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By Scott Thompson

Worldwide mobile payment users will surpass 141.1 million in 2011, a 38.2 per cent increase from 2010, according to Gartner. The market is, however, growing slower than expected.

Worldwide mobile payment volume is forecast to total $86.1 billion, up 75.9 per cent from 2010. β€œIn developing markets, despite favorable conditions for mobile payment, growth is not as strong as was anticipated. Many service providers are yet to adapt their strategies to local requirements, and success models from Kenya and the Philippines are unlikely to be translated to other markets,” says Sandy Shen, research director at Gartner. "While developing markets have favorable conditions for mobile payments, such as high penetration of mobile devices and low banking penetration, this is no guarantee of success, unless service providers adapt their strategies to local market requirements.”

"In developed markets, companies are trumpeting the prospects of Near Field Communication (NFC) without realising the complexity of the service model. We believe mass market adoption of NFC payments is at least four years away," she adds. "The biggest hurdle is the need to change user behavior by convincing consumers to pay with mobile phones instead of cash and cards."

Gartner expects Short Message Service (SMS) and Unstructured Supplementary Service Data (USSD) to remain the dominant access technologies in developing markets due to the constraints of mobile phones. Wireless Application Protocol (WAP) will remain the preferred mobile access technology in developed markets, where the mobile Internet is commonly available and activated on the phone. Mobile app downloads and mobile commerce are the main drivers of WAP payments, and WAP will account for almost 90 per cent of all mobile transactions in North America and about 70 per cent in Western Europe in 2011. Money transfers and prepaid top-ups will drive transaction volumes in developing markets. These are seen as the "killer apps" in developing markets, where people value the convenience of sending money to relatives and topping up mobile accounts. This is most obvious in Eastern Europe, the Middle East and Africa, where these two services will account for 54 per cent and 32 per cent of all transactions in 2011.

"Thanks to the success of mobile application stores, such as Apple's App Store, and the efforts in driving mobile sales by major retailers, such as Amazon and eBay, merchandise purchases far outweigh other use cases in developed markets, which include North America and Western Europe," says Shen. "We predict that in 2011, merchandise purchases will account for 90 per cent and 77 per cent of all transactions in North America and Western Europe, respectively."

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