What do you buy the man who has everything? Plus all the payments news you missed last week.

CONNECT WITH US

HOME | NEWS | OPINIONDATA & RESEARCH

Sat - October 7, 2017


NEW REPORT: What Makes Subscription Commerce Successful?


Plotting The Points To Global Marketplace Expansion


Despite The Digital Age, Cash Is In The Pink (OK, Green) Of Health


The Pixel 2, The Mini-Home And The AI Tie That Binds


Startup Roundup: The Name Of The Game Is Speed


In Retail, The Great Space Race (Across Shelves And Minds)


CFPB Has Spoken: Payday Lending Regs Drop


In B2B, Better Supply Chain Relationships Through Cutting The Paper (Check) Chase


NEW REPORT: With Zelle, FIs Want To Be Everyone’s P2P Bae


Reminding The Middle Market That Global Payroll Demands Cybersecurity, Too


Ubiquity And The Holy Grail Of Rewards Redemption


Stripe Aims To Cure Mobile Checkout Conversion Blues


NEW STUDY: Consumers Hate Getting Checks, Why Do Companies Still Send Them?


Inside Mastercard’s Journey To Predicting Card Fraud


Why Treasurers Aren’t Into Real-Time Payments


For Faster Payments, Is The Business Model Key?


Snagajob And The Uber For Hourly Workers


Open Banking And The Consumer Data Conundrum


Dolphin Hacking And The Invisible Threats To The Connected Commerce Economy


Credit Unions: Better Together


Millennials Are Prized Territory In Grocery Wars


The Risk Of Playing Alt Lending’s Rate Limbo


The Airbnb Of Restaurants Is… Airbnb


Why Plastic Pulls Weight With Millennials


Major Marketplaces: Friend Or Foe To The SMB?


The Surprise And No Delight Edition: Whole Foods, Sonic and BAMS


Read More

 

How To Buy The $4M Aston Martin Submarine
 

What do you get the man who has everything? Aston Martin has the answer, and is going where no car manufacturer has ever gone before: underwater. Yes, when life on the mega yacht gets a bit dull, a cool $4 million puts you in the driver’s seat of your very own consumer submarine — a small price to pay to channel your inner James Bond. How to pay for it? Turns out there’s a credit card for that, too.

Read More...

 

Olo CEO: The Past, Present And Future Of Mobile Order-Ahead
 

All entrepreneurs have the courage of their convictions. In 2005, Noah Glass, OLO Ceo, believed consumers would hate standing in line at QSRs so much that they’d instead suffer through text order-ahead on a flip phone. That leap of faith led Glass to launch version one of a platform that now powers mobile order and delivery for 200 of the largest restaurant chains in the U.S. In the aftermath of Amazon’s announcement to use Olo Rails to power its own Restaurants’ power play, Glass sat down with Karen Webster to talk about mobile ordering’s trajectory over the last 12 years — and what the next 12 might look like.

Read More...

 

 

 
   
 

Join Our Mailing List

Having trouble viewing this email? Please click here.
This email was sent to you by PYMNTS.com. To ensure delivery to your inbox,
please add ops@pymnts.com to your address book.

 

This email was sent to newsletter@newslettercollector.com by pymnts.com
 

Instant removal with unsubscribe
 

PYMNTS.com | 111 Devonshire Street | Boston, MA | 02108