From a financial innovations standpoint, 2010 is off to a great start. Just 35 days into the year and we’ve already had two launches of services I don’t think anyone saw coming: Blippy to automatically stream your purchases to the world (previous post) and now Kwedit (say it out loud if you don’t get it).
Kwedit is designed to be the payments engine for the massive virtual goods market, estimated to be $1.6 billion in 2010 according to InsideVirtualGoods.com, up from $1 billion in 2009 (cited by GamesBeat last week).
Many of the gaming networks, especially the so-called “social gaming” startups such as Zynga’s FarmVille, appeal to teenagers and younger kids (note 1) who don’t have credit or debit cards available to pay for virtual goods. This has made it difficult for the publishers to monetize the games through direct payments.
How it works:
1. Users of games partnering with Kwedit can purchase in-game virtual goods by promising to pay later through their associated Kwedit account. See the screenshot below to see how Kwedit is positioned in the online game FooPets.
2. Later, users print out a bar-coded coupon from their Kwedit account (see inset right) and take it to a participating 7-11 convenience store and pay via cash, mail payment directly to Kwedit, or “pass the duck” and send the IOU direct to their parents for payment. The site also offers an option to pay directly via credit or debit card.
3. To help drive off deadbeats, the company has created a Kwedit Score that shows which users are paying their IOUs on time (inset left). At FooPets, users will get more virtual goodies as their Kwedit Score increases, creating a game within the game and a way to promote responsible spending.
Analysis
I’m not a gamer myself, but as a parent, I understand the pull of online games and look forward to the day when I don’t have to hand over my credit card for use on some site I barely understand. Some will argue that Kwedit needlessly encourages credit use in the pre-teen set (note 1). But as long as parents stay involved, Kwedit can actually be used to teach kids the importance of paying their bills.
So, if users take this option seriously, by paying down their virtual debt with real money, Kwedit could be huge (in which case, PayPal buys it of course). And it’s relatively low risk for the gaming companies because the virtual goods have a zero marginal cost. BillMyParents is another company we’ve covered in the teen-payments space.
There is no doubt in my mind that online gaming needs a better payment system and that the solution is unlikely to resemble anything us parents have ever seen or imagined. Kwedit fits that bill.
Kwedit gets star billing on the main screen at FooPets (4 Feb 2010)
Users create a promise to pay using a popup screen served by Kwedit (link)
Note: Users first must log in to their Kwedit account from this popup
Notes:
1. Kwedit users must be 13 or older to sign up for an account.