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  • Tuesday, April 26, 2016

    Visa unlocks innovation

    Visa Inc. recently introduced two initiatives designed to advance the payments industry by improving transaction times and accelerating innovation. The Visa Developer platform, released Feb. 4, 2016, opened the company’s technology suite to software developers worldwide. Quick Chip for EMV (Europay, MasterCard and Visa), launched April 19, 2016, enables chip card transactions to be completed in two seconds or less.

    “Visa is advancing a streamlined approach to chip transactions to make them faster and more efficient, while still providing a safe and secure experience,” said Mark Nelsen, Senior Vice President of Risk Products and Business Intelligence at Visa. “Quick Chip for EMV helps make the checkout experience comparable to the ease and speed of magnetic stripe transactions.”

    Quick Chip, as its name implies, is all about speed, not only in checkout lanes but in the U.S. transition to secure EMV chip card technology, according to Visa representatives. More than 265 million Visa credit and debit chip cards have been issued to cardholders, making the United States the world’s largest chip card market. The company further noted that approximately 1 million merchants, representing 20 percent of all merchant locations, are EMV compliant.

    Faster EMV checkout, adoption

    Visa revealed the Quick Chip for EMV program at the Electronic Transactions Association’s Transact 16 conference in April, noting the enhancement is free to acquirers and can be implemented with a simple software update. Additional program benefits Visa pointed out include:

    Visa sandbox, developer goldmine

    The Visa Developer platform marked the first time in 60 years that app developers could use Visa’s software libraries, application programming interfaces (APIs) and technology suite to build their own solutions, leveraging such popular technologies as person-to-person payments, Visa Checkout, currency conversion and consumer transaction alerts. The sandbox environment improves transparency and accelerates innovation, the company stated.

    “We are unbundling Visa’s full suite of products and services and giving developers open access to the underlying payment capabilities,” said Rajat Taneja, Visa’s Executive Vice President of Technology. “We believe this will lead to the creation of entirely new commerce experiences with Visa technology integrated to enable greater security, scale and convenience when it comes time to pay.”

    Visa noted the following resources are available to participating app developers:

    Positive pilot feedback

    Feedback from pilot partners including Capital One Corp., TD Bank, Total System Services Inc., U.S. Bank, Scotiabank, and National Australia Bank has been positive.

    “Their exciting new APIs allow us to deliver next-generation products and services that our issuing, acquiring and merchant clients can use to grow their businesses,” said Craig Ludwig, Head of Product for TSYS’ Merchant Services segment. “By implementing Visa’s new technology, we will be at the forefront of payment product innovation.”

    Antony Cahill, NAB Group Executive, Product & Markets, added, “Australians are among the world’s fastest adopters of new technologies and our partnership with Visa enables NAB to act more quickly to deliver market-leading innovations and great experiences for our customers.”

    More collaboration planned

    Visa envisions its global developer platform will create a marketplace where financial institutions, merchants and technology companies can share innovative approaches to digital commerce applications and services. The net result will make payments secure, simple and seamless for consumers and business owners, the company stated.

    A research study published April 25, 2016, by Mercator Advisory Group and titled The Visa Developer Platform: Opening the Gates to Innovation, defines Visa’s approach as a payments industry game changer that may lead to similar initiatives. “Visa turned the model upside down,” noted report author Tim Sloane, Vice President, Payments Innovation at Mercator. “Instead of developers trying to prove themselves and get permission to program on Visa’s network, they can collaborate with Visa developers to identify and execute their best ideas.”

    Sloane also pointed out that Visa has implemented tokenization technology in different ways in different regions, which has enabled the company to build shareholder growth while increasing market share across the payments industry value chain. “They’re moving into areas that they were never in before and providing many services for free, at least for today,” he said.

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