Showing posts with label PayPal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PayPal. Show all posts

19 Jan 2014

10 Ways to Pay Using Your Mobile Smartphone



By Jon Norris at TNW:

The mobile wallet dream may still be a way off for the average consumer, but a cashless and cardless utopia is closer than ever before for the adventurous technophile.

Making a purchase in-store, paying back a generous pal, and even transferring money to a foreign country can now be done from the screen of a smartphone – and this niche market is heating up.

If you want an early taste of the coming mobile wallet revolution, here are ten apps and services to test drive.


Peer-to-peer payments


PayPal



The granddaddy of online payments is still alive and kicking, processing north of $300 million per day. Now boasting apps on all major smartphone platforms and a mobile-friendly website (as well as a separate card reader and merchant products), PayPal is the most established mobile payment service.

Although PayPal’s main selling point – send money to someone using just their email address – still works exactly as it always has, a reputation for hit-and-miss customer service and higher fees than challenger services is beginning to make the poster child for mobile cash look a little over the hill.

That said, it’s still leaps and bounds ahead of most financial institutions with its new fully-native checkout service for merchants.


GoCardless

Ostensibly a no-nonsense system for collecting recurring fees, the UK only company GoCardless is a great way to collect one-off payments, with flat fees of 1 percent, capped at £2.

As the name might suggest, GoCardless is all about ditching credit cards altogether by relying on the Direct Debit system to power payments. Payers simply provide their bank account details and the payment will be sucked from their bank account and into your own.

There’s no mobile app, but the responsive forms throughout the site ensure that you’ll have no problem arranging payments from a smartphone browser with no plastic involved.


TransferWise


Jetsetting type with friends littering the globe? Clever crowd-powered currency swappers TransferWise will not only charge you much lower fees than a bank, but will give you a much better exchange rate too.

This financial sorcery is actually deceptively simple – when you make a transfer, the money never leaves its country of origin. Your deposit is matched with another in your recipient’s country, and sent out domestically.

A usability dream, TransferWise’s mobile site will have you flinging payments around the globe in minutes.

Your bank of choice

With most big banks now sporting a mobile app of their own, you no longer need to go in-branch or use ATMs to make transfers. In the United States, Chase, Bank of America, and many others have mobile apps that can take care of most day-to-day banking tasks. Some even allow you to cash cheques by taking a picture of them.

HSBC in the UK has a dedicated app, PingIt, to take care of simple money transfers between individuals.


Venmo


For those who like payments with a social networking twist (don’t all yell at once), Venmo offers free peer-to-peer transfers from its app to mobile numbers, email addresses or Facebook accounts.

You’ll get a feed of transactions going on between contacts, and this service has some of the most competitive pricing around – Venmo balance, bank and debit card transfers are totally gratis – you’ll only incur a fee if using a credit card.



Going shopping

Square


If PayPal is the granddaddy of online peer-to-peer payments, Square is surely the grandmomma of card-reader dongles. Effectively turning your iPhone or iPad into a cash register with a tiny card reader inserted into the headphone jack, Square is the progenitor of similar products from Verifone, Groupon and even PayPal themselves.

Now processing tens of millions of dollars per day, Square has branched out into entirely cardless payments, allowing customers to settle up simply by checking-in at the store via the Square Wallet app. When they check out, the cashier confirms their identity and the Square payment system handles the rest.


Coin

Coin isn’t a purely phone-based solution – instead it’s a credit card that can imitate any of your other plastic, letting you leave them at home and simply select which you’d like to charge before swiping.

Coin is inextricably linked to your smartphone, both in the sense that the Coin app lets you manage your various cards and add new ones to the device, and in that a low-power Bluetooth sensor connects the two, and sounds an alarm if you leave your card behind.

Coin is US-only for the time being, and is expected to launch this summer.





Google Wallet


Another US-only option and the only NFC-powered app to make our list, Google Wallet does just about everything you might want from a mobile wallet app. Pay by tapping your phone at the checkout, send money to friends with just an email address; you can even order a plastic card that will let you withdraw your Google Wallet balance from ATMs.

Initially conceived as a partnership between Google and carriers (who would ship the app on their smartphones), Google Wallet had a few false starts and some major staff changes before re-emerging as the standalone product it is today.

With NFC becoming standard across smartphones (Apple being the notable holdout here), and tap-to-pay now baked into the Android operating system, Google Wallet’s second coming could become a force to be reckoned with.


Clinkle

This mysterious startup, famous for raising one of the biggest rounds of seed funding in Valley history (a cool $25 million), is promising to change the way we view and use currency wholesale. This lofty ambition is backed by a secretive product that was impressive enough to ensnare some of the highest profile investors around.

Nobody is quite sure what form the finished product will take – it’s a mobile app, it lets you send money to friends, and there are whispers it has something to do with Bitcoin and other algorithmic currencies.

The details are scarce, save an infuriatingly-cryptic promo video, but if you’re a mobile wallet enthusiast, Clinkle is one to keep an eye on.



TabbedOut


Built specifically for the restaurant and bar crowd, TabbedOut allows you to pay with your smartphone at any establishment that supports the app, as well as a bevy of other smart features. You can see your tab in real time (great for avoiding that end-of-meal bill shock after one too many bottles of wine), add a tip, split the bill with fellow diners, and pay straight from the app.

TabbedOut also lets you build a relationship with your favorite eateries – you can leave written feedback once you’ve paid your bill, and you may get vouchers back for next time!

This year could well be the defining chapter of the mobile wallet story. The contenders are growing both more numerous and more usable, and increasing adoption means consumers are now almost as likely to have a smartphone in their pocket as they are a regular wallet.

