The best testing ground for consumers looking to try out mobile
payments for the first time just may be Subway.
Want to try out Apple Pay? Subway has it. Softcard? Check. Pay by the Subway app? No problem.
While the positioning of the payment
titans takes the stage, Subway has been quietly chugging along looking to let consumers pay however they want.
Last year, the company added a mobile wallet by Paydiant into its own app so
people could pay from inside the app, which I wrote about here at the time (Subway Adding
Mobile Payments to the Menu).
That payment platform is white labeled, so consumers only see payments by Subway.
In its Apple Pay announcement last week, Subway was featured as one
of the merchants set up to use the service.
And now Softcard, the joint venture of AT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile formerly known as Isis (still the name at the top of the announcement at the
time of this writing), announced it will be available for payment at 26,000 Subway locations.
An interesting twist for customers using Softcard mobile payments is they receive $1 back on every
purchase over $1 made via the American Express Serve card.
With Apple Pay and Softcard, Subway gives a boost to NFC (near field communication), since consumers will need the technology,
already in many millions of Android phones and coming in the iPhone 6.
Consumers will be trained to tap to pay.
They also can pay just using the app, including in advance ordering.
And yes, they can still use cash.
May the best payment method win.