Monday, April 24, 2017

Even young, hip Americans don't want to use mobile payment apps: Duh!

  1. Think about this for a moment. who tends to know the most about computer devices presently? Young hip Americans, especially those who live near Silicon Valley in California. 

    IF you know about Computer devices like the smart phone you know that there is no more hackable, vulnerable computer device than a smart phone anywhere on earth. So, why in hell would you ever want to use mobile payment apps on the most un-secure device possible? So, whether you own or use an Iphone, Android, Microsoft or any other smart phone device, you know that this is the last place you want to do anything financial right off the bat.

    By the way I try to use cash whenever possible because it is less likely you are going to be defrauded by anything electronic including your chip cards being scanned by a mobile reader if you don't have an RFID wallet or chip protector.

    This way if you are only using your chip ATM card at the Bank the bank becomes responsible for any online thefts and they have insurance to cover this instead of you losing everything. I no longer do ANY online bank transactions at all except with an account that I keep a small enough amount of money in it to be safe for all online purchases.

    Because if a hacker gets your home password the bank isn't liable for what happens you are. So, if you are banking at home and someone hacks you and you lose everything the bank isn't at fault legally you are.

    So, even though it is inconvenient this is why I stopped all online banking.

     

    begin quote from:

    Even young, hip Americans don't want to use mobile payment apps...

    www.marketwatch.com/story/even-young-hip-americans-dont-want...
    2 hours ago ... Besides using the peer-to-peer payment app Venmo, adoption levels are low.
  2. Even Young Hip Americans Don't Want To Use Mobile Payment Apps News

  3. Even young, hip Americans don't want to use mobile payment apps

    newstral.com/en/article/en/1063075525/even-young-hip...
    3 hours ago ... Besides using the peer-to-peer payment app Venmo, adoption levels are low.» 

    Even young, hip Americans don’t want to use mobile payment apps

    Published: Apr 24, 2017 12:17 a.m. ET

    Besides using the peer-to-peer payment app Venmo, adoption levels are low

    Duane Prokop/Getty Images for MasterCard
    Mobile payments are gaining steam, but large segments of the population still don’t use them.
    By

    MariaLaMagna

    Reporter
    Despite their reputation for being tech-savvy, it’s still unlikely you’ll see a millennial use their phone to make a payment any time soon.
    Only 14% of millennials said they use their bank’s mobile payment app often and 35% said they don’t use a mobile payment app at all, according to a new survey of about 2,000 millennials by LendEdu, which provides personal finance tools including cost comparison for refinancing student loans. About 44% said they most often use Venmo, the peer-to-peer payment app owned by PayPal PYPL, +0.27% that lets millennials pay one another digitally, either directly from their bank accounts, or with credit cards linked to their accounts. Only 1% said they use Square Cash, a service similar to Venmo.
    Young Americans would, in theory, be the natural early adopters of such technology, and other surveys of all U.S. adults have shown similar results. Despite large investments by banks and financial technology companies in new services, mobile payment adoption has been slow in the U.S. in the last several years. Still, usage is projected to grow more rapidly in the next several years, until 2021, according to the research firm Forrester.
    It’s not that most people don’t know these apps exist. About 56% of American and Canadian consumers said they are “extremely aware” they can use their phone as a payment device to buy goods or services, up from 41% who said they were in 2012, according to a survey of 4,000 adults by the consulting firm Accenture released last year. About 36% said they were “neutral” about knowing their phone or payment device could be used this way, up from 32% in 2012. And 8% said in 2016 they were “not at all aware,” down from 27% in 2012.
    0:00 / 0:00
    By 2020, 50% of workforce will be remote. Here's how.
    By 2020, 50% of workforce will be remote. Here's how.
    Citrix Systems CEO Kirill Tatarinov talks to MarketWatch about how technology will shape the future of work.
    Millennials were slightly more likely than the general population to make purchases on their phones. About 35% of millennials and “mass affluent” customers, which Accenture defines as consumers with an annual income of $100,000 or more after taxes (no matter what generation they are from), regularly use their mobile phones to pay online, compared to 23% of average consumers. Just 19% of consumers overall pay in stores with their phones, the same number as in 2015, Accenture found.
    Once again, Venmo or similar services were the most popular mobile payment app, but only when used for peer-to-peer transactions rather than buying items in a store. Some 32% of millennials use their mobile phones to make peer-to-peer payments on services like Venmo, compared to 18% of average consumers. (One factor that could make mobile payments more popular is better rewards programs that incentivize paying by smartphone, the Accenture report’s authors wrote. Some 63% of consumers participate in payments rewards programs, but only 19% use them regularly, they found.)
    Why? Nearly 40% said cash and plastic cards already met their needs to make a payment. Some 85% of transactions worldwide still happen in cash, according to the credit card company MasterCard MA, -0.28%  . Another reason: It’s also expensive for some retailers to upgrade their point-of-sale equipment to accommodate a wide variety of mobile payment apps on the market.
    One company that stands out as an exception: Starbucks SBUX, +0.88%  , which has one of the most successful rewards programs. About 7% of all Starbucks transactions are from mobile orders. Mobile payments, including those customers make at checkout, make up some 27% of the store’s U.S. transactions. In fact, a report last year found customers collectively have more money in their Starbucks accounts than they do at some banks.

No comments: