real life) and virtual reality (don a headset and bring the shopping to your eyes). Rival Visa touted traditiona­l biometrics like face, fingerprin­t and voice for use with its own mobile wallet, Visa Checkout, for mobile to The go authentica­tion beyond pay gimmicks to really just are on succeed, payments, sales. great, it but needs says for Brendan Research. Miller, an He analyst envisions with offers Forrester like ordering ahead and skipping the line for pickup, or other incentives. Miller’s vision of the mobile pay future: “I walk into Starbucks and it recognizes me instantly from my voice. I order my latte and there’s no pulling out the credit card, because my voice is all the authentica­tion Starbucks need. That’s where everything should be going.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O ??
GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States