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Mobile Cannibalism: Get Used To It

Written by Evan Schuman
September 2nd, 2010
With several major retail mobile sites starting to yield significant traffic and/or sales--Pizza Hut's iPhone app, for example, is about to pass the 2 million download mark--senior execs at various chains are grappling with what should be expected of the telephone terminals, what Lily Tomlin's Ernestine the switchboard operator might have called Ringy Dingy Revenue.

What is a realistic near-term goal? Is it to generate true additional revenue or is it acceptable--initially, at least--to simply shift purchases from Web to mobile? Moving from revenue to the much-beloved profit margin, is it possible to say whether mobile or Web has lower operational costs?

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4 Comments | Read Mobile Cannibalism: Get Used To It

  1. Vikas Goyal Says:

    True. Its more about customer retention than acquisition.

  2. Dan Stiel Says:

    Yes, mobi-ordering will disintermediate transactions from other channels. So did ATMs in the 1980s at the bank, as did pay-at-the pump did at the gas station in the 1990s, and the web has for retailers over the past decade.

    Mobi-ordering begins with eliminating the “hassle-factor” for customers – whether making it easier to order a pizza or making a last-minute change on an airline ticket, as well as improving operational and labor effectiveness for merchants.

    Mobi-ordering will become a consumer expectation sooner than most realize for reasons that include convenience but go much deeper.

    I’ve been working with a mobile technology client who builds mobile ordering apps for food service operators and entertainment venues. The challenge is less about supporting the devices (iPhone, iPad, Android, Blackberry, et al). That’s actually easier than you might first think.

    The bigger issue for operators (not our client, I might add) not mentioned in your article, is having the skill and tenacity to integrate the ordering app into the multitude of POS networks/software iterations, and vintage systems a multi-unit operator tends to support.

    The other issue is bandwidth. Mobi-devices can find it challenging to find/grab a signal to complete a transaction, even with 3G and 4G promises. I’ve had those Bill Gates/Steve Jobs moments where I can’t finish a live demo in front of an audience because the AT&T signal fails on my iPhone or iPad.

    The biggest opportunity/threat of all for your readers? Mobi-ordering is agnostic when it comes to payment choices. Your mobile phone is indifferent to Visa, AMEX, or any other form of payment available to the customer. That creates opportunities for merchants and entrepreneurs to use mobi-ordering platforms for card-less alternative payment choices that have yet to be dreamed of that can reduce expenses or add value in new ways.

  3. Contactless Payment Says:

    People around the world today are using smart cards for debit and credit payments. Contactless payment

    applications are gaining momentum as new contactless devices are being introduced like Secure Contactless

    Tokens, NFC Stickers etc.As far as on security concern Dynamically generated codes, high encryption standards

    and biometrics can be employed in the security mechanisms for the contactless devices.
    And very nice and informative news on contactless payment technology

  4. Marion Guthrie Says:

    It’s not the “same dispute” if you acknowledge that we’re moving to one device in our pockets. Then your vision to make purchases happen via mobile is all about planning for the future. The future incorporates an audience that’s grown up on using the technology and your infrastructures grew along with them. Otherwise you will kiss your stockholders good-bye!

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