Abstract
The rise of alternative payment services - from PayPal to Google Checkout,
Bill Me Later and many others - is a response to both consumer demand for an
improved online payment experience and merchant need to lower shopping cart
abandonment rates, payment processing fees, and raise the appeal of online
shopping to specific consumer demographics. Mercator Advisory Group' s latest
report, Alternative Payment Services: Moving into Traditional Payment
Territory, examines the role and adoption of these competitors to traditional
online card-based payments and online merchant acquiring.
The report offers an in-depth look at the principle providers of alternative
payment services. The report examines the payment modalities supported by
these alternative payment services and the consumer demographics they appeal
to.
While retail point of sale continues to be the largest area for consumer
payments, online consumer spending has yet to reach its potential from the
payment perspective. In 2000 less than 1 percent of sales were via the
internet. Today, that spending is likely to be $116 billion in the United
States, a full 5% of retail spending. But this annual growth is predicted to
slow from 20 percent to 16 percent by year end and further to 13 percent by
2008. As these rates slow, online merchants must meet their customers "where
they are" with the right payment mechanisms to maintain the highest possible
growth and the widest possible sales funnel. Alternative payment systems are
fast becoming an important way for merchants to sustain and accelerate that
online sales flow.
"Online merchants have to respond to consumer misgivings about online payment
security and convenience," stated Melanie Broad, a member of Mercator Advisory
Group' s Emerging Technologies Service and principal analyst on the report.
"When you add game changing providers like Bill Me Later, Google Checkout' s
blended ad and payments value proposition, PayPal' s broadening range of pay
now and pay later offers, to the growing set of other payment services, online
merchants now have new options and new ways to get paid. While competition
will blur distinctions as providers enter each other' s space, merchants and
their customers will benefit."
In Alternative Payment Services: Moving into Traditional Payment Territory,
Mercator Advisory Group reviews the current and future roles of alternative
payment services. The report discusses some of the drawbacks and issues of
each alternative payment service and its payment modalities in relation to
both the consumer and merchant including the IT challenge of integrating
multiple payment methods into an e-commerce site.
The report contains 34 pages and 5 exhibits.