Apple, Google & the War To Replace Your Wallet

Original article

Amazon, Google, Apple, Microsoft and others have their eyes on the NFC mobile payment market, setting the stage for a potentially brutal battle over the future of payments.

NFC, or near-field communication, allows for wireless transfer of data over short distances between two devices. This makes it an ideal technology for financial transactions between a phone and a device at a brick-and-mortar store.

While NFC is still in its infancy in the U.S., it is prevalent in Japan, where you can pay for almost anything by simply swiping your phone. There’s no need for credit cards, cash or even ID. Your smartphone is your wallet.

A lot of companies are betting that 2011 is the year NFC takes off in the U.S., and are working on their own NFC payment solutions. This list includes some very big players:

In a wide-open NFC mobile payment market, you can make a compelling case for any of these companies to become the dominant player. Google is moving faster than anybody else in the market, has a partnership deal with Mastercard and Citigroup, and controls the Android OS. Apple not only has iPhone, but it has iTunes, making it the company with the most credit card information on the web. Microsoft may be behind in the mobile OS race, but its partnership with Nokia should fix that problem. And Isis alone controls more than 200 million wireless subscribers and hundreds of millions of handsets.

And then there’s Amazon. While it doesn’t control a mobile OS or millions of smartphones, it does have the most payments experience and clout of the group. It has also proven adept at developing strong mobile apps. And even more important is its potential ability to convince brick-and-mortar stores to include its own NFC devices in their stores.

It’s easy to see why all of these companies care about NFC. It’s potentially game changing technology. As Mashable‘s Sarah Kessler explained last year, NFC could be used in payments, transportation, health care, smart objects and social media. Each one of those industries is a multi-billion dollar market on its own.

The NFC battle is going to be waged over years, or even decades. The stakes are simply too high for anyone to let a competitor dominate the market.

About jonbarker

Digital Marketer working in the UK. Interested in Motor Racing, Politics & Current Affairs and Business....

Posted on November 17, 2011, in mCommerce. Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.

Leave a comment