Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Statistics about the blogshop scene in Malaysia


Here are some statistics about the size of the Malaysian blogshop scene.  I think the estimated 3000 blogshops does not include the ones operating on Facebook.


Source: http://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/category/business/2013/04/17/online-payment-gateway-for-%E2%80%98growing%E2%80%99-blog-shops/

Online payment gateway for ‘growing’ blog shops

April 17, 2013
By Tanu Pandey
KUALA LUMPUR: Keeping pace with the changing shopping environment where online shopping has become very popular, Malayan Banking Bhd (Maybank) has launched a payment gateway for blog shops, targeting a blog shop purchase market worth RM105 million in five years.
Blog shops that are online shops that sell goods and services online, have been growing lately with an estimated 3,000 blog shops currently and the “the number is growing”.
Maybank president and CEO Abdul Wahid Omar said this yesterday at the launch of the Maybank2u Pay, the first payment service of its kind in the country.
This year, the bank aims at capturing 5% of the sector worth RM5 million with at least 180,000 transactions on the online shopping portals and blogs. The average size of each transaction is worth RM30 as many of the blogs shops purchases are for lower priced items.
There is an increasing trend in social commerce where blog shops use banks as a payment facility. Such shops are too small to be registered as payee corporations and in most cases use online fund transfers as a mode of payment from buyers to sellers.
The Maybank2u Pay service has no joining fee but after 2013 there will be a nominal transaction fee for each transaction done via the gateway.
Maybank plans to expand the service to Indonesia, the Philippines and Singapore after this year. “This year we will try to expand the service in Malaysia and try to penetrate the market,” said executive VP and head of virtual banking & payments community financial services Mohd Suhail Amar Suresh.
When asked if the bank expects others to follow a similar trend, Abdul Wahid said, “ As a leader, we are used to others following us. We are accustomed to dealing with competition.”
Online shopping has become popular in the country with more than 1.1 million Malaysians spending RM1.8 billion for online shopping in 2010, according to statistics. The value of such shopping is expected to grow RM5 billion next year, said Maybank.



 from: http://www.thesundaily.my/news/663916

Maybank aims RM5m transactions from blogshops

KUALA LUMPUR (April 17, 2013): Malayan Banking Bhd (Maybank), the country's biggest lender, expects its Maybank2u Pay -- a new payment gateway to facilitate online purchasers at blogshops -- to attract at least 5% or 150 of the 3,000 local blogshops this year, to register 180,000 transactions valued at RM5 million, said its president and CEO Datuk Seri Abdul Wahid Omar.
"This is projected to increase to 30% (of total blogshops) with expected transaction value of RM105 million in five years," he said at the launch of Maybank2u Pay here yesterday.
Twenty local blogshops have signed on for the service, which is the first by a bank in Malaysia.
"The average transaction (at blogshops) is about RM30 and this is where we feel we can play a role by making it more efficient so that it can generate more volume," said Abdul Wahid.
Online shopping in the country is expected to grow to RM5 billion next year from RM1.8 billion in 2010 spent by over 1.1 million Malaysians. Maybank currently commands 50% of registered users for online banking in the country.
"Within our customer base, we have some 2.3 million active users who performed over 2.5 million shopping transactions worth about RM675 million last year," he added.
Abdul Wahid said over the years, Maybank has noticed an increasing trend in social commerce of blogshops using Maybank2u as a payment facility.
However, they were too small to be registered as payee corporations and in most cases, were using online fund transfers as a mode of payment from buyers to sellers.
This year, Maybank will focus on rolling out Maybank2u Pay in Malaysia, but plans to expand the service across its other key markets such as Indonesia, the Philippines and Singapore in 2014.
Maybank2u Pay offers blog shop owners the ability to manage their transactions via Maybank2u in a systematic and professional manner, with detailed view of sales transactions with information such as date and time of transactions, buyer's name and email as well as the transferred amount.
The new service also eliminates the current need to send proof of payment to blogshop owners. Instead, Maybank2u Pay will send email alerts to both buyers and sellers when a payment is made.
One of the key strengths of Maybank2u has always been the bill payment facility, which by far, offers the largest number of payee corporations. Maybank is also the leader in online fund transfers.
Blogshop owners can apply for Maybank2u Pay via their Maybank2u access without any joining fee. Beyond 2013, on a per transaction basis, the bank would probably charge a nominal fee like any other e-payment transaction.
Abdul Wahid also said Maybank is predicting Malaysia's gross domestic product to grow by 5.3% this year, driven by the various projects under the Economic Transformation Programme.
"With that, the banking system will both benefit as well as play a catalyst role. With an efficient banking system, we will make sure that there is enough founding for the various projects to be implemented."


from: http://www.btimes.com.my/Current_News/BTIMES/articles/rup164/Article/ 

Maybank2u Pay to facilitate online shopping

Published: 2013/04/17


KUALA LUMPUR: Maybank2u Pay, a payment gateway for blogshops, is expected to facilitate RM5 million worth of online shopping transactions in Malaysia next year as consumers look to blogshops as a convenient and reliable online shopping experience.

