Mobile payments in the
US
are expected to catch on in the coming years, but that doesn’t mean millennials
will jump on the bandwagon.
Millennials, generally
regarded as those born after 1980, are increasingly concerned about mobile
payments, with one in four abandoning the practice due to security concerns,
according to a survey from VocaLink.
It’s not all a lost
cause; of the 5,000 people surveyed, 70 percent say they’d use a mobile paymentservice that was run by their bank, especially if it was secured via
fingerprint authentication rather than chip and PIN.
“Surprisingly, the
element of ‘trust’ and ‘security’ was a priority for many of the millennials we
spoke to, and as a result felt strongly that their bank was the preferred
provider of payments technology,” VocaLink’s director of marketing and customer
insights, Cara O’Nions, said in a statement. “However, it is clear they still
want to see further innovation from all payment providers, to respond to their
need for ubiquitous and reliable instant mobile payments.”
At this point, 52
percent of all mobile payment users are millennials, but 86 percent of people
within that group have had problems using contactless payment services.
Millennials represent
a critical demographic for mobile payment providers like Apple, Google,
Samsung, and others. They invest heavily in smartphones that allow for services
like Apple Pay to work, and are probably most likely to adopt mobile payments.
Earlier this week,
Google said Android Pay will soon be available on “hundreds of thousands of newsites” where Visa Checkout and Masterpass are accepted. This should offer a
much easier checkout experience on these sites, letting users pay with their
preferred device authentication method, such as a fingerprint scan.
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