TSYS partner with Cassis for mobile NFC payments (US, Singapore)

US payment processor, TSYS has inked a partnership deal with Cassis International, a Singapore-based Company to provide secure mobile payment, loyalty and commerce functionality.

Cassis is a mobile trusted service manager for banks, retailers, transit operators and mobile service providers and is globally certified by Visa and MasterCard.

Mobile Payment launches nationally at Starbucks in the USA

The coffee retail chain, Starbucks has announced that all of its USA based stores are now accepting payments via mobile phones. This national program now includes nearly 6,800 company-operated stores and more than 1,000 Starbucks in U.S. Target locations.

According to Brady Brewer, Vice President Starbucks Card and Brand Loyalty, today, one in five Starbucks transactions is made using a Starbucks Card and mobile payment will extend the way their customers experience and use their Starbucks Card.

To use mobile payment at Starbucks, customers just need to download the free Starbucks Card Mobile App for select BlackBerry smartphones, iPhone or iPod touch mobile devices. More than one-third of U.S. Starbucks customers use smartphones, of which nearly three quarters use BlackBerry smartphone or iPhone mobile devices.

In addition to the mobile payment capability, the app allows customers to manage their Starbucks Card account, check their card balance, reload their card with any major credit card (iPhone users can also use the PayPal feature), check their My Starbucks Rewards status and find a nearby Starbucks store with the store locator feature.

Customers can pay with their smartphone by holding their mobile device in front of a scanner on the countertop and scan the Starbucks Card Mobile App’s on-screen barcode to make a purchase. Customers have successfully adopted this technology in test markets in Seattle, Northern California, New York and more than 1,000 Starbucks in U.S. Target stores.

Deutsche Telekom joins Mpass (Germany)

Deutsche Telekom (DT) has reportedly joined the Mpass mobile payment initiative founded by Vodafone Germany and O2 Germany.

DT’s membership boosts the target base of Mpass to over 20 million pre-registered post-paid mobile customers. The system can also be used by pre-paid customers and customers of other mobile networks with a bank account in Germany.

The operators’ service caters to nearly 70 million bank and mobile customers across the nation and provides them an experience of online shopping on their mobile phone or PC. This new payment system assures a high degree of security.

TTSL to launch 3G services on Diwali (India)

Tata Teleservices has announced to launch 3G services on Diwali day next month in all the nine circles. With this move the company will become first private sector Telcom Company to launch 3G services. State-owned BSNL and MTNL already provide 3G services.

TTSL is one of those companies who operate both on CDMA and GSM technologies to offer telecom services throughout the country. The company has over 70 million subscribers.

Tata Tele’s 3G services would be in partnership with Japan’s NTT DoCoMo which has 26% stake in the company and was the first company to have created 3G network in the world.

The company had recently awarded the equipment deal to Nokia Siemens and Huawei to roll out 3G services.

According to company officials, NTT DoCoMo has provided technical inputs to make TTSL’s 3G network world-class. The various 3G services provided elsewhere by the company like i-mode, location-based services and mobile payments will all be provided in India.

3G services enables subscribers to download full length movies, make video calls and watch live television programs.

Orange launches Mobile Money service in Madagascar

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: The mobile payment service of Orange has been launched by the company under the brand name Orange Money in Madagascar in early May. Banque Malgache de l’Ocean Indien (BMOI) and post office Paositra Malagasy (PAOMA) are the two partners of the telco in this project.

Mobile customers will be allowed to deposit, withdraw and transfer money, to easily buy call credit, to pay for goods at certain retail partners and to pay bills, through this service. Orange Money has been introduced by the telco to two West African countries in the last few weeks, Senegal and Mali after studying customer needs in each market, with the intention of developing additional, more advanced mobile payment services such as international money transfers.

Local banks with which the telco has signed a partnership deal will be responsible for issuing and guaranteeing the electronic money.

Mobile Conference 2010 to Focuses on Mobile Payments

IPQC, conference organizer is all set to stage its Prepaid and Mobile Payments 2010” event from June 29 to 30th in Denver. The aim of the conference is to examine new opportunities and challenges in the payment industry from a strategic level. It will also forecast the next profitable business models apart from including updates on recent regulatory developments.

