by Tim Attinger
Cloud Payments 210 (required): Building Value in the Network
Lesson 1 Discussion Board: What is the most important driver of the network effect? Click here to respond.
We hope you enjoyed Fall Break from PYMNTS University. Perhaps you were out enjoying the fresh autumn breeze, a change in the color of the leaves from green to bright crimson, and perhaps a raucous time enjoying a football game on a crisp afternoon. Back at the PU faculty club, your professors were planning out a compelling series of courses to keep you engaged as we fall back and the cold winds begin to blow. We’ve covered the basics of debit, prepaid, mobile, and consumer behavior at the point of transaction.
In this course, we’ll cover the basics of how network businesses operate, how they cycle for growth, and how they drive more value in that growth. To understand payments is to understand the fundamentals of how network businesses work. The way that networks grow is a fairly consistent process, regardless of the industry in which they operate. They add users, then functions, then value, and work to attract more users. Networks, particularly payments networks, must continue to grow or they will most certainly die. In this course, we will discuss this dynamic in greater detail.
Basics of the Network Effect: Networks are powerful engines for growth. Like all platform businesses, networks require two different parties to adopt the network at the same rate and at the same rate to be viable. In telecommunications, these two parties are callers and receivers. In online search companies, the Web 2.0 versions of local newspapers, these are advertisers and readers. In payments networks, these two parties are buyers and sellers. Successful payments networks are born from a strong proposition that brings buyers and sellers to the platform at a great rate, driving valuable interactions between them that cross the network, igniting a catalytic reaction at the core that begins to fuel an almost self-driving cycle of growth.
The core proposition of the network effect has been described by many observers over the years. The most readily understandable network may be telecommunications. As phone networks first began to expand service to consumer households, callers understood that the value of paying to have the lines installed and to subscribe to basic phone service came most directly from how many other people you could call on the other end. These basics apply to payments networks as well, expressed in terms of buyers and sellers. A simple summary of the network effect may be this:
The Value of the Network Effect: For a payments network to achieve a strong catalytic cycle of growth, managers of the business must understand the core values of the network effect. While the core description of the network effect is clear above, it certainly merits further description and detail before we begin to discuss how payments professionals may drive the growth of an electronic payments network and realize these effects. For further detail, the fundamental value of the network effect described above may be elaborated as follows:
The fundamentals of the network effect are fairly simple. Driving a system that realizes these effects is yet another thing altogether. In our next class, we will review the basis by which the manager of a payments business can generate these network effects through three simple steps. And in our final session, we will talk about how today’s payments network businesses have challenges for maintaining growth, and how they might manage to grow through them.
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Mobile 206 Lesson 1: Emerging Mobile Landscape
Mobile 206 Lesson 2: Emerging Mobile Evolution
Mobile 206 Lesson 3: Emerging Mobile Implications
Driving Payments Innovation through Education- PYMNTS University