How To Improve The Mobile Retail Experience

During the Mobile World Congress in February, SAP carried out a survey to find out more about what makes a good mobile retail experience. The survey included 300 respondents, representing a cross-section of attendees, including mobile operators, fixed telecommunication operators, OTT players, vendors and other mobile industry leaders.

Survey results revealed that the “secret sauce” for creating a better retail experience includes location-based point-of-sale offerings (24 percent), point-of-sale services such as near field communication (NFC) (28 percent) and facilitating universal acceptance of mobile payments (25 percent). Less popular services included targeted offers based on consumer preferences and shopping history (12 percent) and integration with mass transit (nine percent).

“We are seeing a maturing of the mobile payments market, as we move from a service that is driven by person-to-person payments to one that must tackle the challenges of the retail environment,” said Diarmuid Mallon, lead, Global Mobile Marketing Programs, SAP. “It is clear from our survey that in addition to improving the payment experience, mobile wallet apps need to support a multitude of services such as loyalty and couponing.”

The anticipated leaders of future successful mobile payments offerings included banks (29 percent); online payment schemes, such as PayPal, Apple iTunes or Amazon Payments (28 percent); credit cards (26 percent) or a consortium of operators (26 percent). This statistic diverged slightly from the2012 SAP Mobile World Congress Survey, which anticipated banks (24 percent) and mobile operators (26 percent) would be important catalysts, but placed lower expectations on credit cards (10 percent) and online payment networks (19 percent).

In one year it shows that mobile payment experiences has shifted from the realm of traditional established players like bank, to newcomers and mobile operators.

The survey found that 34 percent of the respondents felt that applications like Apple Passbook will speed up brands offering wallet services. In regard to changes in the mobile wallet, only 28 percent of mobile insiders expected new ticketing and coupon services, such as Apple Passbook, Google Now and the Samsung wallet app, could become an alternative to true mobile wallets; and still, 38 percent believed that the lack of consumer awareness and too much confusion around the offerings were holding back mobile wallet services.

Absent from this study were the actual retailers. While feedback and insight from mobile players is important, retailers need to be involved in this conversation if we want to get a clear picture of what the retail and mobile money environment might look like in the coming year.