@Sachin S:
I never received SMS alerts on my UK credit or debit cards. I've read about Visa attempting a few pilots for realtime SMS alerts for credit cards in the USA and a resultant lawsuit claiming patent infringement. Since they weren't directly relevant under the context of the article or my previous comment, I hadn't brought up these points before. Now that you've made a mention, I'm keen on knowing about other countries where this feature is common / mandatory / hygeine factor.
08 Aug 2011 16:42 Read comment
"To clamp down on card fraud, it ... suggests the introduction of SMS fraud alerts to warn customers of unusual spending activity."
Well, many banks in India started sending out realtime SMS alerts for every credit card transaction around 45 days ago. During this period, I've been able to spot one fraudulent transaction. Props to banks for introducing this valuable service. So far, it seems to be offered free-of-cost but I won't mind paying a nominal fee for it.
08 Aug 2011 15:17 Read comment
Since merchants / banks are the ones who have to bear the loss arising from fraud from current non-EMV technology, I'm sure they'll eventually get around to trying EMV / CAP and other technologies once they've sorted out other real-world issues like cost, potential benefit, ROI, conflicting investment priorities, and so on.
05 Aug 2011 16:55 Read comment
Talking of EMV and CNP, leading analysts like TowerGroup to whom banks tend to listen, have stated that EMV provides no fraud mitigation for online transactions. US merchants seem to be finding it difficult to justify the business case for EMV itself in the first place. I can't name a single leading US e-commerce website (e.g. Amazon, GoDaddy, eBay) that uses VbV / SecureCode / 3DS despite their being around for years and having reached mandatory status in some countries (e.g. India). I'm not sure how many of them would think adequately out-of-the-box to even dream of implementing USB EMV Card Reader / CAP / equivalent at this point. End of the day, it's possible to keep adding technologies to keep reducing fraud, but merchants have to weigh their costs and incremental friction with increased security - and that's an equation that is very specific to local business cultures and consumer attitudes in different countries. As an online shopper, I find the US online shopping experience to be the best in the world, which tells me that US online merchants have struck the right balance between convenience and security. If fraud rates go up to unmanageable levels, I'm sure they'll implement the required security measures, EMV / CAP being only one of them.
05 Aug 2011 15:53 Read comment
Not necessarily. According to the complaint filed in the latest case - link to which is available in my below Finextra post - the plaintiff (Village View Escrow) spotted the loss the very next day.
https://www.finextra.com/blogs/fullblog.aspx?blogid=5590
04 Aug 2011 17:24 Read comment
Astute marketers have always known and acted on the basis that 'perception is reality'. It's just that social media has the power to accelerate and magnify perception. A single negative sentiment might subsequently be proven inaccurate and unfair based on post-facto qualitative and quantitative analysis. However, before that happens, social media has the power to make it explode into a huge flood of negative perception. Banks and other companies have to listen and take remedial action (if any is merited) as such sentiments happen, even if their accuracy or fairness is as yet unknown. Postponing remedial action until after the analysis is complete might be too late.
There's also a flipside to this. Just as negative perception can build quickly thanks to social media, it can also dissipate equally quickly. While I don't have any concrete incidents to illustrate this, I personally believe that a couple of negative flareups in social media hardly affect a brand in the medium or long term.
03 Aug 2011 19:04 Read comment
This is a solution for Card Not Present credit card transactions where EMV is irrelevant.
03 Aug 2011 18:45 Read comment
Personally, since I keep complaining about the friction involved in a typical bank-provided ePayment and have complemented FiServ ZashPay's simplicity in the past, I won't grudge the US$ 1.00 fee to make a ZashPay. However, studies have shown that the difference between FREE! and one dollar is far more than the difference between, say, 1 dollar and 2 dollars, or, say, 88 dollars and 89 dollars. Going forward, the rate of adoption of BBVA's ZashPay will indicate which of the two sources of friction is more severe among the mass market of BBVA's customers.
03 Aug 2011 16:47 Read comment
Assuming that the average person has more than one checking account and credit card, it's obviously not possible for any one bank to carry out a holistic analysis and present personalized offers based on that person's spending pattern - unless one of his / her banks offers a Mint-like portal to which one can, and is prepared to, link all other accounts. I know at least one bank that offers such a portal (OneView from HDFC Bank in India).
I know one third-party service in the USA called Offermatic which offers such a facility for US-based credit card accounts. (Full Disclosure: Apart from having blogged about it in the past, I've no interest in this company).
03 Aug 2011 16:37 Read comment
@Brett K:
Great post. Glad to note that we finally have a customer walking into a bank branch in one of your posts!
I agree that banks need to eliminate friction in almost all scenarios you've described. Let me add a few more of my pet peeves about which I've blogged and commented on earlier occasions: Forcing e-payment iniators to decide between between FPS, BACS, CHAPS without presenting a menu of choices based on reachability, delivery date and fees; calling billers by whatever names banks have on their masters instead of using the names by which payors know them; restricting payment narration to the field lengths that the bank can process instead of letting them be what payor would like to convey to the beneficiary.
But, to give credit where it's due, the following recent developments convince me that many banks are listening to feedback and doing something about it: The first direct lab; realtime SMS alerts we've started receiving for every use of credit card issued by all / many banks in India.
03 Aug 2011 16:22 Read comment
Derek RogaFounder and CEO at EQUIIS Technologies Switzerland AG
Austin TalleyFounder and CEO at Everyware
David CocksFounder and CEO at CloudTrade
Suruchi GuptaFounder and CEO at GIANT Protocol
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