Malayan Banking Bhd (Maybank) president and chief executive officer Datuk Seri Abdul Wahid Omar said the Maybank2u Pay will likely attract at least five per cent of the 3,000-strong local blogshop community this year.

This customer base is projected to increase to 30 per cent with expected transaction value of RM105 million in five years.

Within Maybank itself, there are some 2.3 million active users who performed more than 2.5 million online shopping transaction, worth about RM675 million last year.

Abdul Wahid said Maybank will establish the Maybank2u Pay service locally before expanding it to Indonesia, the Philippines and Singapore next year.

"We intend to introduce this to other key markets in the region, where we believe we can make a significant impact on the lives of micro entrepreneurs," he said at a media briefing yesterday.

Maybank is the first in Malaysia to launch such a payment gateway for the blogshop community.

Originally hosted on free blog sites, blogshops are now becoming regular online stores while retaining more personal customer relationships.

The country's biggest lender, which has been a leader in Internet banking since it introduced the service in 2000, commands nearly half of registered users in the market for its services, which include the bill payment facility and online fund transfers.

Over the years, Maybank found an increasing trend of blogshops using its website as a payment facility. They were, however, too small to be registered as payee corporations and in most cases, were using online fund transfers as a mode of payment from buyers to sellers.

Maybank2u Pay eliminates the current need to send proof of payment to blogshop owners. Instead, Maybank2u Pay will send email alerts to both buyers and sellers when a payment is made.

Read more: Maybank2u Pay to facilitate online shopping http://www.btimes.com.my/Current_News/BTIMES/articles/rup164/Article/#ixzz2QlzZoB9X

Friday, January 11, 2013

Online sales of contact lenses



From the Straits Times:

Singapore - March 9, 2009 
By Serene Luo

Stop online sale of contact lens. 
Blogshops warned to stop contact lens sales
Ministry tells online sellers to remove all related posts at once.

The Ministry of Health (MOH) yesterday morning warned unlicensed blogshops to stop selling cosmetic contact lenses. 
The Optometrists and Opticians Board of the ministry sent e-mail letters, which The Straits Times obtained, to blogshop owners to remove all contact lens-related posts from their blogs immediately as well. 

If they did not, they could run foul of the Optometrists and Opticians Act, and face jail of up to six months or fines up to $25,000, or both, for prescribing and dispensing contact lenses without being qualified to do so. 

The cosmetic lenses are popular with teenage girls, but some users have developed complications, such as corneal ulcers or conjunctivitis, from wearing them. 

Last month, The Straits Times' forum published a letter from the board, warning buyers to buy lenses only from licensed and qualified sellers. 

The cosmetic lenses are being sold on personal blogs, which have become a platform for teens and youth as young as in primary school to sell clothing and accessories. Their customers are usually other youth. 

This is the second reported action taken by a government agency on casual, typically unregistered, online businesses. 

About two years ago, two blogshops selling food products were asked by the National Environment Agency to remove mention of their wares online. The law prohibits food prepared at home from being sold to the public because of food safety concerns. 

Checks by The Straits Times last week found there were at least 10 online 'stores', mostly run by young women in their teens or early 20s, selling cosmetic contact lenses. 

These lenses, which are usually imported from South Korea, may or may not be powered but reportedly make the users' eyes look 'bigger and more sparkling'. 

But a Sunday Times article last month reported that eye doctors and opticians had seen a spike in eye infections in users who had bought cosmetic lenses from online sellers. 

In Singapore, only qualified and licensed practitioners are allowed to prescribe and sell contact lenses. 

When contacted, a number of blogshop owners said they would sell the lenses only to overseas customers. 

A few also said they had certificates from suppliers to prove the lenses were 'authentic' and not faked goods. 

One blogshop owner, a 21-year-old who wanted to be known only as Miss Tan, said she would stop all sales after completing her current order this week, as many customers had already paid. 

She added that even though she had announced on her blog that she was stopping sales because of legal restrictions, a number of youths, some aged just 12, had approached her to supply them with lenses to sell. 'They are completely unaware of current affairs and news,' she said. 

A board spokesman said that if sellers continued their trade in contact lenses, 'enforcement action may be taken against them'. 

It conceded that enforcement against the online sale of contact lenses would be 'highly challenging', since owners of websites are hard to trace, but it would issue stern warning letters to those it can trace. 

It has also informed contact lens suppliers and companies to supply contact lenses only to qualified sellers, its spokesman said.

Contact lenses online controversy

This news was from a few years back, but it shows how blogshops operate outside mainstream channels and pose competitive threats to established professionals. 

