BankThink

New Banks Need Apps and NFC to Battle Incumbents

NFC mobile payments continue to grab headlines, but to really drive uptake and ensure full market coverage, combining contactless cards with next-gen mobile banking apps is surely the right way to go for new banks.

Much has already been said about the opportunity for these banks, called challenger banks in the U.K., to disrupt the traditional banking system. These next-gen financial institutions have a very different view of the world and are, in the main, also quite different from one another. What unites them, however, is the belief that they can deliver a more convenient, value-oriented and better contextualized banking experience than their bigger, traditional counterparts can.

No challenger bank would disagree that mobile is a key weapon in their fight to disrupt the market. Virtually everyone today supplements some form of daily activity with a mobile service, and few of attract such close scrutiny as those that support the business of spending. In the post Apple Pay world, therefore, it is little wonder that NFC mobile payments remain central to mobile fintech industry dialogue.

But NFC payments would be nothing without contactless technology. And, while whole-of-market NFC payment solutions remain waylaid by their issuing stakeholders divisive battle for market supremacy, contactless card issuance and use has absolutely exploded. Some stats from the UK alone (courtesy of UK Payments Council): In October 2015, there were a total of 76 million contactless cards in issue (that’s comfortably more than one each for the whole population), representing a year on year hike of 39.7%. 120.5 million contactless transactions were made in that month alone, each worth an average of £7.72 and total contactless spending was up by more than 213% year on year, to almost £930m.

What does this signal for the coming year’s mobile oriented challenger banks? We know that enabling customers to track their transactions and account balance throughout the day in real time will be a major proving ground for them in 2016, not least because traditional banks’ legacy systems just can’t deliver this level of agility.

This real time transaction data can also help them provide handy location-based info on retail offers, for example, or the whereabouts of the nearest ATM. The key point here is that contactless cards can provide this data right now, in real time, and regardless of which handset the customer uses. This means challenger banks hell bent on positioning themselves at the heart of the customer’s spending experience can, via a contactless card, deliver the exact same tap and go, value added service enabled, location optimized experience as mobile NFC-payment services, only they can deliver it to everyone right away; not just those with a premium NFC-enabled handset.

So, my message to challenger banks gearing up for 2016 is this: By all means, get stuck into the mobile channel, just don’t get hung up on NFC payments. In contactless cards, you have an uncomplicated and proven route to market which your customers already use and love, and which will deliver you the data you need to create the disruptive customer experience you seek. So why wait around?

Paul Underwood is a managing director for Thames Card Technology.

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