Tag: starbucks

Starbucks continues its push into the mobile payments realm

Starbucks is growing bolder with its mobile initiatives in order to better engage consumers

Starbucks is beginning to more aggressively promote its mobile payments application. The app can already be considered a resounding success for the company, but Starbucks is keen to see its use expand among its customers. The company is beginning to promote the app as the best way to avoid long lines at its local stores, giving customers a way to order and purchase products quickly from their mobile devices while also being rewarded for doing so.

Mobile commerce is quickly winning over consumers

Mobile commerce has won favor with consumers because of its convenient nature, but relatively few people are willing to embrace mobile payments fully. This is due to their security concerns and the fact that most mobile commerce platforms are exactly the same. The majority of mobile commerce applications currently available to consumers only facilitate mobile transactions, offering little else in the way of convenience or rewarding consumer loyalty. Starbucks has managed to find strong success with its app through a focus on consumer loyalty, noting that more than 8 million people are currently registered with My Starbucks Rewards.

Starbucks begins promoting mobile transactions in more of its stores located throughout the US

Mobile Payments - StarbucksApproximately 14% of all payments made at Starbucks store now come from the company’s mobile application. Starbucks suggests that its customers are becoming quite interested in mobile payments because of how easy and convenient its mobile application is. The company is beginning to rapidly increase the number of locations that accept mobile transactions in the hopes of further promoting its application as a viable tool for consumers.

Company has big plans for mobile commerce and plans to see success in this highly competitive market

Mobile commerce has become one of Starbucks’ most lucrative business sectors. Rumors suggest that the company was able to generate more than $1 billion in revenue just from mobile payments in 2013. The company is eager to continue capitalizing on the increasing mobility of its customers, offering them services that are designed to be convenient and mobile-centric in nature.

Mobile wallets could replace traditional wallets

Mobile applications are beginning to play a major role in commerce

Mobile wallets may soon be in a position to replace their traditional counterparts. Mobile technology is becoming an increasingly integral part of society, and many people are beginning to rely on their smartphones and tablets in their daily lives. This means that mobile devices are becoming repositories of consumer information, including financial data. These devices are also storing information coming from businesses, such as digital coupons and other such offers from retailers and other organizations.

Mobile wallet applications are becoming more common among consumers of all kinds

Mobile wallets are simple applications that are designed to store financial information, making it easier for consumers to purchase products online and at physical stores from their mobile devices. These applications have become somewhat popular among consumers, but no single application has managed to win the favor of the majority of people in any given demographic. Consumers favor moving from one application to the next, making use of multiple apps that suit their needs effectively at any given moment. Some, however, have settled on the apps that they find most useful, keen to make use of these mobile wallets more than they use traditional forms of currency and credit cards.

Starbucks shows off how mobile apps can be used to generate more commerce activity

mobile wallets Starbucks is, perhaps, one of the best examples of the success that a company can find in engaging mobile consumers with wallet applications. Approximately 14% of all transactions made at Starbucks stores come from mobile devices, according to the company’s CEO, Howard Schultz. These transactions are coming from the company’s own mobile application, which is designed to facilitate mobile payments.

Some companies are having trouble finding a foothold in mobile commerce with their own wallet applications

Other companies working to find success in the mobile commerce space have had trouble finding traction with their mobile wallet applications. Google is one such company. In the early days of Google Wallet, the platform was crippled by security issues that drove consumers to use other applications. Other organizations have faced similar problems, as well.