From: http://www.asiaone.com/Health/News/Story/A1Story20090210-120853.html

>> ASIAONE / HEALTH / NEWS / STORY
Tue, Feb 10, 2009
The Sunday Times
Look out for contact lenses sold online
[Top: Owner of anna-blogshop Anne Catherine Christy, 18, imports coloured cosmetic contact lenses from Korea.]
By Elizabeth Soh
EYE doctors and opticians are reporting a spike in eye infections among youngsters who have bought coloured contact lenses from online sellers.
Under Singapore law, only registered optometrists and opticians can sell or prescribe contact lenses. But over the past two years, hundreds of unregistered Internet 'blog shops' have sprung up selling novelty cosmetic contact lenses that claim to add sparkle to eyes or change their colour.
The lenses are delivered in the mail, with little or no consumer aftercare provided to ensure users do not overuse their lenses or neglect hygiene.
The result is that many users are falling victim to a range of eye problems.
Music student Daphne Tan, 20, has sworn never to buy lenses online again after she ended up with a corneal ulcer, which causes acute burning pain and, if not arrested, can lead to total loss of sight.
'It was excruciating. I was so frightened, I wondered if I would go blind. When I asked the blog shop for compensation, the person simply closed down her shop. And I never heard from her again.'
Arts undergraduate Lee Jia Min, 21, has suffered at least four bouts of sore and itchy eyes after buying more than 10 pairs of Korean and Japanese lenses from various blog shops over the past two years.
'There was one pair which made my eyes hurt the moment I put them on,' she said. ' I immediately threw them away.'
A search on beauty forums such as cozycot.com and flowerpod.com unearthed at least 10 complaints of blog-shop buys that led to eye infections.
Optometrists also reported a rise in the number of individuals seeing them with eye problems related to cosmetic contact lens wear.
Like many of his colleagues, Mr William Choo, 44, a trained optometrist and the operations manager of Nanyang Optical, has seen a spike in those coming in with symptoms ranging from dryness to bloodshot eyes.
'Most are youngsters who abuse their eyes by wearing cosmetic contact lenses daily, for extremely long hours,' he said.
These blog shops often peddle the latest rage - coloured lenses from Korean companies - for as little as $9 to $20 a pair. The lenses come in a dizzying array of colours, claim to enlarge and brighten eyes like 'your favourite Japanese or Korean celebrity', and last an entire year.
The blog shops are being established at a rapid rate. According to undergraduate A. Ling, 21, who runs sglenses, a popular blog shop selling South Korean contact lenses, about 20 new shops open every few days.
They are set up mostly by Internet-savvy Singaporean students, often as young as 15. They simply start a blog, source trendy products cheaply from suppliers in China and Korea, upload photographs and basic product information, provide online payment details and are open for business.
Many say it is 'easy money'. With no rent or overheads, sellers can mark up prices by up to 60 per cent and charge a handling fee of $1.50 to $3 per sale.
'I make about a thousand dollars a month, give or take,' said Mr Ling, whose blog gets over 200 hits a day. 'I run it like a real business, doing advertising on Internet forums and other blog shops. I also sell my lenses worldwide.'
The existence of these blog shops is a thorn in the side of registered optical professionals who operate in an altogether different price bracket.
Their price for a monthly supply of Johnson and Johnson's Acuvue Define daily lenses, which comes with a free eye examination, is about $120.
They cannot compete on price but maintain that they carry products with proven safety records and high manufacturing standards.
Madam Seah Siew Leng, 39, an optician at Pavilion Optical in Marine Parade, who has been in the business for more than 10 years, said that for safety reasons, optical shops here do not carry certain brands from companies which are headquartered overseas.
'We are not sure if these brands are reliable in the event that there are problems with their lenses,' she said.
When informed of the Optometrists and Opticians Act that outlaws lens sales by unregistered operators, eight of the 10 blog-shop owners interviewed said they would stop selling cosmetic contact lenses.
Owner of anna-blogshop Anne Catherine Christy, 18, who has just completed her O levels, said: 'If there is such a rule, I will definitely stop selling them. I'll just find other things to sell.'
She currently also sells F-cup cookies, priced at $35 for a box of 30, which claim to enhance the bustline. But she added that they are sold as a 'novelty biscuit, rather than a medical device'.
The Consumers Association of Singapore has advised those who want to buy from online shops to deal with registered businesses as far as possible, to always get contact details of the sellers and suppliers, and to exercise caution.
Once lenses have been bought, eye professionals advise that users should diligently follow wearing guidelines.
Dr Francis Oen, 47, a senior consultant at the Singapore National Eye Centre, said: 'Wearing cosmetic contact lenses in the first place increases the risk of mild eye infection. The pigmentation on the coloured lenses aids the accumulation of dirt, so you need to be extremely hygienic.'
Mr Choo of Nanyang Optical, who is registered with the Optometrists and Opticians Board, added: 'As opticians, we can help you if you suffer from any kind of infection when you wear cosmetic contact lenses. Your eyesight is probably the most precious thing you own.'
esoh@sph.com.sg
This story was first published in thesundaytimes on Feb 8, 2009.

Saturday, January 5, 2013

State of the Media Reprt Social Media 2012

This is the 2012 social media report by Nielsen, accompanied by summaries:

http://blog.nielsen.com/nielsenwire/social/2012/

http://www.internetretailer.com/social-media-guide/?cid=2013-Social-Media-300-Article

http://www.internetretailer.com/2013/01/03/leaders-social-commerce-are-not-usual-suspects 

The leaders in social commerce are not the usual suspects

Internet Retailer’s Social Media 300 reveals that smaller web-only merchants are beating out Amazon and Wal-Mart in social media marketing.

