Saturday, 9 June 2012
Thursday, 7 June 2012
Intuit launches new QuickBooks with mobile point of sale
Compatible with Apple, and most Android devices Intuit is launching its latest point-of-sale product, QuickBooks Point of Sale 2013, with integrated mobile payment acceptance technology (view press release).
The new product integrates with Intuit’s mobile payment processing app, GoPayment, and forms a mobile point-of-sale solution for small retailers. The free GoPayment app comes with a card reader that is compatible with Apple, and most Android devices.
The solution enables merchants to bring payment to the customer and send receipts via email or text message. Sales and inventory data can also be collated through the app and stored directly with the integrated QuickBooks Point of Sale central management system. Retailers can manage their finances by syncing sales data with QuickBooks financial software, which can be used in conjunction with QuickBooks Point of Sale.
Pitch the Plastic: The Mobile Payment Era Has Begun
Spend money, of course.
A survey conducted by Harris Interactive found that 39 million Americans made an online purchase using their phone in 2011. That represents 20% of all mobile phone owners in the US. The survey also found an increasing number of smartphone owners (59%) affirmed that having the ability to make a purchase using their mobile device was at least "somewhat important.”
Let’s take a look at two companies capitalizing on this trend by providing creative mobile payment solutions for the smartphone-toting masses.
iCache Geode
What if you could store all of your plastic - credit cards, loyalty cards, membership cards - in your smartphone? iCache has created a mobile wallet solution for iphones that does just that.
Promoted as the most secure wallet you’ve ever seen, the iCache Geode is an iPhone case that contains a rewritable magstripe card on its rear end. By installing the corresponding app on an iPhone 4/4S, users can store their credit card information on their smartphones and write it onto the so-called GeoCard.
The GeoCard can instantly morph into any credit card you’ve uploaded into your iPhone. Moreover, a small e-ink display mounted on the back of the Geode displays the barcodes for loyalty cards that have been stored in the app.² For enhanced security, Geode comes equipped with a James Bondesque biometric reader that registers your fingerprint (remembering that every human has a unique fingerprint).
The set-up is pretty simple. Just input some basic information so the Geode can identify you. The Geode comes with a small reader attachment so users can effortlessly swipe any cards with magnetic strips into the mobile device. Users can add loyalty cards by taking a pic of the barcode with the iPhone’s camera.
To choose which credit card to upload into the Geocard, just tap the Geode button and select a card from the iPhone display; that card’s information is instantly transferred into the GeoCard stored at the back of the case. You can then pull out the card and swipe it at any POS system.
Pretty slick.
The Geode offers two big advantages to consumers: convenience and security. Having all of your cards integrated with your mobile device is pretty handy. The inclusion of a biometric reader ensures that sensitive credit card information can only be accessed by the device owner, so if you lose your phone, your information is safe.
Check out ICache’s promotional video for the Geode iPhone case, which retails for $199:
TabbedOut
Oftentimes, real-world experiences provide inspiration for new technologies. Such is the case with TabbedOut, a mobile platform that allows customers to make quick, secure, plastic-free payments at select bars and restaurants.
Inspiration for TabbedOut came to co-founder Rick Orr in 2002, after he waited almost an hour for a check at a Mexican restaurant in Austin. “I was walking out to the parking lot and knew there had to be a better way,” Orr says.
TabbedOut has grown steadily since the company’s 2009 launch, enjoying a 315% year-over-year growth in its consumer channel. With about 1,000 bars and restaurants throughout the country using the mobile payment solution across the country, TabbedOut recently announced a national partnership with T.G.I. Friday's.
MARKETING TAKEAWAY
Mobile payment solutions such as the iCache Geode and TabbedOut are instructive for business owners and marketers, as they’re reflective of the final stage of mobile’s integration into the consumer buying cycle.
Beginning with mobile-friendly web design (mobile web apps, responsive web, mcommerce) and continuing with mobile marketing (mobile ad campaigns, m-copywriting, geo-local targeting), user-friendly mobile payment solutions complete the circle.
No business is immune from mobile. To adapt, brands need to implement a holistic (social local) mobile strategy that addresses every stage of the consumer buying cycle from the perspective of the smartphone (and tablet) user.
After all, they’re the ones wielding all that power in the palm of their hands.
How is your business preparing for the massive consumer shift to mobile?
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Branches will be open twice as long as traditional high street banks; mirroring M&S store opening hours and enabling customers to bank while they shop, seven days a week. The high street presence will be supplemented by 24-hour access to online banking, as well as UK based call centres.
A current account will be made available from autumn 2012 and customers can pre-register their interest in July, mortgages will be offered by the bank at a later date.
Over 3 million customers already use M&S Money products, including credit cards, loans and savings. Research amongst its Premium Club customers revealed that over 70% found the idea of an M&S current account appealing.
M&S Money is a joint venture with HSBC struck in 2004; the profits are split equally.
HSBC will continue its partnership with M&S for the launch of the new bank.
Joe Garner, Head of HSBC in the UK, comments: "This is our most significant innovation in retail banking since we launched First Direct over 22 years ago. It is concrete evidence of HSBC increasing innovation, competition and investment in the UK."
M&S is pitching itself as a credible, alternative choice for UK banking services, extending its trusted brand into a sector beset by a succession of defaults, mis-selling scandals and rows over rich bonus pay-outs.
Marc Bolland, chief executive at Marks & Spencer says: "M&S is one of the most trusted brands on the UK high street and we've achieved this by continually listening and responding to the needs of our 21 million customers. This bank will be built on M&S values; putting the customer at the heart of the proposition and delivering the exceptional service that sets us apart from the competition."
The launch of the new bank is expected to create 500 new UK jobs by the end of 2013. This includes 400 customer-facing roles in branches across the country and around 100 roles at the company's Chester based head office.
Each branch will be managed by a dedicated M&S Bank team and will feature private meeting areas, self service banking points, as well as a bureau de change.