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What are your experiences with online shopping payment from Europe?
Did anybody try some alternative payment systems?
They've intered into partnerships with several ecommerce sites. You set up an arrangement with the bank, and then you're able to shop in these 'stores' and pay through your bank account. I guess it works like the paypal system, which by the way is somewhat difficult for Europeans to set up.
The problem in Europe would be a bank etc. covering more or all the countries.
You pay with the mobile phone the phone is connected to a bankaccount so when you are going to pay over the net it will call in your phone and then you will have to give them a password then it goes to your bankaccount and the deal is done paybox are big in germany 260 000 users
i think they will have 3% of what the pruduct kost iam not sure
www.paybox.net
/Ove
(edited by: Ove at 4:13 pm (gmt) on Oct. 25, 2001
So the user in this system doesnīt need a credit card, he just needs a regular bank account plus a mobile. Online shops can from what I saw integrate the software easily. Paybox charges 3% of any transaction.
Sounds all good. Did anybody use it actually?
While some 2,9 bn EURO were spent [webmasterworld.com] for christmas shopping online some of the major European countries are still not anywhere close to the shopping habits of the US or even the UK.
A new survey undertaken in Germany [de.news.yahoo.com] points out most surfers do not trust online payment methods. Credit cards are not nearly as accepted by users as in the US.
To solve this problem some alternative approaches have been developed, among them the paybox system mentioned above by Ove. Paybox has even been adopted by heavyweights like Ebay. Web.de, leading german portal uses it for micro payments for their paid services.
Nevertheless those alternative (micro-) payment systems were used by a meager 7% of online shoppers. The reason given by most people was there were too much different systems in use and too little knowledge about those systems.
Trust and the lack of is the keyword here. "The Germans are more likely to change their spouse than their payment habits" concluded ECO, a german e-commerce lobby.
Basically this sums up to the recommendation of allowing for more than just credit cards when targeting the European market.
I'd still be interested in more opinions, experiences and strategies!
The UK has the highest c/c use in Europe (1.69 cards/capita, apparently), which may explain why we seem to be the most comfortable with using the Web for e-comm. Also, here [mori.com] is an excellent link to a MORI poll from late last year, with some good information UK consumers attitudes
I think that, broadly, the poll shows that regular Web users are fairly aware of the problems and benefits of using the Web (Q's DTI6 -->) which I think leads to trust in the technology, and coupled with our relatively high c/c ownership, and hence trust in the c/c system, you get a population fairly ready to trust their details to the Web.