Your Money: Smiley faces
ease the pain of asking friends for money
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[July 11, 2017]
By Maria Caspani
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Asking friends or
family for money can be awkward, but when you can do it with a smiley
face and a winged dollar bill, it seems to make it better.
Hence the rise of Venmo, a digital payment service owned by PayPal that
allows consumers to send and receive payments regardless of what device,
bank or operating system they use. It helps soften the oftentimes
uncomfortable request by replacing the cold language of transactions
with colorful visuals.
While there are other apps and payment networks that enable friends to
transfer money using a phone - Facebook Messenger, Zelle and Square
Cash, among them - what appears to tip the popularity scale are the
small digital images, otherwise known as emojis.
Seven in ten Americans - or 71 percent - use visual expressions like
emojis, stickers or GIFs when texting or using mobile messaging apps,
according to a new survey from Harris Poll and commissioned by GIF
platform Tenor.
People said they can better communicate their thoughts and feelings when
using visual expressions rather than words alone, according to the
survey.
With Venmo, a reminder to pay up can come under the guise of a winged
dollar bill emoji, a seemingly gentler reminder than a potentially rude
in-person request. Need to split the cost with friends for beers and
pizza? There is an emoji for it. In fact, the pizza slice emoji is among
the most popular on Venmo, according to LendEdu research.
The ability to ask people 'with a smile' appeals to 30-year-old Hilary
Gish, who said she uses Venmo for anything from splitting checks to
tipping her hairstylist.
"It's a fun and polite way of asking for money," said Gish, who lives in
Los Angeles.
For 29-year-old Ella Nuortila, part of Venmo's appeal is that the app
feels almost like an extension of social media, and that transactions
are turned into chats.
"A lot of my contacts make (their transactions) public and it gives
insight to their personal lives, much like a Facebook feed," said
Nuortila.
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An undated handout image of the Venmo app home screen, showing July
4th-themed emojis. REUTERS/Venmo/Handout
PayPal's Chief Operating Officer Bill Ready told Reuters the social aspect of
apps like Venmo can help make financial transactions less burdensome.
"Because Venmo is where your friends are, it makes it less awkward to ask for
payment," said Ready.
CHALLENGERS COMING
A recent survey by LendEdu ranked Venmo as the most popular money exchange app
among Millennials, chosen by two-thirds of the 20 to 30-something people who use
mobile payment apps.
The service processed $17.6 billion in transactions in 2016, a 135-percent
increase on the previous year. In the first quarter of 2017, it reported a total
of $6.8 billion, up from $5.6 billion in the fourth quarter of 2016.
In a challenge to Venmo, a group of major U.S. banks, including JPMorgan and
Bank of America, recently launched Zelle, a network that allows customers to
send money to each other instantly.
Earlier this month, Apple announced that Apple Pay will soon allow users to send
and receive money via iMessage, which supports emojis. The service will be
available on the most recent iPhone and iPad devices, as well as Apple Watch.
These challengers will have a lot of ground to make up. Venmo says its most
active users check the service daily, while the average user checks it two or
three times per week - not just to send or receive payments, but to see what
their friends and family are doing.
(Editing by Beth Pinsker and Diane Craft)
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