Tag Archive | "Bank"

Advertisement

Mobilink, NADRA Join Hands for Utility Bills Payment Solution


mobilink NADRA 300x199  Mobilink, NADRA Join Hands for Utility Bills Payment Solution Mobilink, Pakistan’s market leader in cellular services and a part of Orascom Telecom Holding (OTH) has formally collaborated with NADRA Technologies Ltd to facilitate payment of Utility Bills. This service will be available Free-of-Charge and around the clock. Deputy Chairman NADRA, Tariq Malik and Vice President Marketing Mobilink, Bilal Munir Sheikh inked the agreement to this effect.

NADRA Technologies Ltd (NTL) has undertaken this innovative approach to develop an e-Sahulat billing switch to provide an integrated system response to clients for payment of utility bills through alternate channels like mobiles phones, internet, ATM, bank branches and telcos outlets. The facility will empower Mobilink retailers to accept and deposit utility bills from all Mobilink and Non Mobilink customers, even people who do not own a mobile phone can avail this service by walking into a Mobilink retailer’s outlet and depositing their utility bills round the clock, within the due dates.

At the signing, Tariq Malik, Deputy Chairman NADRA said, “We are pleased to partner with the Mobilink which is the country’s largest cellular family with the most widespread retail and distribution network. Through this service, we are taking the bill payment facility to places where banks haven’t.” He further emphasized that “e-Sahulat platform is a tip of the iceberg and NTL is in process of transforming this platform into National Smart Service Platform for e-commerce. Through this Smart Service Platform organizations can utilize e-Sahulat touch points for cash in and cash out transactions under branchless regulations issued by State Bank of Pakistan. This arrangement will help commercial banks and Telecom operators to extend branchless banking concept through e-Sahulat without raising any infrastructure thereby saving capital and operational cost.”

Bilal Munir Sheikh, Vice President Marketing, Mobilink commented, “We commend NTL’s efforts to reach out to the common people of Pakistan, a vision we are pleased to share with them. As there is no charge or fee associated nor any condition to own a mobile phone, all segments of the society can avail this convenient facility”

e-Sahulat is a truly enabling service that cuts across infrastructural barriers in line with the spirit of branchless banking. This arrangement once put in place will facilitate general public especially in rural areas with solutions housed in congenial environments, while exposing the public to state-of-the-art-technology.

Share

Posted in IT, Mobile Banking, PakistanComments (0)

Financial Transaction On Your Phone


In this post I review the efforts by US banks and financial institutions such as credit card companies to push mobile commerce as another channel for their clients. This post is based on a study and report by Information Week. As you go through this, compare this with the experiment in Japan, especially how applications are loaded on the phone … it will be interesting to revisit this after a few months.

Citibank has unveiled Citi Mobile, the first downloadable mobile banking application from a major financial services provider. After enrolling online and downloading the app to a cell phone or smartphone, customers can view balances, pay bills, transfer money, locate ATMs, and click to call customer service.

Citi Mobile can be downloaded to 100 cell phone and smartphone models. It’s initially available in California, but Citibank says it will be out in other states by midyear. The app has been more than a year in development, and Citibank execs think U.S. cell phone users are ready to do more than talk and text on their phones. “They can manage their accounts while sitting at a red light in their car,” says Steven Kietz, Citi’s business manager for enhancement services and e-commerce.

133NACitiMobile
Information Week is not so sure. As they say: There will be a growing market for mobile banking when there’s a need for immediacy, like emergency fund transfers and balance checks, predicts James Van Dyke, president of payment consulting firm Javelin Strategy and Research. But his take on a mass market for mobile bill paying: “It’s ridiculous.” The banks beg to differ, though. Wachovia, which has a mobile offering, says mobile bill paying is one of the top customer requests.

Since the Citi Mobile app resides on the phone, it’s faster and offers a graphics-intensive interface that’s closer to online banking than text-heavy Web-based apps. Customers select the Citi icon on their phones to access accounts instead of navigating through multiple Web pages on a tiny screen. They’ll also receive new features automatically whenever Citibank makes an upgrade available.

Bank of America took a different approach, launching its WAP-enabled Web-based mobile banking service in February. Most mobile browsers can access the service, which lets Bank of America customers check account balances, pay bills, and transfer funds. “We chose to go with a WAP application, so that everyone can access it,” says Sanjay Gupta, an e-commerce executive for Bank of America. The downside: WAP displays information mostly in text form without rich graphics.

More from the report:

Wachovia also went with a Web-based app, launching its Wachovia Mobile service in December. It works only with Web browsers that come on smartphones running Microsoft’s Windows Mobile 5.0, Research In Motion’s BlackBerry, and the Palm OS. More than 50,000 people access Wachovia Mobile each week, says Ilieva Ageenko, the bank’s director of emerging applications.
But Wachovia has another option in the works. It has teamed with AT&T, which will offer later this year mobile devices preloaded with a mobile application for accessing Wachovia’s and other bank’s services. Preloading the app makes it easier to use on the phone. By getting together with AT&T, Wachovia has “enough footing to reach out to this huge base of customers,” says Ageenko.
133NAmobilephone
But preloaded apps have their downside since the number of customers a bank can reach is limited to the number of phones its app is loaded on. But even with downloaded and Web-based apps, banks may have to work hard to convince customers to sign on. “Instead of banks giving away toasters, maybe they’ll give away phones,” says Richard Crone, of Crone Consulting. Also, putting an app on a mobile device could increase calls to the support center as people struggle to get an app to work on a particular device, thus increasing a bank’s costs, he says.

Besides usability and access issues, security looms as a potential problem. Mobile applications preloaded on cell phones mean personal information will be stored on phones, posing a huge risk. The good news is that the banks are putting a lot of effort into securing their mobile offerings. With Citibank’s Citi Mobile service, the phones don’t store any personal information and transactions are secured with 128-bit encryption, the same technology that’s used at Citibank.com.

Customers accessing Bank of America’s online banking service from their cell phones are protected by the bank’s SiteKey security technology. Data also remains encrypted when it’s sent between the phone and the bank. Once AT&T rolls out mobile devices with Firethorn’s preloaded banking application, it will have the ability to remotely wipe devices clean of personal data if they’re lost or stolen.

MORE THAN JUST MOBILE BANKING
Credit card companies MasterCard and Visa have their own agenda. They want to convince users to use cell phones as credit cards for quick purchases. The report presents a few updates on this:

MasterCard and Visa have tested cell phones with embedded Near Field Communication technology that enables short-range wireless communications between devices. The next step is to team with wireless carriers and financial services providers on actual products. MasterCard says it’s in discussions with several carriers and financial services companies.

Visa is testing a mobile application that will let consumers use their cell phones for payments and online purchases. Customers will have access to their credit card account information and will receive account alerts and mobile coupons when they use the service. Visa also is partnering with chipmaker Qualcomm and phone maker Kyocera on contactless payment-enabled phones.

With everything that credit card companies, banks, and wireless carriers are doing, people’s cell phones should soon turn into more than communications devices. “It truly is disruptive technology,” says consultant Crone. The question is whether consumers also will be as excited about mobile banking and contactless payment apps.

Share

Posted in Mobile BankingComments (0)



Google Ads

Google Ads