At last week’s Sprint Open Solutions Conference<\/a> I got my first look at Google Wallet<\/a>, the search and advertising company’s mobile payment system. Wallet is the first large scale mobile payment system released to the general public in the US. Here’s my take on how it works and what it means.<\/p>\n
The Samsung Nexus S 4G<\/a> on the Sprint network is the first, and so far the only, phone that works with Google Wallet. It contains an NXP<\/a> PN65 NFC chip which\u00a0incorporates\u00a0the NFC receiver, transmitter, radio controller and microprocessor as well as an embedded “secure element” which holds encrypted digital copies of the user’s credit and debit cards. The entire payment transaction is\u00a0controlled\u00a0by the NXP chip independently of the phone’s OS and CPU.<\/p>\n
Google Wallet currently works with point of sale\u00a0terminals\u00a0which support MasterCard’s\u00a0PayPass<\/a><\/em> contactless credit and debit cards. Millions of PayPass compatable cards have been distributed since the program launched in 2005 and today over 300,000 US merchants accept PayPass, including most Radio Shack, Home Depot and\u00a0MacDonalds\u00a0locations.<\/p>\n
Getting started with Google Wallet is pretty straightforward. You launch the Wallet app on the phone, set up a four digit PIN and add your cards to it.Currently the only supported cards are certain CitiBank<\/a> credit cards, a Google Prepaid debit card and rewards cards for Foot Locker, Champs Sports, Guess shops, OfficeMax and American Eagle Outfitters. Unless you already have a supported Citi credit card the Google Prepaid Card, which is available\u00a0instantly\u00a0to anyone with a Google account, is the fastest and easiest way to start using Wallet. Google even gives you a $10 credit when you activate the prepaid card. You can top up the prepaid card with any credit or debit card from with in the Google Wallet app on the phone. The minimum top up amount is $20.<\/p>\n
It took me less than five minutes to set up Google Wallet and the Google prepaid card. I tried it at Peet’s<\/a><\/em> coffee shop. The first time I tried it didn’t work, probably because I didn’t hold the phone on the terminal long enough. You need to hold the phone on the reader until you hear a beep.<\/p>\n
In Sprint<\/a><\/em> Google found a nationwide mobile operator willing to work with them. Google and its partners have created the first large scale nationwide mobile payment system in the US. In tech, being first doesn’t always guarantee success, but it often does, especially when the intial implementer has the resources to aggressivly promote and continually improve their product and Google certainly has both.<\/p>\n
The main things I see as holding back Google Wallet adoption are that it only works on one phone on one operator and that not enough merchants accept it. Although 300,000 participating merchants sounds like a lot, my local grocery store doesn’t take PayPass and neither do any of favorite cafes and restaurants. For Wallet to really take off it needs to be supported by the\u00a0majority\u00a0of merchants. Google and FirstData are doing their part with a program to give small merchants a free NFC reader and $100 of free transaction processing<\/a>. In addition Google isn’t charging any\u00a0transaction\u00a0fees at all. Merchants pay the same processing fee as they do for conventional credit card purchases and Citi, MasterCard and FirstData collect their normal fees as well. Google plans to monetize Wallet with\u00a0advertising\u00a0and merchant fees from Google Offers<\/a>,<\/em> which is integrated with Wallet.<\/p>\n
Although\u00a0Google has Sprint, getting other operators on board may be a tough sell.The other US national carriers (Verizon, AT&T and T-Mobile) have created a joint venture called ISIS<\/a> which has announced agreements with Visa, Mastercard, Discover, and American Express. As often seems to happen with joint operator schemes, ISIS seems to be slow out of the starting gate. The ISIS program began a year ago but is not yet operational. ISIS is scheduled to begin its first trial by mid-2012 in Salt Lake City. At that rate I can’t see ISIS general availability for at least a year. By then Google could have an insurmountable lead.<\/p>\n
I’m interested to see what happens when the next pure Google Android flagship, the Galaxy Nexus<\/a>,\u00a0lauches Nov 21st on Verizon. It is said to contain the same NFC payment chip as the the Nexus S. The big question is if Verizon will allow the phone to use Google Wallet. If they do I think ISIS is dead.<\/p>\n
At last week’s Sprint Open Solutions Conference I got my first look at Google Wallet, the search and advertising company’s mobile payment system. Wallet is the first large scale mobile payment system released to the general public in the US. Here’s my take on how it works and what it means. The Samsung Nexus S 4G on the Sprint network is the first, and so far the only, phone that works with Google Wallet. It contains an NXP PN65 NFC … Continue reading