Mobile proximity payments have to date proven lacklustre and despite hundreds of millions spent on developing these platforms, consumer take-up remains low.
While the reasons for this are many, the application of loyalty rewards and benefits via the digital wallet is now seen by many as potentially the killer app that will help to finally ignite the long simmering mobile proximity payment market.
“Ovum’s research highlights that 53% of consumers globally report they’ve either used or are interested in redeeming offers and coupons with their handsets, while 44% have used or are interested using their mobile device to pay for things in store and restaurants,” explains Gilles Ubaghs, Senior Analyst, Financial Services Technology at Ovum.
“Combined rewards and offers in conjunction with mobile payments are set to be a common feature in the near term as a means to reach consumers and drive spending in new ways. Already today new services such as the Coles Mobile Wallet, with FlyBuys integration and mobile payment services from the likes of Starbucks, McDonalds and others shows investment here is high and growing.”
As highlighted in a recent Ovum report, launching these services is easier said than done as the loyalty market itself continues to undergo a disruptive evolution just as powerful as that impacting the payments space. In particular the loyalty market is rapidly becoming inundated with offers and daily deals leading to a growing need for more personalized and targeted offers to consumers to help maintain engagement levels among an increasingly fickle audience.
Achieving this from a merchant or bank perspective requires developing extensive Big Data capabilities that extend beyond just traditional top level basket transaction data, and must now include applying analytics on a range of consumer data down to location and SKU specific data.
This will require greater levels of cooperation between payment providers and merchants and represents a growing market opportunity for big hitting third party loyalty and analytics vendors such as Aimia, Oracle, IBM as well as opportunities for emerging start up players.
“Payment providers today already hold a rich seam of transaction data that can be and already is applied to loyalty programs,” continues Ubaghs.
“However, much of this data remains largely unstructured and the needs of modern loyalty programs remains largely ill-defined. Wallet providers who can crack this and create a broader payments loyalty ecosystem have the potential to both drive mobile wallet usage and create new consumer retail experiences beyond the POS.”
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