The question is, who will win out? Several carriers have launched mobile wallet products which have flopped (UK network O2 announced the closure of their wallet product just a few days ago), and no company has emerged as a clear leader yet.

The NFC question also remains – a solution cannot be truly mainstream these days unless Apple supports it, and the iPhone is the last big NFC holdout.

It’s foolish to throw around predictions in a market this immature – the only thing that’s certain is that 2014 looks to be a mighty interesting year in the mobile wallet space.



Via
http://thenextweb.com/mobile/2014/01/18/10-ways-pay-without-ever-whipping-wallet/#!sBIXR



28 Nov 2013

PayPal Makes Prepaid Gift Cards Easier



By Chris Crum at WebProNews

PayPal announced that it now supports prepaid gift cards in that consumers can use them anywhere that accepts PayPal.

This is just in time for the holidays, when many people will be getting these cards as gifts. As PayPal explains, these gifts often come with a burden attached to them.

“A lot of e-commerce sites can’t or won’t accept it right off the shelf—even if other credit or debit cards of the same card brands are allowed,” says PayPal’s Ed Lee in a blog post. “Many consumers are forced to call the card issuer or go to a special website to register a billing address before trying to pay with the prepaid gift card. It might sound simple, but in PayPal’s recent usability study, it was found that only 1 person out of every 4 was able to register their billing address and complete an online purchase successfully. Thankfully, PayPal has offered a way to resolve the issue. Now, no more of this hassle is required if you use prepaid gift cards through PayPal Checkout.”

“After our customers voiced this particular pain point again and again, we knew we had to fix it once and for all,” he adds. “After months of research and investigations, we discovered a patent-pending and innovative way to allow the usage of prepaid gift cards so that you can seamlessly apply them to the purchase of products and services anywhere PayPal is accepted – just in time for the holidays!”

This goes for cards from Visa, American Express, MasterCard, and Discover.

About a year ago, PayPal began offering its own prepaid cards, but only to those who have credit/debit cards or bank accounts connected to PayPal.



Via WebProNews.


15 Jan 2013

Must Have Apps for Bloggers

Working remotely is one of the biggest benefits of bloggers. You have the freedom and control of setting up a mobile office with your laptop wherever you please. The increased popularity of mobile devices and the plethora of new apps available allow even more freedom than before. Manage your blog and your business from the comfort of your tablet or smartphone. Read on to learn our top 10 apps for bloggers.




1. Dropbox

Keep your mobile blogging lifestyle by accessing your files no matter where you are. Dropbox allows you to access all of your files from any registered device.


2. WordPress & Blogger

If you happen to host your blog one of these popular blogging platforms, you can conveniently update your site while out and about, read postings & comments, edit postings, manage comments and perform other tasks.


3. PayPal

Many Infolinks bloggers monetize their sites via PayPal. This mobile app allows you to completely manage your Paypal account with a wireless connection.


4. Evernote

Quickly access for easy organization of all your videos, images and other items saved on your phone with Evernote, the archive app.


5. Adobe PhotoShop Express

Easily use the professional photo editing capabilities of Adobe Photoshop to touch up or edit photos and graphics from your mobile device.


6. Hootsuite

Manage all of your top social media platforms including Twitter, Facebook and Foursquare from this easy to manage mobile app. Hootesuite is a great way for you to update all of your social media platforms and monitor what is going on while on the move.


7. SkypeFor important business meetings and phone calls, Skype is the only way to go. Stay in touch with your partners, guest bloggers or anyone else for free with an internet connection and your mobile device.


8. Google Analytics

Google Analytics is a must! Discover who is reading your blog posts, where they are coming from and how many site visits and page views your blog is receiving. Effectively analyzing this data will reveal which blog posts are the most popular to help you optimally tailor your content for the future.


9. Byline

Reading other blogs and articles on the regular is crucial for good bloggers to get even better. With byline, you can read the latest news from your favorite sites and blogs, even when you’re offline. It easily syncs with your Google reader account. Overcome your writing block with this useful app


10. Infolinks Real-Time

Infolinks mobile app, delivers real-time reports so you can always know exactly how your Infolinks ads are performing on your blog. Check on your payments and have a fast connect to our blog and other info as well.






This entry was posted in Blogger Tips


15 Dec 2011

PayPal to Challenge Groupon in Daily Deals

By at Mashable:
EBay’s PayPal unit plans to take on Groupon in early 2012 with a new service that will offer coupons based on users’ buying habits and mobile phone locations.
PayPal has partnered with 200 U.S. merchants for the offering, says Anuj Nayar, a PayPal rep. The service first reported in Bloomberg, will launch in the first quarter of next year. Nayar declined to say who the merchants are.
Though others, such as Facebook and Yelp, have attempted and failed to compete in the daily deals segment, Nayar says PayPal will use the knowledge of its 103 million customers’ preferences and mobile technology from the recently acquired Where to make the offers more relevant than what Groupon, LivingSocial and Amazon (which is also a LivingSocial investor), currently offer.
“As a 40 year-old male, I don’t think I’ll ever use a coupon for 50% off bikini wax,” Nayar says, referring to irrelevant deals from competitors. Nayar says the goal is to use laser beam-like targeting to make sure the offers are germane.
PayPal’s entry could shake up the daily deals category, which is estimated to more than double to $4.17 billion in 2015, according to researcher BIA/Kelsey.
The report comes after other recent attempts to grow PayPal’s estimated $4.7 billion total payment volume, including a Facebook app designed to send money to friends unveiled in November and a mobile payment system that made its debut that month.
Meanwhile, PayPal’s parent company, eBay, has been offering online daily deals for years, Nayar says.