In: Economics
Compare the benefits and drawbacks of Google Wallet and Apple Pay from a consumer’s standpoint, a retailer’s standpoint, and a bank’s standpoint.
Apple (AAPL) and Google (GOOG) brands inspire almost religious devotion in their loyal consumers who see comparisons between the two tech giants as a comparison between apples and oranges. When it comes to Apple Pay and Google Wallet, our preliminary findings suggested they are mostly identical offerings: Apple Pay appears easier to use, while Google Wallet has a few more features. Further digging reveals that this is literally an apples vs. green-robot-persons comparison!
Credit Card fraud has been a major problem in the U.S. As banks and retailers work to upgrade their platforms, mobile payment systems like Pay and Wallet may actually allow the U.S. to leapfrog to the forefront of payment security.
While both systems appear to be equally robust, the two companies do take different approaches that shape what their products can and cannot do. For the consumer, the use of Touch ID vs. PIN Authentication is the most visible difference, but behind the scenes, there is a lot more going on. Most important is the fact that neither system reveals the user's card details to the vendor.
With both systems, the user's card details are provided only once, during the initial setup. Google adopts an intermediary role and saves your card details on their servers. They then issue a virtual card to your device, the Google Wallet Virtual Card. When paying, the device only transmits this virtual card. The vendor never sees your real card, which is safely protected by Google's own secure servers. When the virtual card is charged by the seller, Google in turn charges your stored debit or credit card, being the only entity that ever sees your real card through this transaction.
Apple employs a different system known as Tokenization. Here, when your card details are provided to the device, it contacts the issuing bank directly and upon confirmation receives a device and card specific token called the Device Account Number (DAN) that is stored on a secure chip on the device. The DAN structurally resembles a credit card number and is the thing that is passed on to the merchant when any payment is made, and authorized in the usual way with the bank.
This seemingly small distinction makes all the difference. Since Google acts as an intermediary and stores your card details on its own servers, it does not need to worry about making any deals with the banks and practically any card can be added to your Google Wallet. In fact, you can even add loyalty cards and gift cardsto your wallet, and send and receive money that can be stored in the Wallet and used directly without involving your bank.
In every single way, Google Wallet tries to replicate a real wallet in the virtual world. So much so that Google even tracks your transactions, saving order details, almost as if you stuffed your receipt into your wallet. This data will be used, as with all data on Google, to serve you ads that matter to you, which feeds directly into Google's business model. In keeping with its role as an intermediary, Google offers 100% security with its Google Wallet Fraud Protection policy.
Apple, on the other hand, explicitly declares that it will never track your transactions. In fact, Apple won't even store your card details on their servers or on the devices. All Apple does is transmit your card to the bank, authenticate with the bank and receive and store the DAN that the bank sends back.
Apple is not a payment intermediary, and is instead positioning itself as, true to its name, a payment medium alone. In essence, an Apple Pay enabled phone is an expensive and beautifully crafted credit card; one that can be lost or become useless if the phone battery dies.
Though fingerprint scan security and the ability to remotely disable the phone offer quite a bit of protection, if someone does get access to your Apply Pay phone, you have to take up the issue with your bank and not Apple.
.1)Consumer’s stand point From a consumer perspective, Google Wallet and Apple Pay offer very similar in-store experiences. Google Wallet requires a PIN, while Apple Pay uses Touch ID, but both still primarily use NFC. While the two competing services differ dramatically behind the scenes in many ways, the in-store experience is more important to consumer adoption.
2)Retailer’s standpoint While Apple Pay may work with more retailers and financial institutions, the fact that it’s currently limited to the latest iPhone is a major drawback.Because Android Pay is compatible with multiple Android devices, more people can experience the Pay feature. However, it appears that more Apple users have tried Pay. In fact, research has found that “56% of those who have tried Apple Pay use it once during a typical week,” compared to 36% of Android Pay users.
3)Bank’s standpoint Apple Pay and Google Wallet technically are similar outside the phone. On the phone Apple Pay is much better protected. Politically Google Wallet originally attempted to be some sort of credit card layer/issuer/resolver which made adoption slower than Apple Pay. Apple took the “easier” route and takes the tiny fee akin to what the “comrades credit cards” give out. So, more banks worked with Apple then Google. Google Wallet has had changes recently, so some of this may have changed.2.In 2015, Google announced the introduction of a new service called Android Pay.Using your favourite search engine or the resources of your library, learn more about Android Pay and, in about 200 words, explain why you think Google decided to develop this new product. In your answer, be sure to consider why Google also decided to continue offering its Google Wallet product.Unlike Google Wallet did in the past, Android Pay operates with the cooperation of banks and card issuers, and doesn't have any restrictions based on the phone carrier you're using.