SAN FRANCISCO -- Square's grand business plan just got a caffeinated jolt.
In
one of the largest mobile-payments rollouts yet, technology start-up
Square on Thursday said it has begun processing all credit card
transactions at Starbucks' more than 7,000 U.S. storefronts. Next month,
customers will be able to purchase coffee with Square's Wallet app, the
companies say.
Starbucks also said it will enable digital tipping on its mobile-payment apps and on Square Wallet in the U.S. in summer 2013.
"We think we can redefine a Starbucks customers' experience," Square CEO Jack Dorsey told USA TODAY.
Dorsey,
who invented Twitter, and Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz presented the
plan at Starbucks' Leadership Conference in Houston, where more than
10,000 Starbucks store managers were in attendance.
With
Starbucks, Square -- whose app is increasingly popular among small
businesses -- for the first time is wading into mobile payments for
large multinational organizations. It plans to venture overseas next
year through Starbucks, which has 18,000 stores in 60 countries.
Eventually,
Starbucks' customers will be able to order and pay for drinks via their
smartphone before they enter a store, says Adam Brotman, chief digital
officer at Starbucks. Starbucks employees, in turn, would be able to
process orders before a customer speaks, based on the information
contained on their Square apps, he says.
"There are seismic
changes to (consumer) behavior because of technology," Schultz told
store managers in Houston. Starbucks chose Square instead of about a
dozen other tech suitors because "Jack cracked the code on customer
experience," Schultz said.
For Starbucks, which already had a
successful mobile-payments system, the partnership with Square expands
its formidable reach. Starbucks is the largest retailer accepting
mobile payments -- it handles more than 1 million mobile transactions a
week. The deal with Square lets credit card users who don't have a
Starbucks card make mobile payments at the coffee chain. (Frequent-buyer
rewards that come with Starbucks cards are not transferable to the
Square app.)
The Starbucks deal introduces Square to more
consumers and helps the overall digital market, Denee Carrington, an
analyst at Forrester Research, said in a recent report.
While
Starbucks has no immediate plans to displace cash registers with card
scanners, as Nordstrom and others do, its deal with Square does augur a
continued shift away from cash.
Payments on a 'massive scale'
Square's
success has spawned competing services -- PayPal Here, NCR, Intuit and
Groupon, to mention a few -- that have crowded the market, and given
consumers one less reason to use cash.
Handicapping the
mobile-payments race, each major player has carved out a niche,
according to analysts. Square is ideal for small merchants such as
coffee shops and food trucks. PayPal Here is positioned for businesses
that have an online and offline presence. Groupon's new service will
appeal to businesses such as restaurants and spas with which it already
works. Intuit's GoPayment is designed for small and midsize businesses.
Square
is generally in "good shape," Aite Group analyst Rick Oglesby says,
because it has a head start on the competition -- and the Starbucks deal
is "huge" by putting them in front of a mainstream audience.
"No
one else has really achieved that yet, so I'd say that Square is
probably off to the best start -- but it's going to be a very long and
competitive race with more than one winner," Oglesby says.
Despite
the Starbucks deal, Square faces formidable competitors and major
hurdles to becoming a force with big retailers and corporations. "While
Square is new, it's just facilitating a 50-year-old payment mechanism -
mag-stripe cards," says Nick Holland, an analyst at market researcher
Yankee Group.
Mobile-payment transactions will surpass $171.5
billion, up 62% from $105.9 billion in 2011, says market researcher
Gartner. The ranks of mobile payment users worldwide, meanwhile, is
expected to vault 32%, to 212.2 million in 2012, from 160.5 million in
2011.
Rocky Agrawal, an analyst at reDesign Mobile, offers a
cautionary note about the massive scale of payments, and how Square
sizes up. While Square claims to process $8 billion in transactions
annually, he says, American Express processed $822 billion.
Squaring up
Since
its device and app launched in 2010 as a pioneer in mobile
point-of-sale systems, Square has gained more than 2 million customers,
who typically pick up the small, white plastic device for free through
the company's website, or with a rebate from retail stores such as
Apple, Best Buy and Walmart.
Smaller businesses, such as coffee
shops and food trucks, use Square's device, which plugs into the
headphone jacks of mobile phones and tablets to perform transactions and
keep customer records.
The 400-person private company has grown
quickly by raising capital from the likes of Visa and venture-capital
firms Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and Sequoia Capital. Former
U.S. Treasury secretary Lawrence Summers and Schultz are among its board
members.
Last month, Square said it raised $200 million in its
latest round of funding from investors that include Starbucks, Citi
Ventures and Rizvi Traverse Management. That now values Square at $3.3
billion.
Square's device plugs into Apple and Android mobile
devices to enable smaller merchants who previously were only able to
take payments made by cash or check, to accept credit cards by swiping
them through the dongle.
Square has widened its ambitions. It
offers a merchant-finder for people to identify which businesses take
Square payments; merchants can use it as a way to manage inventory; and
there are now options to pay with Square that do not involve you
actually pulling out your card.
The Starbucks deal not only
broadens Square's audience and visibility, but it "validates" the
company's mission, Dorsey said in the interview. As a testament to
Starbucks' influence among retailers and as an early technology adopter,
Square has heard from several major retailers that now want to work
with Square. He hinted that more deals may be announced but gave no
specifics.
The pitched battle for mobile payments intensified in
August, when Square announced a new pricing model that gives merchants
the option to pay a monthly fee of $275 instead of the current 2.75% fee
on every transaction.
Merchants who make more than $10,000 per
month in business would pay less under the new pricing plan. It's all
part of a move to make it easier for consumers and merchants to eschew
cash, Dorsey says.
USA Today