Once again the silicon valley is abuzz with talk about the new project from one of its heroes, but will Square, meet expectations?
A decade ago with the advent of e-commerce a wave of companies promised to radically transform the way payments were accepted, from wallets to micro-payments. This year, year 0 in the new calendar of m-commerce- has seen a number of promising announcements in mobile payment from the likes of Obopay, Boku or BlingNation. This week Square joined the fray and showed to the world what had been whispered in the Silicon Valley circles throughout the fall.
It is politically correct to praise the new venture of a Web 2.0 innovator, especially one with backers such as Khosla Ventures. Yet I have seen many highly anticipated payments products fail to achieve their promise. So what will if be with Square?
First the positives:
Without a doubt Square is therefore well positioned to challenge the providers of mobile terminals and gateway services. The Verifones of the world or startups such as Way Systems have offered solution still too expensive and inflexible for your proto-typical mobile merchant (for instance the Mary Kay reseller who wants to take payments, get it reported to her accounting software, have the order processed with the head office, get a receipt for the client, track the order later on…).
However Square also has some real challenges still ahead:
In the end though the true uniqueness of Square may have less to do with a clever way of executing mobile payments, and more with the data hoard they could accumulate: a person’s name, email address payment account, picture, possibly phone number, all validated by a payment transaction is a very valuable asset regardless of whether you are in the payments gateway business or not.
This valley falls easily to the power of hype, and its history is littered with examples of formidable innovators who could do no harm… and yet eventually proved to be mere mortals. Without prejudice for a team that delivered in record time two very interesting inventions (the card reading device and the iPhone experience), I think the jury is still out.
Agree / disagree: Tweet me at PRGauthier
For 20 years, Patrick Gauthier has been developing, selling and deploying new technologies in particular for payment and commerce, in private and public companies ranging from start-ups to global organizations.
Most recently while at Visa, he lead a number of high profile product deployments such as Smart Visa and Visa Contactless/PayWave. He was also responsible for Visa International Innovation program driving new strategies and business models for mobile commerce, account holders identification and authentication, and payment data security. In parallel Patrick managed Visa’s Corporate Venture and Alliances program investing in a number of companies that are shaping the evolution of commerce and payments. Prior to Visa, Patrick held various Sales Management, Product Management and Engineering positions.
A native of France, Patrick holds a Master’s Degree in Telecommunications Engineering from Telecom SudParis, and lives in California. Patrick has served on a number of Boards as director, observer and advisor, including mFormation, mTLD, Arcot, Inside Contactless and Upek, each leaders in their respective fields. Patrick is also an appointed member of France’s Conseil du Commerce Extérieur.
Patrick Gauthier can be contacted at patrick.r.gauthier@sbcglobal.net or twitter: prgauthier.