The conference will focus on leveraging prepaid products for global money transfer and remittance and  will also try to develop a winning strategy to serve the unbanked and undeserved

Europe gears up for SMS- based mobile payments

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Europeans now seem to be willing to pay for goods from their phones and with the successful trial in Sweden; the continent seems to be ripe enough for SMS-based mobile payments to take off.  20% increase in sales of the seven vending machines in two Stockholm underground stations was reported where the service was trialed by the payment and messaging equipment provider, Ericsson IPX, besides boosting carrier’s ARPU through increased SMS traffic.

The commercial services in Sweden is now planned to be launched and is set to begin fresh trials in Oslo, Norway, by end March. According to Donya Ekstrand, head of marketing and communications at Ericsson IPX, the Swedish trial was successful because consumers are familiar with how SMS works, and using that technology provides a clear revenue stream for carriers.

Partner firm Mobivending, on the other hand, has shown its unwillingness to discuss how many people had used the service in Stockholm. It has also been explained by CEO Katarina Lowenberg that it was up to the carriers to discuss usage, but said that individuals spent around 50% more when paying for goods via SMS because it was more convenient than fishing around their pockets for change.

Orange & Barclaycard to launch Contactless Mobile Payments

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Contactless mobile payments will be launched by the end of the year by Barclaycard in conjunction with Orange. The news has been confirmed by Head of Innovation Marketing, Sarah Mansfield in a presentation at a mobile marketing event organized by the Institute of Sales Promotion and Mobile Interactive Group.

According to Sarah, at the back end of 2010, the company will have a commercial launch with Orange for mobile payments and the consumers will be able to buy an NFC-enabled phone and make payments with it. The trail for the mobile payments was first done by Barclaycard in 2008.

SMS alert is also offered besides having an iPhone and Android Augmented Reality application. The application enables users to find their nearest retail outlet that accepts contactless payments, or their nearest ATM.
A joint contactless credit card was launched by Orange and Barclaycard, last month enabling users to make payments of £10 and under using contactless technology.

Nokia Money due to launch soon

Nokia is attempting to create a multi-bank, multi-operator and multi-device collaboration on mobile banking.
Nokia’s mobile banking and payment service is expected to be commercially available in its first market in Q1 2010, though no location details have been revealed yet.
According to Teppo Paavola, vice president, GM mobile financial services, Nokia cannot reveal any details until a banking partner is confirmed. It is learnt that the service requires a banking license before it can be launched.
Nokia said its target is to have 300 million active users of its services by the end of 2011; the number is expected to be 80 million by the end of 2009.
Paavola said the service will enable un-banked people in emerging markets to transfer money, top up prepaid mobile services, pay bills, carry out online transactions, and pay merchants.
Global mobile payments market is expected to be worth €18 billion by 2014 – €12 billion from emerging markets and €6 billion from developed markets.
Approaches to mobile banking so far have lacked scale and have not worked across operators and across banks.
Nokia therefore plans to drive the collaboration on an open financial ecosystem, with Nokia Money at its core. Paavola added that it has taken a long time to get all the players together, from banks through to mobile operators.
The Nokia Money application will not only be pre-loaded but could be sideloaded, or downloaded later.
Nokia will also be able to provide the physical distribution channel that is critical for the service to work. For example, Nokia handset sellers can be turned into Nokia Money agents, providing the devices, the application, and the ability to handle cash.

Nokia is attempting to create a multi-bank, multi-operator and multi-device collaboration on mobile banking, a service dubbed Nokia Money.

Nokia’s mobile banking and payment service is expected to be commercially available in its first market in Q1 2010, though no location details have been revealed yet.

According to Teppo Paavola, vice president, GM mobile financial services, Nokia cannot reveal any details until a banking partner is confirmed. It is learnt that the service requires a banking license before it can be launched.

Nokia said its target is to have 300 million active users of its services by the end of 2011.

Paavola said the service will enable un-banked people in emerging markets to transfer money, top up prepaid mobile services, pay bills, carry out online transactions, and pay merchants.

Global mobile payments market is expected to be worth €18 billion by 2014 – €12 billion from emerging markets and €6 billion from developed markets.

Approaches to mobile banking so far have lacked scale and have not worked across operators and across banks.  Nokia therefore plans to drive the collaboration on an open financial ecosystem, with Nokia Money at its core.

