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Market Research Report
Business Cards in Europe
| Published by |
Datamonitor |
| Published |
February, 2009 |
Product code |
82944 |
| Content info |
30 pages |
| Price |
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Business Cards in Europe published by Datamonitor in February, 2009. This report consists of 30 pages and the price starts from US $ 2795.
Abstract
Overview
Introduction
As the consumer payment card markets in Europe reach maturity, issuers must
look toward new segments in order to maintain growth. The business card market
is one such segment: potential volumes are high and penetration remains low.
This report examines the current and future size of this market and identifies
the key strategies needed to take advantage of this opportunity.
Scope
- The report provides data and analysis on the business card markets in
France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and the UK
- Market data for the business card segment and total commercial card market
covers the period 2003-2012f and is segmented to the card scheme level
- Data for the business population in each country provides insight into the
size of the addressable market for issuers to target
- Analysis of current products and strategies highlights the factors that
issuers and schemes must consider if they are to succeed in this segment
Report Highlights
The business climate has proved challenging in H2 2008 and the outlook for
2009 looks even more challenging still as the European economies enter
recession. However, the business card market holds huge potential for issuers
and schemes due to the high volume of paper-based transactions.
The small business sector, which represents around 98-99% of all businesses,
is an important driver of economic growth and its development is supported by
government. With low penetration of cards, there is a large untapped market,
which offers the potential to boost the card portfolios and profitability of
issuers.
Despite some differentiation, there is a high degree of symmetry between
consumer and business card products. In order to drive sustainable growth in
this segment, much more needs to be done to market business cards and create
products that add value to business clients.
Reasons to Purchase
- Understand the scale of the opportunity for issuers and schemes in the
business card sector, both now and up to 2012
- Gain insight into the key trends and drivers in this segment, from the
issuer and business perspective
- Learn which product strategies are successful in this market at the
moment, and which approaches will generate growth in the future
Table of Contents
- Overview
- Executive Summary
- The business card market has grown strongly across Europe
- However this segment still represents an underserved market with a
great deal of potential
- Business spending is dominated by cheques, cash and other methods that
are prevalent in these markets
- There is symmetry between consumer and business payment card products
- This sector holds huge opportunities but issuers must change their
approach
- Despite the slowdown, Datamonitor forecasts that this market will grow
- Table of Contents
- Table of figures
- Table of tables
- Trends in Business Card Payments
- The business card market has grown strongly across Europe but is still
underserved
- Business card spend has grown strongly in absolute terms and as a
proportion of total commercial
- However this segment still represents an underserved market and one
with potential
- The business card market is growing as a proportion of the total
consumer and commercial market
- Turnover per card in the business segment is typically higher than
turnover per consumer card
- Business spending is still dominated by cheques, cash and other
methods prevalent in these markets
- Despite the slowdown, Datamonitor forecasts this market will grow
- The UK is forecast to maintain its lead position while Germany is
expected to be the fastest growing market
- Growing this sector will require better marketing and stronger products
- This sector holds huge opportunities but issuers must change their
approach
- There are two areas of growth: expanding the market as a whole and
taking business from competitors
- Businesses that largely rely on other methods of payment need to
realize the benefits of payment cards
- Capturing card activity from personal cards and competitors is also
a major opportunity
- Issuers and schemes need to emphasize the benefits of business cards
more strongly
- There is symmetry between consumer and business cards
- The need to separate business and personal expenses can be leveraged
to drive growth in the market
- Focusing on added value benefits is an area in which business card
issuers need to improve
- Improvements to the value proposition and product positioning are crucial
- Incentives and rewards on offer need to be better aligned with
business needs
- Insurance benefits are frequently too general for some specific
business needs
- Incentives such as discounts are available but may also have limited
appeal
- Loyalty reward programs are also emerging in the business sector
- Fuel discounts can be particularly beneficial to businesses for
which petrol is a major expense
- APPENDIX
- Definitions
- Business/small business card
- Co-branded card
- Commercial card
- Corporate card
- Credit card
- Debit card (pay now)
- Deferred debit card (pay later)
- Pay later card
- Pay now card
- Private label card
- Purchasing cards
- Supplementary data
- Methodology
- Further reading
- Ask the analyst
- Datamonitor consulting
- Disclaimer
- List of Tables
- Table 1: RBS business charge cards benefits in the UK, 2009
- Table 2: Fees and charges applicable to business charge cards in Germany,
2009
- Table 3: BBVA MasterCard Solred fleet credit card' s fees and features, 2009
- Table 4: Value of payment card transactions segmented by total consumer
and commercial, 2003-07
- Table 5: Business parc data for firms with up to 50 employees, 2003-07
- Table 6: Population by country, 2003-07
- Table 7: Consumer total cards and population in Europe top five, 2003-07
- Table 8: Average transaction value and frequency of use, 2003-07
- Table 9: Current relevant publications
- Table 10: Future relevant publications
- Figure 1: The UK is the largest market in terms of transaction values
while Spain is the lowest, 2003-07
- Figure 2: The penetration of cards in the business card market is low,
especially when compared to the consumer market, 2007
- Figure 3: Business card spend is growing faster than corporate/purchasing
card spend when compared to the total consumer and commercial market, 2003-07
- Figure 4: Turnover per card in the business segment is typically higher
than turnover per consumer card, 2007
- Figure 5: The use of business cards is most highly developed in France,
2007
- Figure 6: Despite the economic slowdown the value of transactions is
forecast to experience a CAGR of 10% to 2012, 2007-12f
- Figure 7: The number of cards is forecast to grow at an annual average
growth rate of 9.9% to reach 10.6 million cards by 2012, 2007-12
- Figure 8: Visa partners that offer discounts and rebates to business card
users, 2009
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