On the road to voice payments, Google and Amazon pull ahead of Apple

Google just scrapped its Hands Free pilot, a retail payments program it began testing almost a year ago that allowed people to use facial recognition technology to pay for items in-store. All they had to do was say “I’ll pay with Google.”

The road to mobile payment is riddled with the bones of past failures. Google previously stumbled with Google Wallet in 2011, the first attempt at a mobile wallet for consumers that never really took off — and was overshadowed by Apple Pay, which launched months later.

But now Google has a leg up in voice, which is probably the next shift in consumer behavior, and as a result, payments. The same is true for Amazon. Google’s Hands Free facial recognition experiment may not have caught on, but the popularity of its Home Assistant, as well as Amazon’s Alexa, is rising rapidly. Echo sales jumped 400 percent from last year, according to VoiceLabs, and both Google Home and Alexa grew their third-party developer bases more than 1500 percent.

Meanwhile, Apple is missing the voice-first boat, which is odd considering that Apple Pay, a fingerprint-enabled mobile payment service, took an early lead in the mobile payments race after Google Wallet’s flameout.

But fingerprint tech is different from voice. And even though Apple’s Siri debuted well ahead of Alexa and Google Home, in differs from them in the types of information users feel comfortable sharing with her and what they can share with Alexa or Google Home.

Here’s how the three biggest players in voice currently stand against each other in regards to voice payments:

Alexa
This week Starbucks — itself a payments pioneer disguised as a caffeine vendor — launched a beta version of its voice ordering function for iOS and Alexa users. About 1,000 users in the U.S. are testing the service. People who bank with Capital One can ask Alexa for information about their banking activity. Alexa has the greater information sharing and reading capability, for now, than its competitors.

There is an increasing number of service providers bringing Alexa integrations to enable commerce through voice. Currently, it adds a level of convenience to small purchases, like a Starbucks coffee or an Uber ride.

“I don’t think the day is on the horizon where a consumer is standing in their living room saying, ‘I want to order a 42-inch TV,’” said Michelle Evans, head of digital consumer research at Euromonitor. “I think it’ll be driven around different products or services where convenience is a factor,” like food ordering, or ride sharing services.

Google Home
Brian Roemmele, a researcher and analyst and founder of PayFinders.com, predicts that in the next two years adoption of digital assistance will accelerate as quickly if not more as the original iPhone did in its early days and smaller uses will begin to take off, like ordering food.

“We had three voice-first Super Bowl ads,” he pointed out. “One from Google and two for Alexa. People say mainstreaming is about 10 years away, I’m saying it already happened.”

It’s not clear what Google’s next move is. Now that the Hands Free pilot is over it plans on “bringing the best of the Hands Free technology to a wider audience,” it wrote in an FAQ this week. In the same week, Alphabet, Google’s parent company, warned investors in its annual report of increasing competition from “digital assistant providers, such as Apple, Amazon, Facebook and Microsoft.”

Furthermore, developers last month dug into the code that makes up the latest version of the Google Home Assistant and found some lines saying it would soon allow users to make payments directly through Google Home. Neither Google nor Amazon responded to requests for comment.

Siri
Developers have built a voice-first peer-to-peer payment capability into the latest iPhone operating system, with Square Cash and U.K. challenger bank Monzo. The next update will include voice-activated bill pay functionality, an Apple spokesperson confirmed. But because Siri requires the person’s fingerprint to authenticate and send the payment, it still feels like more of a mobile payment than a true voice payment. For example, someone might say, “Hey Siri, send John $10 using cash,” Siri would go into the Cash app to set up the payment, but then ultimately require TouchID verification to send it.

Apple’s best efforts in voice have been Siri and its new AirPods, wireless headphones made for better listening experiences and interactions with Siri. These allow people to exchange much more personal information, things customers are most likely uncomfortable disclosing to a digital assistant like Alexa or Google Home because of who might be listening in on that information, said PayFinders’ Roemmele.