The Nokia Money application will not only be pre-loaded but could be sideloaded, or downloaded later.

Nokia will also be able to provide the physical distribution channel that is critical for the service to work. For example, Nokia handset sellers can be turned into Nokia Money agents, providing the devices, the application, and the ability to handle cash.

Mobile Advertising Worth $10 Billion By 2010

For marketers, mobile marketing and advertising has great promise – it combines the wide reach of television with the precision of direct marketing and the tracking potential of the Internet. Mobile marketing campaigns using SMS, and more recently MMS, have already helped to open up the eyes of the media world to the power of the mobile channel. Interactive TV and radio, product promotions using coupons and competitions, even charitable giving, have exploited this medium. But things are set to change as Internet style advertising, in the shape of display advertising (banner ads) and search, and even TV-style advertising, come to mobile.Consequently, the opportunities for marketers to reach and engage with consumers through this medium will expand even further.

Now, more than ever, marketers are looking for alternative ways to reach customers. Traditional channels for advertising, like TV, radio and print, are becoming less effective because consumers now consume information and entertainment very differently than in the past, due largely to the digitization of content and the increasing ease of access to the Internet. This is especially true of the highly coveted “youth” demographic – the 18 to 34 year olds with high disposable income, high brand awareness, and short attention spans.

According to a new study published by The Shosteck Group, mobile marketing and advertising could be an important driver of growth for mobile operators too. This would be due to its strong influence on the future development of the mobile Internet and the subsequent growth in demand for mobile content.

“Without a robust mobile marketing and advertising market, the prospects for the mobile Internet and in particular, mobile content – a potentially significant source of revenue for mobile operators – will be limited,” according to Jane Zweig, Chief Executive of The Shosteck Group, an international telecommunications consultancy based in Silver Spring, Maryland (USA). “A robust mobile advertising market could subsidize many mobile services (as advertising supports many TV and online services today), encouraging take-up and usage of mobile Internet services such as games, music, video and even TV. It should also attract important content providers.”

The firm analyzes this emerging market in its most recent study, and concludes that there is potential for this market to grow rapidly over the next five years. The study predicts that under the most optimistic scenario, the global market could grow to US$9.6 billion by 2010. However, the study demonstrates that the market may not generate huge revenues directly for mobile operators – less than US$2 billion by 2010 – but could facilitate the development of a much healthier mobile Internet, from which mobile operators can benefit.

“We believe that mobile advertising will be a necessary driver for the development and commercialization of the mobile Internet, just as online advertising has been for the ‘fixed’ Internet to-date,” said John Darnbrough, Senior Associate of The Shosteck Group. “It is our view that the two – mobile advertising and mobile content – are inextricably linked. The success of one will enable the success of the other and vice versa,” he continued.

But, the study argues, mobile operators must act now to ensure that the mobile marketing and advertising market prospers, and that they can fully exploit the opportunities it affords them. It warns that the robust and profitable development of this market will only be possible if the major players – operators, handset vendors, content providers, advertisers and Internet portals – collaborate effectively. It also predicts that the extent of this collaboration may be limited, as the motivations and objectives of some of the key players will inevitably conflict.

“Given the immaturity of this market, the fickleness and impatience of consumers, and the complexities and politics of the telecoms industry, we believe the next two years will be critical as other technology and market trends could prove to be barriers to the anticipated growth of this market,” said Mr. Darnbrough. “For example, a damaging consumer backlash against intrusive and unsolicited mobile marketing could occur if over zealous marketers fail to respect consumers’ right to privacy and inundate them with unwanted and irrelevant mobile marketing messages.”

The study concludes with concrete action items and recommendations for how mobile operators might profit from the emerging mobile advertising model. Additionally, it provides warnings for those along the value chain, that significant commitments and investments by major brands might not materialize, due to uncertainty regarding timing of key technology developments, such as the availability of ubiquitous, low cost and high speed mobile access; mobile broadcast TV; alternative DRM; and mobile payment systems.

“For sure, the hype is building but the mobile advertising market is still in its very early stages. There is little consensus on how long it might take for the market to reach the ‘tipping point,’ i.e. when, and indeed if, it reaches critical mass to become a mainstream mobile market in its own right,” said Ms Zweig. “The rewards are there but the question remains as to who benefits from them.”