The future of the paper check, a dark future indeed.#

For many years now I've been discussing with friends our frustration with the state of the mobile phone industry in the United States. Compared to the Europe and parts of Asia, the United States is in the 3rd world. In many parts of of the world, people no longer carry wallets opting instead to use their cell phones to pay for food or buy concessions out of vending machines. The simplicity of pointing your trusty mobile device at a Point of Purchase, waiting for the amount to show on your screen and accepting the transaction is incredibly appealing. But here in America this may seem as fantastic as many things shown in Star Trek.

Here in the United States, things aren't exactly smoke signals and horse drawn carriages. There are have been some in-roads into the mobile banking space. For instance, Pay-Pal has a mobile application that allows you to check your balance, send money or buy things off eBay. There are also financial aggregation services such as Mint that allow you to view information about various banking and investment accounts, set budgets and receive alerts when you exceed those budgets. All of this available from your mobile, web-enabled, device. But these features, while making life easier, are still far from the technological utopia experienced daily in parts of Europe and Asia.

One of the new features I've been noticing at ATM's lately is the removal of deposit envelopes. Now when you wish to deposit several check or cash, all you need to do is enter the amount you are depositing and then place your cash or checks inside a drawer in the ATM. The ATM is equipped with scanners that read the check amounts and verify they match with what you entered then, after processing the deposit, print a receipt with an image of the check(s) you deposited.

Enter the next phase of check processing. It's incredibly rare to find a mobile device without a built in camera these days. A new application being proposed by the United Services Automobile Association (USAA), called Deposit@Mobile, will allow users to log into their banking site, then snap a picture of the front and back of checks and process the deposit right there, negating the need to visit a bank branch or ATM.

There are many security and fraud issues that need to be addressed, like stealing someones purse and writing yourself a large check, for example. But the prospect of removing the ATM/bank branch from the deposit equation is very exciting to me. There have been several instances where I carried checks around in my wallet for days or even a week because I kept forgetting or didn't have time to stop at the bank and deposit them. With innovations like this, I'm excited to see where the mobile banking space will be in the next 2-3 years.

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Saturday, August 08, 2009 8:29:10 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) #    Comments [0]  |  Trackback

 

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