Next to the content of bin Laden’s hard drive, what I’d most like to see today are the PowerPoint decks that led AT&T and Verizon to actually think they could start a mobile payments network. My guess is that between the two companies and their management consultants the following questions weren’t addressed or were glossed over as not being that important to pay attention to:
I was quite dubious about the chances for ISIS when it was first announced (Read: Will the Mobile Payments JV Trounce MasterCard and Visa?). But I figured that maybe they had thought this venture through more deeply than their announcements and press reports were suggesting and I had given them credit for. The Wall Street Journal article today by Robin Sidel and Shayndi Raice confirms my initial concern that this was yet another badly thought through adventure into mobile payments in America. Lots of hype, lots of money spent, not much to show for it, a sideshow on the long-haul to ignite mobile payments in this country.
What should the mobile carriers do now? There’s certainly nothing wrong in their trying to create disruptive innovation including mobile payments. They might succeed, make a lot of money for their shareholders and create valuable services for consumers and merchants. But maybe they don’t have it in their genes to do that anymore than I could, if I were younger, go from being an economist to being a singer. Instead of working on trying to be the mobile payments network or trying to control the mobile wallet, it might be best if the mobile carriers just concentrated on providing the best possible pipes for mobile payments and commerce and stopped trying to control other pieces of what will become the mobile payments workstream. That would probably speed up the development of mobile payments, and the carriers would probably make more money sooner.
David S. Evans is an economist and a business advisor to payment companies around the world. His recent work has focused on helping companies create, ignite and profit from payments innovation. He is the originator of the Innovation Ignition Framework®, a tool provides a systematic way for companies to evaluate and implement innovative ideas and achieve critical mass. David is the Founder of Market Platform Dynamics. Read More