Stefany Moore
Research Analyst
Lead Photo
Here’s what the leaders in social media marketing and commerce look like: they are small to mid-sized web-only merchants, relatively new to online retailing. They are putting social media at the forefront of their business strategies. And they are growing fast as a result.
The Social Media 300, Internet Retailer’s new publication available today, is a comprehensive analysis of e-retailers’ social commerce strategies and a first-ever ranking of retailers’ social skills based on the percentage of web site traffic merchants receive from social networks—a key measure of how effective e-retailers are at social media marketing and commerce.
The research shows that merchants don’t need to have large staffs or big budgets to be successful in social media marketing. Quite the opposite, in fact, as nine of the top ten retailers in the guide brought in less than $30 million in online sales in 2011.
Merchants at the top of the Social Media 300, like pet food supplies retailer PetFlow.com (No. 1), design-inspired flash sale newcomer Fab.com (No. 2) and baking flour maker and e-retailer King Arthur Flour (No. 6), are generating significant returns by making social media a priority. They are adept at weaving social connections into many aspects of the shopping experience, and have found innovative ways to find new customers via social networks and then to connect with these and existing customers on a personal level.
“We’re really trying to build customers for a lifetime, and social is a way for us to do that,” says Fab.com founder and CEO Jason Goldberg.
What the Social Media 300 documents is how these social media strategies drive traffic and sales. PetFlow.com, brings in 30% of its total site traffic and overall revenue from social networks—mostly as a result of a laser-like focus on building a maintaining a loyal Facebook fan base and regular posts that speak to their followers’ inner pet lover.
Fab.com has made social media a key component of its business strategy from the beginning—most notably with cash rewards for sharing its products on social networks and a custom-built social feed that alerts visitors to Fab.com of who’s buying, sharing or liking its products at any time. The merchant gets 25% of its site traffic and around-one third of its sales directly from consumers who click to the site from online social networks.
For eyewear retailer Coastal Contacts Inc. (No. 3), sales from social networks comprised an estimated 5% of sales last year, a substantial sum for a web retailer that generated $177 million in sales online in 2011.
Many of the leaders in the Social Media 300 are finding that social media is a cost-effective way to generate results. Most retailers can’t match, for example, the $3.9 million Amazon.com Inc. spends each month to drive traffic via paid search ads, according to search marketing firm ROI Revolution Inc. But they can channel their passion for, and their knowledge about, the products they sell into engaging campaigns on social networks and innovative design elements on their own e-commerce sites that integrate the comments, sharing and purchases of their socially connected fans.
On average, retailers in the Social Media 300 get 4.25% of their total site traffic directly from Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest. Those numbers vary widely from top to bottom—ranging anywhere from 0.33% for sporting goods merchant The Sportsman’s Guide (No. 300) all the way to 30% of site traffic for PetFlow.com.
And while it may be surprising as to which merchants are landing in the top of the rankings, it’s also important to note which ones are missing. The largest online merchant, Amazon.com Inc., and the world’s largest chain retailer, Wal-Mart Stores Inc., both are ranked below 125. Other retail chains like Barnes & Noble Inc., Target Corp., Walgreen Co. and Best Buy Co. also fail to make the Top 100. In fact, there isn’t a single retailer with a physical store in the Top 10.
The Social Media 300 includes detailed operating data, including each merchant’s 2012 social commerce sales—defined as transactions completed on an e-commerce site after a consumer clicks from a social network—and conversion rate and average order values on visits from social networks.
While the leaders in the Social Media 300 are driving huge portions of traffic and sales from social networks, they are the exception. Internet Retailer research reveals social commerce sales as a whole are a small portion of total online sales. Merchants in the Social Media 300 brought in a total of $1.6 billion in social commerce sales last year, less than 1% of the $224.2 billion in U.S. online retail sales projected for 2012 by eMarketer, a research firm focused on online marketing and commerce.
Direct sales doesn’t tell the whole social media story, however, as many retailers see social media marketing primarily as a way to attract and engage consumers. This publication measures their success by reporting for each of the 300 retailers their Facebook fan counts, number of Twitter and Pinterest followers, and YouTube video views. Key engagement metrics are also included, such as average number of comments per Facebook post, number of Likes per Facebook fan and average retweets (or percentage of posts on Twitter that are re-shared by a retailer’s follower).
Information on how to order the Internet Retailer Social Media 300 is here.

Social commerce payments


This article makes observations of payment systems used for commercial activities in social networking sites.

http://kansascityfed.org/publicat/PSR/Briefings/psr-briefingdec2012.pdf


 
Where Social Networks, Payments and Banking Intersect
by Terri Bradford, Payments System Research Specialist

It may be old news that social networks are big, and get­ting bigger by the day. But the expansion of commerce across the social network landscape is a relatively new development—one that brings not only opportunities for innovation but also a range of potential risks.

As a consumer market, the world of social networks is vast. Facebook alone now has some one billion users. And it’s not just that there are a lot of users. Those users are also spending a lot more time on social sites. In 2011, users spent nearly a quarter of their total online time on social networks, up from just 15.8 percent in 2009.1

Where there are large groups of people spending a significant amount of time, commerce tends to follow. Nearly all of the top internet retailers interact with consumers on at least one social networking site. When that interaction includes the sale of goods or services, familiar methods such as card payments, automated clearinghouse (ACH) transfers and even PayPal support those transactions. In addition, alternative payment methods have emerged. A significant number of financial institutions also engage their customers using social networks and some are beginning to offer pay­ment services as well.

Unfortunately, where there is commerce and modes of pay­ment to support it, risks tend to emerge. By their nature, social sites allow users to communicate not only directly with one an­other but also, sometimes inadvertently, with an entire network of users. This may be a benefit for users desiring to socialize, but when payments are involved along with the data required to facilitate them, there are risks ranging from personal privacy violations to fraud, or even potentially money laundering.

This article begins with a glimpse of the extent to which social networks have been adopted. Next, it describes the diversity of commerce arising among social networks and the payment methods that support it. The article then describes ways in which financial institutions are using social networks to provide banking services and how consumer attitudes may drive opportunities to offer person-to-person (P2P) pay­ments. Finally, the article concludes by setting out some of the potential risks of these various interactions.
Social Networks and Their Use
In existence since the mid-to-late 1990s, the use of social networks has become mainstream. Facebook has one billion active monthly users, more than 600 million of whom use Facebook mobile products. Twitter has more than 140 million active users who are tweeting at a rate of nearly 350 million tweets a day. And LinkedIn, reportedly the largest professional networking site, has more than 185 million members in over 200 countries and territories.2

The demographics of these millions of active social network users cover a wide range of ages. A 2011 study by the Pew Institute found that 83 percent of those who are 18 to 29 years of age, 70 percent of those 30 to 49, 51 percent of those 50 to 64, and 33 percent of those 65 and older are social network users.

With such widespread adoption, it’s not surprising that the use of social sites has become the dominant way that Ameri­cans spend their online time or that the use of social networks on mobile devices is quite prevalent as well.3 The sheer number of users has attracted commercial activity as well.
Commerce and Payments on Social Networks
The nature of commerce on social sites varies. Most of it arises from the purchase of “virtual goods,” particularly in social games.4 However, commerce also arises from the purchase real goods from “storefronts” on social network sites, and as individuals use social media to make P2P payments and charitable contributions.
Virtual goods and micropayments

A popular activity among users of social networking sites is playing games. While the games are free to play, individu­als can customize their experiences within them through the purchase of virtual goods such as hair for an avatar, rain for a virtual crop, or food for an imaginary pet.5 Players purchase these goods to enhance their gaming experience and/or to increase their chances of success in the game. A key feature of these virtual goods is that each purchase is of small value, often less than a dollar—a “micropayment.” In aggregate, however, these micropayments are growing in significance. In 2012, U.S. revenue from virtual goods is projected to be $2.4 billion, more than double the revenue from 2010 (Javelin Strategy and Research 2011).

Because payments for virtual goods are micropayments, payment methods differ from those used for online purchases of real goods and services. Traditional payment methods such as card payments and ACH transfers generally require sellers to pay a fixed processing cost for each transaction. Having to cover this fixed cost for each purchase of low value would make the sale of virtual goods prohibitively expensive. To get around this problem, many social games allow players to pre-fund “virtual currency” accounts, like Facebook Credits and Linden Dollars, using traditional payment methods.6 Players can then draw down their virtual currency accounts as needed to purchase virtual goods. Under this arrangement, the fixed processing cost per payment transaction need only be incurred when a player adds funds to his or her account, rather than each time a virtual good is purchased.

Another payment method that economizes on the transaction costs of micropayments enables consumers to use their mobile phone accounts to pay for virtual goods. The cost of each purchase of virtual goods is charged to the consumer’s mobile account and settled only once at the end of the month, when the consumer pays his or her phone bill. Billing to mobile phone accounts has long been used to pay for low-value digital goods such as ring tones and wallpaper. More recently, mobile payment providers like Boku, mopay and Zong have partnered with mobile carriers to facilitate payments for virtual goods used in games as well. In a typical transaction, the consumer selects the amount of a virtual cur­rency to purchase and enters his or her mobile phone num­ber. The mobile payment provider then sends the consumer a text message that contains a PIN, which must be used in the game to confirm the purchase. After the purchase is confirmed, the payment provider notifies the mobile carrier, which posts the charge to the consumer’s phone bill. The mo­bile payment provider is subsequently paid by the carrier and will periodically settle with the game provider by transferring funds through the ACH to the game provider’s bank account. A recent mopay study reveals that mobile gaming accounts for more than half of all mobile transactions, with growth in social gaming, in particular, drastically increasing.7 Mopay data showed that average spending ranged from below $2 for various mobile-related services to $10 and above for social networking or entertainment offerings.
Consumers can also pay for virtual goods with rewards earned by participating in online promotions. Companies like Super Rewards and Tapjoy serve as intermediaries be­tween advertisers trying to interest consumers in promotions and game providers seeking to monetize their games. Typi­cally, when a consumer agrees to participate in a promotion, the intermediary asks the game provider to add the agreed-upon amount of virtual currency to the consumer’s account. Periodically, the intermediary collects the funds due from the advertiser and passes them on to the game provider via the ACH, wire, PayPal or check to cover the virtual currency reward. These transfers are made only periodically, rather than each time a consumer participates in a promotion. As a result, transaction costs are kept to a minimum, just as in the case of mobile carrier billing and pre-funding of virtual cur­rency accounts. Tapjoy reports that its network has reached more than 500 million devices and is actively used by 110 million customers on a monthly basis.8
Purchase of real goods from social storefronts

Ninety-seven percent of the top 250 internet retail­ers have a presence on at least one social networking site.9 Social networks enable merchants to meet their customers where they are, and can provide information about potential customers, such as whether they are male or female, their age range, where they are located and even what language they speak. This type of insight can prove useful to retailers in improving products and services, refining marketing efforts, or simply making consumers’ experience more enjoyable.

Using a social network like Facebook, a retailer can set up a page to promote products or services and encourage us­ers to become “fans.” Once a Facebook user opts to become a fan, the retailer’s posts and special promotions appear on the user’s Facebook page. In most cases Facebook users wanting to interact with a retailer will have to follow a link to the retailer’s website, taking them off the Facebook platform.10 However, some retailers operate storefronts that enable Face­book users to make purchases without leaving the Facebook platform.11 In those instances, payment is almost always made through a payment intermediary like PayPal. As in traditional e-commerce, the payment intermediary either processes pay­ments on the consumer’s credit or debit card or uses the ACH to deduct funds from the consumer’s bank account.

Twitter is another social network that retailers use to interact with consumers. Retailers can encourage consumers to “follow” them on Twitter by sending tweets with special offers. As in the case of Facebook, consumers responding to these offers generally must leave the social networking platform and navigate to the retailer’s website or physical location to make the purchase. However, new payment services like Chirpify are attempting to streamline the payment process by linking con­sumers’ Twitter accounts with their PayPal accounts.12 Chirpify enables a Twitter user to buy goods and services without leaving the Twitter platform, simply by replying to tweets. Pay­Pal, acting as the intermediary, processes the payment on the consumer’s credit or debit card or through the ACH. Among the users of Chirpify are a growing number of musicians who sell music and merchandise via Twitter.
P2P payments and charitable contributions

P2P payments have been introduced on social networks by providers such as Pay Me and Twitpay but haven’t yet achieved widespread adoption. Pay Me was launched on Facebook in 2007 and Twitpay was launched on Twitter in 2008. Both P2P services required their respective users to link their social network account with a PayPal account to settle payments.13 With either P2P service, a user could initiate a payment to another user of the same social network by replying to or sending a message. Pay Me or Twitpay noted the payment on the accounts of the sender and recipient and kept a record of the payment until it settled through PayPal. Failing to achieve significant adoption within their respective social network, Pay Me shuttered its service by 2010, and Tw­itpay shifted its focus to its RT2Give service, which enables registered non-profit organizations to solicit contributions via Twitter.14

Twitter users interested in making charitable contribu­tions can also register with RT2Give by providing personal and payment information and linking their Twitter accounts. Once the registration process is complete, Twitter users can respond to tweets from registered causes without leaving the Twitter platform. Payments are completed by traditional methods such as the use of credit or debit cards or through the ACH. Examples of charities that use RT2Give include the Literacy Freedom Project, the American Lung Associa­tion, and the Children’s Miracle Network.

Social networks also facilitate charitable contributions through the purchase of virtual goods in social games. For example, in response to the Haiti earthquake in January 2010, social game developer Zynga created limited edition virtual goods for games played on Facebook and donated the proceeds to Haitian relief efforts. Purchases of virtual goods like Haitian white corn in FarmVille and Haitian fish in Fish­Ville generated over $1.5 million in charitable contributions for Haitian earthquake survivors.15

Banking Services on Social Networks

Merchants are not alone in their use of social networks to engage customers. A study by The Financial Brand found that nearly 75 percent of financial institutions use Facebook, 54 percent use Twitter, and 48 percent use LinkedIn.16 They use these sites to share information about their community service and philanthropic activities, market products and services, provide customer service, foster engagement and, to a more modest extent, provide access to banking services.

Vantage Credit Union was an early adopter of social networking. It used Twitter to launch its TweetMyMoney service in 2009. TweetMyMoney allows Vantage customers who are also Twitter users to view account balances, transfer funds between their Vantage accounts, and view their last five transactions. While Vantage remains a relative trail blazer in offering banking services through a social network, Citigroup recently solicited interest in banking on Facebook, and a number of international financial institutions have recently begun offering banking services as well.17

Earlier this year, India’s ICICI Bank launched a Facebook banking application that enables its customers to perform account inquiries, check account balances, and get account statements. South Africa’s FNB Bank has also given its cus­tomers the ability to bank on Facebook by linking their mo­bile banking profile to their Facebook profile. The FNB Bank service is currently limited to purchasing prepaid airtime, text messages and smartphone data bundles, and viewing balances and lottery results. FNB customers can also buy vouchers that can be sent as gifts to friends on Facebook and later redeemed for prepaid airtime or converted to cash. In addition, FNB plans to allow payments in the future. Meanwhile, Common­wealth Bank of Australia is building an application that will allow its customers to make payments to third parties and friends through Facebook. Finally, New Zealand’s ASB Bank, which is owned by Commonwealth Bank of Australia, has a mobile application that allows its customers to make P2P payments directly to Facebook friends.

One of the main hurdles faced by electronic P2P pay­ment services is the inability to achieve universal adoption among consumers, whether as payers or as payees (Bradford and Keeton). Given consumers’ demonstrated willingness to engage on social networks, it may be that social networks could provide a channel through which P2P payments can overcome this hurdle. There are now 5 billion mobile devices in the world and 1 billion Facebook active users—600 million whom already access Facebook from their mobile device.18 Though banking on social networks is still in the developmental stage, the financial institutions that are pioneering payment services are able to leverage some aspect of their mobile banking platform to allow customers to send payments to Facebook friends.
Implications for Payments Risk

Growth of commerce and payments on social networks has implications for risks related to money laundering, fraudulent activities, and privacy violations. With respect to money laundering, in the physical world, providers of finan­cial services are mandated under the Bank Secrecy Act and the USA Patriot Act to “Know Your Customer” (KYC). KYC requires financial institutions to collect and analyze basic identity information as well as monitor financial transactions against expected behavior. In a virtual world, money launder­ing is an emerging vulnerability that could potentially occur as social gamers interact internationally, buying and sell­ing virtual property, goods, and services. An individual can establish a virtual currency account using falsified informa­tion. The individual can fund the account using a prepaid product, for example one purchased with proceeds from criminal activities. The individual can then begin to transact with a partner or a network of partners who then convert the virtual currency to real currency and withdraw the funds (AUSTRAC 2012).

In contrast with the physical world, the KYC responsi­bilities of operators of virtual worlds are less certain. In July 2011, under a requirement of the Credit Card Accountabil­ity, Responsibility and Disclosure Act of 2009, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) issued its final rule amending the Bank Secrecy Act implementing regula­tions regarding Money Services Businesses (MSBs). Though money laundering in the context of social networks is not explicitly addressed, the rule clarifies which entities qualify as MSBs and are therefore subject to the anti-money laundering regulations of the Bank Secrecy Act.19 Given this clarification, it could be interpreted that providers of virtual currencies are indeed MSBs and should be treated accordingly.

Other fraudulent activity is also a risk on social net­works. For example, users who participate in online surveys or sign up for new services to earn rewards may be misled by confusing or spurious offers. Some users have experienced billing of unwanted services to their mobile phone or card accounts.20 Fraud also can result from criminals’ using stolen payment card information to buy digital goods which they sell and then convert the virtual proceeds into real dollars. Consumers have recourse when transactions are made with payment cards, but it is less clear what recourse is available when mobile account billing is the method of payment. Mer­chants selling goods in social networking environments may also be more vulnerable to fraud. Their vulnerability arises because methods of fraud detection may not be rigorous and because delivery of goods is instantaneous. CyberSource Cor­poration has estimated that merchants that sell digital goods lost 1.9 percent of revenue to fraud in 2009, compared with a 1.1-percent fraud rate for companies that sell physical goods online (Worthen).

In addition to fraud risks, users of social networks can expose themselves to identity theft through social engineer­ing, hacking or inadvertent exposure of data. Research has shown that even individuals with privacy concerns who join social networks nevertheless reveal vast amounts of personal information—about themselves, their families, and even their employers. Some users believe they can control access to their personal information, while others have a general misconcep­tion about the actual size and composition of the online com­munity and therefore the visibility of their profiles (Acquisti and Gross). In recent testimony before the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, and Homeland Security, the assistant director of the FBI stated that social networking sites, especially, are breeding grounds for cyber-criminals who trick unsuspecting victims into revealing bank account infor­mation and other personal details. To combat such activities, the FBI has forged partnerships with federal, state, local and international law-enforcement agencies, and with the private sector and academia.

Social network users’ data also can be inadvertently exposed. For example, Facebook recently announced it has begun allowing marketers to target ads at its users.21 Facebook is enabling the advertisements based on the email addresses and phone numbers that users list on their profiles, or based on their surfing habits on other sites. Facebook maintains that it is not selling user data to advertisers. However, its actions have raised concerns and calls for special scrutiny because in many cases Facebook has more information about its customers’ identities than other internet companies.
Conclusion
Commerce—and payments—will tend to arise wherever people congregate in significant numbers. Although com­merce on social networks is still in its early stages, it offers interesting possibilities for payments. New payments are emerging alongside more familiar options such as card pay­ments, ACH transfers and PayPal. Now, Twitter can be used to complete a transaction using just 140 characters or less. Virtual currencies like Facebook Credits and Linden Dollars can be used to purchase virtual goods. In turn, those purchas­es of virtual goods can be used to make charitable donations. And, with just the name of a Facebook friend, funds can be transferred from one person to another.

