The super app shift favors the banks, with decades of experience and long-lived relationships with customers. The super app shift favors the FinTechs, with the ability to innovate in a world that is constantly, and increasingly, going digital.
The deciding factor, of course, lies with the consumer. Trust is what ultimately sways the individual to lodge their loyalties with a particular provider.
And at least for now, though it’s early innings yet, the advantages lie with traditional providers, namely, the banks.
The desire for a super app, PYMNTS and PayPal have found, seems to be universal. But to make the leap from interest to intent use those “digital front doors,” consumers need to see that security is inextricably linked to convenience.
In “The Super App Shift: How Consumers Want to Save, Shop and Spend in the Connected Economy ” the data show that consumers want a simple interface that connects a broad range of activities, where shopping can flow seamlessly into ordering food, where checking social media might give way, on a whim, to checking one’s checking account (and savings balances). Consumers, of course, want frictionless experiences on demand, and at the same time want to know that someone’s got their proverbial backs.
International Appeal
The joint efforts between PayPal and PYMNTS analyzed the responses from 9,904 consumers in Australia, Germany, the U.K. and the U.S. The study found: