The online shopping cart: how customer behaviour has changed
By Jasmine Zhu, AsiaPay
By Jasmine Zhu, AsiaPay
It is understandable that IT teams and data protection experts are advocating improved methods to authenticate user identity in apps and cloud services.
While firms have been devoting huge chunks of their time and compliance budgets implementing new GDPR processes, lawmakers in the US state of California have just tossed a curveball in passing an equally stringent package of data protection measures – and they have serious implications for the global payments sector.
Innovative fintech products are fast-becoming the lifeblood of global economic prosperity.
Over the past few years, new payment trends have flourished. Invisible payment is one of them.
Cryptocurrencies might be a relatively new economic development, but they’ve already experienced some tumultuous boom and bust periods in key markets.
Businesses across all sectors are continually looking for the next big disruptor within payments, offering consumers ever-greater numbers of alternative payment methods to optimise the customer experience and drive both loyalty and growth.
As technology continues to evolve, businesses across the globe are becoming increasingly reliant on new developments in payment processing systems and dynamic point-of-sale (POS) terminals. Yet with increased reliance come data security risks.
The global rise of instant payments corresponds with the demand for “instant everything.” Customers want an economy that is like everything else in their lives: frictionless, on demand, and most important of all, fast.
An hour for lipstick, two weeks for a new outfit, three and a half months for a car... New research from Checkout.com reveals consumers' spending anxiety and attitudes towards different payment methods when buying online.