However, just as social networks create opportunities for commerce, they may also unintentionally introduce risks such as breaches of privacy, fraud and even money laundering. If new regulations become necessary, that may have a dampen­ing effect on the potential for social networks to offer new retail payment opportunities. If the social channel is to reach its full potential, providers, users and policymakers will need to remain vigilant and guard against the attendant risks.


Endnotes
1State of the Media: The Social Media Report, Nielsen Q3 2011, and “What Americans Do Online: Social Media and Games Dominate Activity,” Nielsen Wire, Nielsen, Aug. 2, 2010.
2The statistics in this paragraph were accessed on Dec. 4, 2012, at the following sites:
Facebook Statistics:
http://newsroom.fb.com/content/default. aspx?NewsAreaId=22
Twitter Statistics:
https://business.twitter.com/basics/what-is-twitter/
LinkedIn Facts:
http://press.linkedin.com/About
3State of the Media: The Social Media Report 2012, Nielsen.
4Social games are a subset of online games, which are played on multiple platforms (PCs, consoles, and social networks with Facebook being the largest platform).
5In gaming, an avatar is a visual representation of the player of the game.
6Facebook Credits are used to purchase goods in a wide variety of games that are played on the social networking site. Once purchased, they cannot be converted back to cash. Credits are scheduled to be phased out by year end; user account balances then will be measured in U.S. dollars, or whatever currency is native to a country. http://developers.facebook.com/blog/ post/2012/06/19/introducing-subscriptions-and-local-currency-pricing/, accessed Oct. 5, 2012.
Linden Dollars are the virtual currency used in the virtual world Second Life. Linden Dollars can be traded for real world currencies (USD, EUR, GBP, JPY) on the Lindex, the official Second Life trading site, and on other third-party exchanges.
7Mopay Study Reveals Consumers’ Spending Behavior Via Direct Carrier Billing, http://www.mopay.com/upload/20120904_PM_ mopay_Numbers_US.pdf, accessed Dec. 4, 2012.
8Tapjoy Surpasses Half A Billion Mobile Devices, http://info.tapjoy. com/about-tapjoy/company-news/press-releases/tapjoy-surpasses-half-a-billion-mobile-devices/, accessed Dec. 4, 2012.
9TOP 250 Internet Retailers On Social Media, https://www. campalyst.com/top-250-internet-retailers-on-social-media-infographic, accessed Oct. 3, 2012.
10“Gamestop to J.C. Penney Shut Facebook Stores,” Bloomberg, Feb. 22, 2012.
11“Small Retailers Open Up Storefronts on Facebook Pages,” New York Times, July 25, 2012.
12Chirpify has also integrated with Instagram, a photo sharing social network. See References.
13Twitpay originally used Amazon Payments to settle its transactions, but was later relaunched with a link to PayPal.
14RT2Give means “retweet to give.” In January 2012 Twitpay also began allowing registered clients to post messages and solicitations on their Facebook walls. http://blog.twitpay. com/?p=404, accessed on Oct. 5, 2012
15“In five days, Zynga raises $1.5M for Haiti via Facebook games,” January 19, 2010, http://venturebeat.com/2010/01/19/in-five-days-zynga-raises-1-5m-for-haiti-via-facebook-games/
16State of Bank & Credit Union Marketing in 2012, Jan. 17, 2012, http://thefinancialbrand.com/21384/2012-bank-credit-union-marketing-study-results/ Participants included over 300 FIs; 101 banks, 143 credit unions, 33 community banks and 26 other types of financial organizations.
17“Facebook Banking Shows Signs of Life,” American Banker, Aug. 2, 2012.
18Fowler, Geoffrey A., “Facebook: One Billion and Counting,” Wall Street Journal, Oct. 4, 2012.
19http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2011-07-21/pdf/2011-18309.pdf, accessed Oct. 5, 2012.
20“Zynga’s Request to Dismiss Lawsuit Denied By Judge,” Industry Gamers, Nov. 16, 2010.
21“Facebook Sells More Access to Members,” Wall Street Journal, Oct. 1, 2012.
References
Acquisti, Alessandro, Ralph Gross, “Imagined Communities: Awareness, Information Sharing, and Privacy on the Facebook,” Privacy Enhancing Technologies Workshop 2006.
Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre, AUSTRAC typologies and case studies report 2012, pp 16-19.
Bradford, Terri, William P. Keeton, “New P2P Payment Methods: Have Checks Met Their Match?” Economic Review, September 2012.
Javelin Strategy and Research, Virtual Currency and Social Network PaymentsThe New Gold Rush, June 2011.
Lunden, Ingrid, “InstaSale: Chirpify Takes Its In-Stream Commerce Service To Instagram As Its Twitter Servicer Continues to Fly,” October 23, 2012.
Madden, Mary, Kathryn Zickuhr, 65% of Online Adults Use Social Networking Sites, August 26, 2011.
The Nielson Wire, “What Americans Do Online: Social Media and Games Dominate Activity,” August 2, 2010.
Worthen, Ben, “Fraudsters Like Virtual Goods,” Wall Street Journal, July 21, 2010.