One of the key drivers of travel’s evolution from a
primarily offline, manually processed business to one increasingly coordinated
online has been the transformation of the payments industry.
The development of the internet, followed by the birth of
e-commerce - notably Amazon in 1994, eBay in 1995 and shortly thereafter online
travel brands such as Travelocity and Expedia - spurred a need for digital
payment options.
One of the first was PayPal, launched in 1999, and today there
are hundreds of ways for consumers around the world to pay for products and
services online.
According to the World
Payments Report 2018 from Capgemini and BNP Paribas, global non-cash
transaction volumes grew at 10.1% in 2016 to reach 482.6 billion. That rate is
expected to accelerate through 2021 to 12.7% compound annual growth rate
globally, with emerging markets growing at 21.6%.
Throughout June, we are exploring the topic of travel
payments from a variety of angles.
We begin with a look at some of options within the growing
inventory of alternative payments.
Background
The term “alternative payments” is generally defined to
include a variety of transaction models such as bank transfers (Trustly, Sofort,
iDEAL), local card schemes (Cartes Bancaires, Girocard, RuPay), cryptocurrency
(Bitcoin, Litecoin, Dash) and the most common and fastest-growing model – e-wallets
(PayPal, Alipay, WeChat Pay, Google Pay, Apple Pay).
According to WorldPay’s
2018 Global Payments Report, “Online shopping demands equal measures of
convenience and security. Digital wallets deliver on both counts. Mobile
applications integrate the act of payment into daily lifestyles and routines,
while preloaded credentials speeds online checkout. E-wallets do all of this
safely with encryption, tokenization and device authentication providing extra
layers of security.”
Worldpay predicts e-wallets will
account for 47% of all e-commerce payments globally by 2022 - nearly three
times the share it predicts for the second-most common payment method, credits
cards (17%). Much of the growth in the next few years, it says, will come from continued
adoption in China and “a surge of adoption in North America.”
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And likely the bulk of the e-wallet
transaction volume will flow through what Capgemini and BNP Paribas call “BigTechs” -Google, Amazon, Facebook, Apple, Alibaba and Tencent - which accounted for
71% of the global e-wallet market in 2016.
“These companies are leveraging
their large-platform user base to make an impact in the payments space,
focusing on providing seamless user experience, value-added features and making
use of network effects,” the report says.
Application in travel
For travel merchants, one of the challenges to offering a
variety of digital payment options is the technical work that must happen to
integrate these offerings.
Payment processing companies such as UATP bridge these systems.
UATP provides a variety of payment solutions for thousands of
airlines, travel agencies and rail carriers, and one of those is to connect
those suppliers to nearly two dozen alternative payment brands around the
globe.
In 2018, UATP’s alternative payment processing business
posted a record-setting 11% growth compared to 2017, and president and CEO
Ralph Kaiser says he expects 2019’s figures to be even higher.
“We basically set a new record every month - our transaction
growth and our volume growth are both in double digits,” Kaiser says.
“We are very bullish on the marketplace. We are offering new
and different programs and technology to our airline members to facilitate the
acceptance of alternative brands. And we’re going to start putting out more
products and services in that side of our business, because there seems to be
demand for it in our airline membership base.”
Kaiser says initially merchants were attracted to options such
as PayPal was because it was cheaper to take a booking through alternative
platforms than through a traditional credit card. Now, he says, it’s primarily
about offering whatever options will satisfy customers.
“So now it boils down to ‘can I sell more things by
accepting an additional form of payment.’ That’s a big driver these days. And what
we’re finding with airlines, to get more ticket sales and incremental revenue,
you have to offer a method of payment that people have and want to use. In some
markets there aren’t credit cards or a large part of the population can’t
qualify for one.”
Consumers that do have a credit card may not have a credit
limit that is high enough to use it for a travel purchase, or the card may not
be enabled for cross-border transactions. And consumers in some regions simply
prefer to pay with cash, so bank transfers are the preferred method.
Rehman Baig is vice president of
payment partnerships at Yapstone, which provides payment services to
marketplace-style businesses including travel brands such as Vrbo, Kigo and
RentPath.
Baig says the value of alternative
payment methods comes from providing simplicity and accessibility for consumers -particularly important in an industry such as travel where brands are trying
to court customers from all over the world and where those customers are often
paying in advance for accommodations and other aspects of their trip in foreign
countries and currencies.
“These tend to be larger transactions
that elicit more anxiety, more fear, more excitement for that matter - I want
to do this and know for certain my bus is booked or my flight is confirmed,”
Baig says.
“An alternative payment
method can ease your way into that transaction. You can pay on your terms ...
rather than how someone else chooses to pay. And you want the consumer to feel
good about completing that transaction.”
Installment options
For some consumers,
point-of-sale financing is a type of alternative payment option that does more
than make them “feel good” about booking a trip - it is enabling travel that
would not otherwise be possible.
Founded in 2017, Uplift is
one company that offers installment payments for travel.
Through partnerships with about
100 brands including Kayak, United Vacations, American Airlines and Universal
Orlando Resort - and, since March, UATP - Uplift enables travelers to book
instantly but pay for their trips over time through fixed payments each month.
Uplift CEO Brian Bath says
the company is on track to exceed its goal of facilitating payments for one
million customers in 2019.
He says those travelers are
equally split into three segments: those with little disposable income and low
credit scores who would not travel without the option of paying in
installments, those with ample savings and high credit scores who use
installments to take a more “luxury” trip and those in the middle for whom installments
convince them to “stop shopping and pull the trigger,” says Barth.
Loans are priced according to
risk, with interest rates as low as 4.35% and as high as 35.99%.
“What it does fundamentally
is it changes the conversion rate of the purchase for leisure travelers,” Barth
says.
“What we really are is a marketing
company, using payments to drive marketing metrics.”
One
of those metrics is ancillary sales: Barth says Uplift’s partners are making
an average of $43 more per booking.
Today there are hundreds of alternative payment brands
globally, but Kaiser says he expects to see consolidation in the future.
“You’ll see a convergence of the traditional and the alternative
coming more toward the center and maybe taking different pieces until everyone has
an offering for their specific customer base."