Amex: Prepaid's Not a Product - It's a Business Model

New York—As the market for prepaid cards expands and diversifies, many companies are experimenting to see what works - and in the process, they are learning that a product-based mindset could hold them back.

Processing Content

At American Express, for example, "We think about prepaid not as a product, a [general purpose reloadable card] - arguably a checking account and a debit account are GPRs," said Alpesh Chokshi, Amex's president of global payment options. "Prepaid is a business model."

And Amex's implementation of that model is paying off. For the Bluebird card Amex created with Walmart, "we estimate our cost to serve a customer compared to a [financial institution] with bricks and mortar, heat and light and electricity ... is less than 20%," he said.

The market today for prepaid cards is $425 billion, he said, but the market for the business model - which can also be applied to check, debit and cash users - is $25 trillion.

Chokshi spoke alongside the heads of Green Dot and NetSpend in a panel discussion at PaymentsSource's ATM, Debit and Prepaid Forum, last month in Las Vegas.

For Green Dot, payroll cards aren't a product or a competitive threat - they're just another channel, said Steve Streit, Green Dot's president and CEO.

Green Dot views payroll cards as a model for distribution, comparable to retail stores or the education market, he said.

It's important for prepaid card companies to keep an open mind as they build out their products, even if they have to add features they dread, Streit said.

Remote check deposit is one "risky line of business, I can assure you," he said.

However, more prepaid card companies are exploring ways to support remote deposit capture, and there is a reward for their efforts. "The more ways you can have to put money on the card, the more ways you can have to spend money," Streit said.

Chuck Harris, president of NetSpend, a unit of Total System Services, suggested taking this idea further: prepaid card companies should expect that consumers will someday stop using the desktop Internet as a method of account access.

"You have to operate under the assumption that it's all going to be on the [mobile] device" within five years, he said.

Amex's Chokshi said Bluebird, launched a year ago, was designed for a userbase that doesn't rely on the same infrastructure that mainstream financial institution customers take for granted.

Much of Bluebird's inspiration came from M-Pesa, a mobile money service popular in Kenya. M-Pesa demonstrates that "when you don't have the physical infrastructure" for a conventional financial service, "you can leapfrog it," Chokshi said.

Amex plans to target markets where cash is the dominant payment instrument. "You'll see announcements from us in a number of markets around the world where people have phones, or they're unbanked, and where cash is king," he said.


For reprint and licensing requests for this article, click here.
Payments
MORE FROM AMERICAN BANKER
Load More