Because customers tend to communicate more generalized information with Alexa and Google, Roemmele added, the two companies will need to fine tune its voice recognition and authentication capabilities to ensure when customers share private information they never feed it back when a third party is in the room.

Nevertheless, Siri as a digital assistant lags behind them. Customers feel the difference when they ask Siri particularly complex questions and she often directs them to web searches requiring they do further reading and research, instead of replying with a complete answer the way Alexa or Google would.

“Apple is missing part of the voice-first revolution because they see it as an upending to the existing operating system,” Roemmele said. “They don’t see it as a modality in and of itself and because of that they box themselves out of it.”

7 examples showing the power of banking APIs

Banking as a platform has been hailed as the coming mega-trend that will change the way we interact with financial services. In order to keep up with changing customer demands, banks open up to business partners and the larger community through APIs that can connect bank data and services to other applications.

The concept of partnerships itself is not new. However, the use of APIs moves the control of the user experience from banks to their partners or to a community of developers, thus changing the relationship from vendor to partner. For a slow and closed industry as banking, this is a huge change.

Banking APIs include account authentication and information, analytics, loyalty programs, and payment processing. In Europe and the U.K., regulators are forcing banks to share customer data and similar changes are probably coming to the US.

But aside from the hype, what API-based banking products and services are gaining traction in the market? 

Paypal / Siri integration: Today, Paypal announced its users can now send and request money via a voice command with Siri. Simply say, “Hey Siri, send Bill $50 using PayPal.” Paypal processed $41 billion in peer-to-peer transactions across PayPal, Venmo and Xoom last year and is expecting 17 million P2P transactions in the month of December alone. Giving customers an easier way to send money to each other is a no-brainer.

Telefónica Deutschland’s O2 Banking: This summer, mobile telecommunication company, Telefonica Deutschland launched a mobile only bank account, built on German Bank Fidor’s platform. O2 Banking offers transactions via mobile phone number, small instant loans, and better mobile data plans. This is a good example how a third party can create a new banking experience on top of a platform created by an established bank.

Robinhood’s connection to a user’s bank account: Users who invest through investment app Robinhood first need to connect their bank accounts. Using Plaid’s banking APIs, Robinhood makes the onboarding process pretty easy and smooth. Plaid’s APIs help connect a variety of other applications, including TransferWise, Acorns, and Stripe.

Wave integrates customer financial info: Invoice and accounting software Wave uses banking APIs to connect to a user’s bank account, empowering its clients with full control of their business finances in one place. Not just an invoicing service with limited visibility to its business clients’ true financial health, the company leverages as much data from other sources as it can. The company also connects with online lender OnDeck to offer loans through its platform.

Facebook Messenger payments: Users of Facebook Messenger can transfer money to their friends without leaving the service. The company is working with major players in the industry including Stripe, PayPal, Braintree, Visa, MasterCard and American Express. Facebook is building Messenger as a bot platform that will allow users to access many third party applications.

Banking chatbots: A handful of banks have recently launched chatbots that can converse — to a certain degree of complexity — with customers using natural language. These AI driven pieces of software have access to the bank databases, account information and can help customers solve many common problems themselves, leaving only the more difficult customer service issues to a real human agent. Such examples include Bank of America’s recently launched Erica and Mastercard’s Mastercard KAI. Mastercard’s chatbot will work through Facebook Messenger. The credit card company plans to expand to other platforms later.

Capital One and Amazon Echo: Capital One took conversational interface, the fancy name for chatbots, to the next level with an integration on Amazon’s voice controlled device, Echo. Though not significantly different than other text-based chatbots, the all encompassing feeling of such an audio interface makes it unique.

APIs give rise to an otherwise impossible number of financial user experiences. Banks just do not have the time or resources to create them. Capital One would not have created Echo on its own, but once the product is there, the bank capitalized on it to reach customers in new ways.

As banks open up their customer data and third parties leverage that information to create better value for the end customer, banking will become omnipresent — there when we need it, in the way we need it.