Cash is no longer king. Cards, apps and electronic wallets are changing how consumers make payments (and how small businesses do business). Small merchants everywhere are scrambling to get their hands on mobile point-of-sale (mPOS) software (apps) to collect payments. Forbes predicts mobile POS systems, particularly iPad POS offerings, are the future of POS systems.
The adoption of this new technology is changing consumer behavior—rapidly—proving significant to small businesses and their employees. Consumers are no longer limited by the cash in their wallet for making purchases, and as a result, consumer tipping is changing.
IPad research firm Software Advice reports use of mobile POS systems results in an increase in the frequency and amount of tips left by customers. Why? Because mPOS systems use subtle tactics to increase tips—great news for hard-working employees.
1. Default Tipping
mPOS apps have integrated slick “default” tipping amounts, limiting tipping options for consumers. Once a credit card is swiped on a mobile POS system, a screen pops up asking how much to tip. Two factors seem to be at work here for consumer tipping behavior:
Laziness
Picking a pre-determined tip amount requires the least amount of effort. Consumers are less likely to customize the tip because doing so demands more thinking and more clicking.
Anchoring Effect
Offering three choices utilizes the anchoring effect. This cognitive bias is best described by Dan Ariely, “When you present three options, people think this is the range of acceptable possibilities. They don’t want to be too high or too low, so they tend toward the middle option.”
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Guilt Tipping
Clever design in the mobile POS space is also playing on consumer behavior to increase tipping overall—gone are the days of consumers passively (or passive aggressively) filling in a paper receipt. Often the signature screens on mPOS systems are kept separate from the tipping screen, so customers can’t move on to sign their receipt until they’ve chosen a gratuity amount. Then there’s the “no tip” option, making tip avoidance more difficult. Michael Lynn, a nationally recognized expert on tipping, describes this, “It’s easy to ignore a tip jar, especially if it’s already empty” but, “it’s harder to ignore a glowing screen asking how much you would like to leave as a gratuity.”