10 Aug 2011

Survey says consumers don’t trust Apple, Google, or Facebook when it comes to mobile payments




Findings from a survey conducted on 500 U.S. based “online shoppers” by Ogilvy & Mather, one of the world’s largest advertising firms, suggests that consumers don’t trust companies like Apple, Facebook, or Google when it comes to mobile payments.

In fact, Facebook scored the worst, being trusted by only 12.1% of the people surveyed. Microsoft, at 22.3%, is trusted by more people than Google, at 19.5%. Apple is trusted by a little more than 1 out of every 5 consumers, 22.9%, but they’re still behind the United States Postal Service at 24.6% trust. Who is leading? It shouldn’t come as a surprise that it’s Visa, MasterCard, and American Express, with 39.6%, 35.9%, and 35.8% respectively. What’s shocking is how many people trust PayPal, at 34.3%. What does this mean for you? Not much since right now the current mobile payment landscape is a battlefield between card issuers such as Visa and MasterCard, operators, who actually teamed up to form Isis in an attempt to get the ball rolling on mobile payments, and the new kids on the block, like Apple, Google, Nokia, etc.
Who is going to win the fight for your new age wallet? It’s difficult to say, but we hope we don’t end up in a situation where your banking information is tied to one particular ecosystem. Consumers shouldn’t have to feel terrified at the thought of their mobile payments not working if they switch operators or get bored of Facebook or want to switch from iOS to Android. In Europe the standard that’s currently being pushed is called SWP, short for Single Wire Protocol. It’s a way for the NFC element in your phone to connect to your SIM card to prove you are who you say you are, sort of like how you’re required to show a photo ID sometimes when making credit card purchases. In the UK it’s currently being rolled out, but only on a select crop of dumb phones no one really wants to use.
With time this will all make sense and sort itself out, but right now we just want to see more NFC enabled phones on the market!

Filled Under:

0 comments:

Post a Comment