There are now a multitude of channels available to customers to pay their bills. These channels include:
1. Print and
mail (paper-based)
2. Fax
3. Email with
embedded data
4. Data interchange
(system-to-system)
5. Email with
PDF and/or link to on-line
6. Online
(customer portal)
7. Mobile (MMS; HTML; WAP;
USSD)
8. Mobile via App
9. Mobile Tablet
10. Emergent
technology (via cable TV etc)
Web based technology has driven the
greatest change in the billing space in the last 10 years or so and seen the
emergence of both consumer and merchant portals (for presentment and payment)
and the use of mobile technology as 3G and 4G have made the internet available
to mobile phones.
Even though each of these channels presents a new and perhaps better and more convenient choice to a given customer (and are often presented as the channel to replace earlier channel choices) in reality, they are often just additional options. In other words, consumers have shown time and time again that they like the extra choice but do not necessarily want to be driven too quickly to only one channel (however “efficient and effective” it is presented to be).
The implication of customers wanting lots of channel choice to both view and pay their bills is that the same bill may need to be presented and rendered possible to pay in several channels, at least for now.
Today’s challenges
Some technology experts are starting to say that customers will be move rapidly away from e-billing to m-billing (m for mobile of course) in the next few years. Modern mobiles can certainly handle very complex tasks today - just look at the hundred of thousands of Apps available for all different platforms. These Apps can do complex tasks, even generating bills “on-the-fly”. A mobile can also handle a simple task such as bill presentment with ease today – in some cases on quite a detailed basis (even though reading it may present quite a challenge!). However, viewing a PDF bill attachment on a mobile (as opposed to a tablet) is often a long scrolling exercise, making it impractical in most cases. There is a solution to this but it needs the biller to solve the problem of displaying their bills in more flexible ways according to the kind of mobile platform to which it is being delivered. In this way, a customer can see a simple version of the way and then “drill into the detail” as they wish when they want to see itemisation.
However, perhaps all of this is a false
dilemma. In the final analysis, customers do not care if a bill is delivered to
their computer, their tablet or their mobile (or even all three). In fact, many
want to see it delivered in as many ways as possible to allow maximum
flexibility, including by email or by PDF attachment and even in the physical
mail or fax on some occasions. This multi-channel approach is therefore a
customer centric approach. The challenge for billers then is how to provide as
many of these channels as possible at the lowest coat possible. In the end
there is only one solution to this –use a full digital bill presentment and
payment portal such as PaySwyft for example. This not only means that a bill
can be sent in all 9 of the current channels above but means that a biller
would be well-placed to take advantage of the new emergent technologies that
will come along as in the near future.
That is true. Due to the rising technology everyday the demand for mobile phones online has also increased rapidly. It saves a lot of time.
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