Prepaid cards are in the midst of a dramatic transformation. With the incorporation of digital wallets, contactless payments, and artificial intelligence, prepaid cards have quickly become one of the most popular payment tools.
In a recent PaymentsJournal podcast, Mani Farhang, Vice President of Product at Fiserv Gift Solutions, and Jordan Hirschfield, Director of Prepaid at Javelin Strategy & Research, discussed the key innovations occurring in the prepaid space and the ways merchants can leverage them to drive customer engagement.
A Generational Shift
The prepaid card market was once dominated by financial giants like Visa and Mastercard, but PayPal and Apple have emerged in the industry. And it’s no coincidence that these two companies also offer two of the leading digital wallets.
“The themes in the industry are the broader shift to digital payments and increasing integration into first-party and third-party wallets,” said Farhang. “Our research indicates that 70% of consumers have downloaded a merchant app to store gift cards and fulfill loyalty rewards. This is driven by a generational shift—millennials and Gen Z are more likely to use digital gifting and take advantage of stored value in loyalty programs.”
In the prepaid industry, Starbucks has been the beacon for other brands to follow due to its success with end-to-end loyalty programs. One important aspect of Starbucks’ prepaid program is how it bridges between physical and digital gift cards.
For many consumers, a physical gift card is their introduction to a brand. Organizations who follow Starbucks’ lead and offer customers the means to digitize their cards into a stored-value wallet can use the initial interaction to introduce consumers to their loyalty and reward program.
“That incentivization makes for a more immersive experience for the consumer, not just in gifting but in self-use,” Hirschfield said. “There is also the opportunity to engage customers beyond the value of the initial card. For merchants, they don’t want the initial prepaid card to be the only interaction—they want it to become the start of a cyclical relationship.”
Lifetime Value
Merchants have an opportunity to expand their prepaid program by upgrading their payments terminals to support contactless payments. Contactless payment through near-field communication (NFC) technology has revolutionized the payments industry, and NFC has begun to gain traction in prepaid.
There has also been the emergence of omnichannel, multi-purse wallets, which are first-party wallets that act as stored-value containers for multiple funding types. These wallets give consumers multiple ways to fund their stored-value wallet, whether through gift cards, pay-by-bank, debit cards, or credit. For merchants, it’s another way to engage and reward loyal customers.
“Moving forward, there is the opportunity for brands to offer rebates and rewards, and even integrate third-party health and wellness programs into their digital ecosystem,” Farhang said. “The orchestration of disparate payment instruments into one ledger is advancing the integration with contactless payments.”
These instruments are frequently contained in digital wallets, which are increasingly becoming the primary option for consumers, even in brick-and-mortar transactions. Businesses should have a strategy to leverage digital wallets so they can reward consumers and pre-load funds into wallets, which is a key opportunity to offer discounts and create exclusivity.
Many mid-tier businesses utilize platforms that provide white-labeled apps and digital wallets that can be integrated with a merchant’s existing app, which allows them to merge loyalty points from multiple brands into a single source. Though first-party wallets are a powerful tool, third-party wallets like Apple Pay and Google Wallet should also be incorporated in an end-to-end loyalty program.
“The more you engage with a customer the more you remove them from the traditional transaction process and bring them into a lifetime value scenario,” Farhang said. “Acquisition costs will decline because the brand is driving higher engagement. It can be a powerful tool for merchants because prepaid cards can increase the amount of the average order and drive repeated transactions.”
The Behaviors of Purchase
Making prepaid transactions more secure is another way to increase customer satisfaction. Fraud is a hot-button issue within the prepaid space, but it’s also an area where another emerging technology—artificial intelligence—can make an impact. AI’s superior pattern recognition abilities make it an efficient tool for detecting fraudulent activities in real-time.
“AI can be implemented to understand if the behaviors of purchase match the existing behaviors of the customer we have engaged with and understand,” Hirschfield said. “The less anonymous the purchases, the more those technologies can identify when purchases seem suspicious. Fraud and scams won’t ever be eliminated, but the prepaid industry can take more steps to mitigate them.”
E-commerce merchants can use AI to vet both B2B and B2C accounts, because machine learning can collate signals from a range of business data and fraud detection programs in near real-time. This functionality can help merchants with decisioning and authorizations, which is often a convoluted and cumbersome process.
There are also ways to implement technology that can reduce fraud at physical locations. At a retailer, a cashier might get an alert if something about a purchase looks suspicious, and they could ask the customer a series of questions to ensure the purchase is legitimate.
Overcoming Barriers
Although fraud will always be a concern, it hasn’t slowed the rapid expansion of the prepaid market. Many businesses want to offer branded prepaid cards, but there are often barriers to entry. For this reason, third-party platforms have emerged to provide merchants with a way to get their prepaid products to market sooner.
Prepaid-as-a-service has been driven by the overall shift to digital payments, but it is also extremely effective in certain use cases. In the gig economy, for instance, prepaid cards are often used as a payment instrument for freelance contractors.
Many governments utilize prepaid cards to disburse payments to their citizens for various reasons. Corporations are also increasingly giving prepaid cards to their employees as incentives for loyalty or performance.
“Whether it’s a retailer or a government entity, their priority is serving their customers or citizens,” Hirschfield said. “The best practice is often for them to focus on providing their products or services and implement best-in-class back-end systems to run their prepaid programs.”
The Core of Change
To achieve an optimized prepaid program, organizations will have to leverage new technologies, particularly platforms that facilitate personalization. Merchants have more customer information than ever, and AI can use that data to supercharge recommendation engines, making them more contextual and customized.
Artificial intelligence is also the engine used to create the artwork and messages that drive the personalized wrapping and unwrapping experiences that have become a popular part of digital gifting. “Digital gift cards are on the rise, and digital wallets will continue to be at the core of change as more of our lives become digitized,” Farhang said. “The move to digital will continue, and there will be a convergence with the physical in a single stored ledger. The ground is shifting rapidly in the prepaid space—though gift cards are one of the most common applications for prepaid.