Worldpay: Global m-commerce to take over desktop shopping by 2023

UK consumers are on an endless mission for convenience as mobile continues its ascent to dominance as the most popular shopping channel.

  3 Be the first to comment

External

This content is provided by an external author without editing by Finextra. It expresses the views and opinions of the author.

Growing at a rate of 16 percent annually in the UK, m-commerce is set to be worth £88.1bn by 2022, according to new data from Worldpay Inc. (NSE: WP; LSE: WPY), a global leader in the payments technology industry.

In its annual Global Payments Report, Worldpay found the total eCommerce market in the UK is set to grow by 40 percent between now and 2022 to £240bn (9 percent CAGR). E-wallets in particular are favoured when purchasing via mobile, currently making up 23.2 percent of online payments in the UK. This is set for rapid growth driven by increased smartphone ownership, faster mobile networks and consumers continually looking for a more seamless payment experience. The predicted rise in mobile commerce is a strong vote of confidence for the security and convenience of the UK’s digital payments.

Worldpay’s report, which examines online shopping in 36 countries across five continents, found that m-commerce currently accounts for 38 percent of the £990 billion in global eCommerce sales, and global m-commerce is set to grow a staggering 19 percent over the next five years. The largest markets in the world for m-commerce are China (£0.57 trillion), U.S. (£0.16 trillion), UK (£48.8 billion), Japan (£26.4 billion) and South Korea (£22 billion).

Motie Bring, general manager for the UK, Global Enterprise eCommerce, at Worldpay Inc. said: “The UK in particular is a highly-developed market, and with 99 percent of the population connected to the internet[1], e-wallets are clearly the future of mobile commerce for shoppers - but this is only the beginning. The latest innovations in device hardware, from voice recognition to facial scanning, are helping make payments more seamless and secure than ever before, prompting consumers to ditch desktop in favour of their smartphone or tablet.

To stay ahead UK merchants should invest in their own apps, building a seamless shopping and checkout experience across every device, and support the most popular payment methods.”

Worldpay has published guidelines for merchants to help capitalise on the global mCommerce opportunity:

1) Consider developing a branded app. We know that 71 percent of shoppers prefer apps over mobile browsers when shopping on their smartphone, and many say they won’t buy from a business that doesn’t have an app.[2] It’s no longer enough to just have a mobile-optimised website - if you’re not prioritising a transactional app for your brand, you’re not putting your best foot forward.

2) Make it easy and use biometrics to speed up the journey. Shoppers are becoming increasingly familiar with the concept of fingerprint scanning and facial recognition, so they do not shy away from using these methods as a form of authentication. Biometrics place payments at the back of the user’s mind, giving them a faster and friction-free experience, making the payment seem ‘invisible’.

3) Identify the most popular payment methods in each territory in which you operate. There are huge differences in payment preferences across the world, and alternative payment methods are gaining share over traditional credit and debit cards. There’s no one-size-fits-all in any region so you’ll need to understand the best options for your company.

Sponsored [Impact Study] 2024 Fraud Trends in Banking, Insurance, and Beyond

Related Company

Channels

Comments: (0)

[Webinar] AI in Banking: Building Compliant and Safe Enterprise AI at ScaleFinextra Promoted[Webinar] AI in Banking: Building Compliant and Safe Enterprise AI at Scale