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Why Mitek's New Photo Bill Pay Could be a Way Bigger Deal than Mobile Deposit

By Jim Bruene on October 25, 2010 6:10 PM | Comments (4)

imageFor the second time in three years, Mitek completely wowed me on the floor at BAI Retail Delivery. In 2008, I was amazed to see them deposit a check with their mobile phone; this year, the trick was similar, but with a bill.

Mitek CEO James DeBello demonstrated the new systam to me at their booth (press release). He grabbed a bill from a pile, took its picture via the Mitek iPhone app, and sent it off via 3G connection to servers which read the characters through OCR and queued it up for payment. The billing and payment-due info was presented in an easy-to-read table for the user to verify before hitting the "pay" button (see screenshots below). I coveted it for my checking account ... now. 

Analysis
While the deposit of a paper check has a little more of a "wow" factor (as in wow, I don't have to go to the branch anymore), the mobile scan-and-pay of a bill is actually far more useful. The potential market for mobile deposit-capture is limited by the shrinking number of personal checks in use, especially by iPhone-wielding early adopters. I'd guess the total U.S. market for mobile deposit is no more than 10 to 15 million households and shrinking.

And even though paper bills will eventually be eliminated by Doxo or someone, they are still a fact of life for just about everyone with a checking account. And even if consumers start accepting ebills from their major payees, most will still have a few paper bills every month for at least another decade or two.

So not only is the market for photo bill-pay about 10x that of mobile deposit, but the service also solves a peskier problem for most end-users: getting bills paid on time, something that has far more financial consequences than processing the occasional paper check gathering dust in the drawer. 

And for financial institutions, photo bill pay provides several important benefits:

  • Helps get customers started with online bill pay by eliminating the data-entry task of setting up new billers
  • Helps convert customers from other bill pay providers by eliminating much of the conversion hassle of re-establishing payees at a new bill pay service
  • Provides a tangible, value-added mobile service to differentiate from the competition
  • Provides a fee-revenue opportunity from either monthly subscriber fees and/or expedited payment fees

The downsides:

  • Cost
  • Tech support/customer service
  • Potentially harder to wean customers off the paper bill, if it's so convenient to just point-and-shoot to get it paid

Bottom line: Without knowing costs, what type of back-office integration hurdles the app faces, or even personally testing the user experience, I can't say for sure how popular it becomes. If the scanning is finicky, it could be a non-starter. But, if it works like it did in the demo, Mitek may have figured out how to finally eliminate the data entry from the electronic bill payment process, a HUGE win.

1. Main screen                               2. Scan with mobile camera

image     Mitek photo billpay camera view

3. Verify data (3 screens)

 Mitek photo bill pay verify data    Mitek photo bill pay verify data    Mitek photo bill pay verify data

Note: For more info on mobile banking, see our mobile banking series in Online Banking Report.

Comments (4)

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4 Comments

Hi Jim,

Great coverage as always. I disagree with you on the utility of this feature. It's definitely neat technology, but I don't think it's much easier than just typing in the few lines of biller information required.

I think the biggest end-user problem with adding a bill to billpay is finding the paper bill to get the right PO Box, Account Number, and so on.

This doesn't solve that problem. You still need the paper bill to snap a photo.

It's gee whiz nifty, but I think it's technology in search of a solution.

-David

David Eads
Mobile Strategy Partners
http://blog.MobileStrategyPartners.com

David...True, it's not super hard for those who know about such things to set up a new payee online. However, for first-timers this could ease the pain of getting started. Will be fascinating to see if it takes off. -- Jim

This could be a way to separate online banking from mobile banking.

If I don't need to setup payees in a traditional online banking environment I can do everything from my phone.

The fraudsters will never be able to abuse this...

As the fee structure changes and free banking goes away, this could affect user behavior. Customers that have multiple bank accounts may consolidate them once fees start hitting their accounts. This feature could reduce of the "stickiness" of billpay users and make them more open to switching to a new account or a current account on which they have not yet set up billpay.

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