βββοΈ Starbucksβs mobile payments system is so popular than Appleβs or Googleβs in πΊπΈ
By the end of this year, a quarter of U.S. smartphone users β 55 million people β over the age of 14 will make an in-store mobile payment. More than 40 percent of those people will have done so through Starbucksβs mobile payments app, according to new data from research firm eMarketer.
The Starbucks app, which launched before the other three top payments apps β #ApplePay, #GooglePay and #SamsungPay β has long been the most successful payments app. Itβs likely going to maintain that lead over the next few years.
π @PerspectiveIX
π Read more at t.me/iXNews/25746
By the end of this year, a quarter of U.S. smartphone users β 55 million people β over the age of 14 will make an in-store mobile payment. More than 40 percent of those people will have done so through Starbucksβs mobile payments app, according to new data from research firm eMarketer.
The Starbucks app, which launched before the other three top payments apps β #ApplePay, #GooglePay and #SamsungPay β has long been the most successful payments app. Itβs likely going to maintain that lead over the next few years.
π @PerspectiveIX
π Read more at t.me/iXNews/25746
πΈ Leading Payment Methods Used in 2018
A credit card stored automatically on a computer is the main form of online payment in the U.S, according to a survey on Mobile Banking conducted by Ipsos and ING. #Paypal came in second place with about 1 in 5 respondents citing the online payment as their preferred form of online payment.
#AmazonPay, #GooglePay, and #ApplePay were some of the less common forms of online payment for respondents interviewed by Ipsos and ING.
π @PerspectiveIX via Statista.
A credit card stored automatically on a computer is the main form of online payment in the U.S, according to a survey on Mobile Banking conducted by Ipsos and ING. #Paypal came in second place with about 1 in 5 respondents citing the online payment as their preferred form of online payment.
#AmazonPay, #GooglePay, and #ApplePay were some of the less common forms of online payment for respondents interviewed by Ipsos and ING.
π @PerspectiveIX via Statista.