The a16z Show - The Story of Apple Pay with Jennifer Bailey
Episode Date: October 22, 2024In 2024, marking 10 years since its launch, Apple Pay now boasts hundreds of millions of consumers in 78 markets, at checkout on millions of websites and apps, in tens of millions of stores worldwide,... and is supported by more than 11,000 bank and network partners.In this episode, a16z General Partner Alex Rampell sits down with Jennifer Bailey, VP of Apple Pay and Apple Wallet, to explore how Apple has transformed digital payments. Jennifer reveals how Apple Pay and Apple Wallet have grown beyond payments to include transit cards, car keys, and more. They also discuss the challenges of driving adoption, the future of digital wallets, and Jennifer’s insights for entrepreneurs. Resources: Find Jennifer on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jbaileyzFind Alex on X: https://x.com/arampell Stay Updated: Let us know what you think: https://ratethispodcast.com/a16zFind a16z on Twitter: https://twitter.com/a16zFind a16z on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/a16zSubscribe on your favorite podcast app: https://a16z.simplecast.com/Follow our host: https://twitter.com/stephsmithioPlease note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures. Stay Updated:Find a16z on YouTube: YouTubeFind a16z on XFind a16z on LinkedInListen to the a16z Show on SpotifyListen to the a16z Show on Apple PodcastsFollow our host: https://twitter.com/eriktorenberg Please note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you look down at your phone, there are so many objects that exist in the physical world that have been absorbed into it.
Maps, calculators, mail, clocks, and of course, for many, your wallet.
In today's episode, you'll get to hear from one of the people who help build Apple Pay and Apple Wallet into these crazy little pocket computers.
Passing over the mic to A16C general partner, Alex Rampel, to properly introduce our guest.
Hi, I'm Alex Rampel, a general partner at A16C,
In this conversation, I talked to Jennifer Bailey, the legendary vice president of Apple Pay and Apple Wallet,
whose work has revolutionized everything from digital payment to transit cards, contactless tickets,
hotel and car keys, and more. Since overseeing the launch of Apple Pay a decade ago,
Jennifer has led its expansion into 75 markets worldwide, now encompassing over 11,000 bank and network
partners. In this conversation, we cover her unconventional path rising through the rings at Apple,
the challenges she confronted pushing Apple pay into the mainstream, new Apple verticals on the horizon,
and her hard-earned advice for early entrepreneurs.
Let's dive in.
As a reminder, the content here is for informational purposes only, should not be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice,
or be used to evaluate any investment or security, and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any A16C fund.
Please note that A16C and its affiliates may also maintain investments in the companies discussed in this podcast.
For more details, including a link to our investments, please see A16C.com slash disclosures.
Jennifer, thank you for being here.
You started off as a software engineer.
Now everybody becomes a software engineer.
I think it's the most popular major in college.
But 1980, that was not a thing.
But maybe walk through how you started.
It really goes back to my childhood because I moved to Silicon Valley when I was six,
and my dad was in the semiconductor industry.
So everyone we knew were pretty much in that phase of technology in Silicon
Valley. And so when I went off to college, I started with math, computer science. And my first job
out of college was, as you noted, a software engineer. It was a fantastic grounding and really
exciting time to be in the industry back then. Any particular memory stand out? One of the things I loved
about what I did in my early career is I was in a lot of early stage companies. Some of them were successful
and some of them were not. And I would say you learn from both, both the success as well as the failure.
And even when I look for hiring people today, I love to see them having come from early stage companies because they sort of understand what it takes.
Yeah, success can be a dangerous teacher, but so can failure.
If you only work at places that never get to product market fit, it's hard to learn anything except you never got to product market fit.
Exactly.
I agree.
Our firm is highly intertwined with the Netscape story.
Netscape, for those that don't know, it was really synonymous with the explosion of this new thing called the internet.
How did you get involved with Netscape?
What was it like working there?
It truly was, I think, the beginning of the commercial internet, certainly not the technical
internet, but the commercial internet. And a lot of things were emerging at that time, the search
business, Yahoo formed in those early years. InfoSeek was another one of the search companies.
And then certainly a few years after that came Google. And so it was an incredible time where
so much formulation was happening around this crazy thing called the internet. The company,
if you asked what it was like to work there.
You know, it was a bit chaotic, like most startups.
But it was a challenge in terms of finding, to your point, product market fit with a revenue
model.
Because as you know, the Internet emerged and browsers emerged to be something that needed to be free.
And that was our primary business model at the time.
We transitioned to do both server technology as well as what we would have called a portal,
which is what you would consider Yahoo was in the days where we're aggregating content
and information and search technology
and trying to monetize that through advertising.
Was there anything that you brought with you from Netscape?
I just remember when Netscape was taking off
and people here talk about tech bubbles,
but there was one real tech bubble,
which was really the late 90s where there were companies
that would get formed,
they'd go public like four months later,
and it was all on the back of the internet becoming a thing.
If you were to think through
biggest learnings that you had from that experience,
anything that really stands out?
I'd say it was two things.
One is having a strong, resilient, smart team
that could really change with the times
and move quickly to new forms of business
was really, really important
and having that flexibility,
not being stuck in a single model,
especially back then when it was sort of unclear
exactly what the Internet was
and how it was going to monetize.
I think the second thing that you learn in startups,
and I actually see this in Apple,
is a lot of success is based on great timing.
And some of that's predictable and some of that's not predictable.
But I think the timing of when these companies come to market,
how they come to market and how quickly they invest
can make a huge determinant in the success of a business.
Yeah, it's probably a good segment at Apple
because I think the most amazing companies exist at the beginning of a product cycle.
Or, in fact, even better they create the product cycle.
So Microsoft and Apple in the early 80s with the operating system for the personal computer.
And then the internet, and the problem is, as you mentioned, Netscape didn't really hold on to that platform.
They were the access point, and then it became free, and then Microsoft got in trouble in the 90s for kind of making it free in a very punitive way to Netscape's peril.
But the smartphone was that next platform.
Everything that we think of today was really because of the smartphone.
And maybe walk me through, how did you rejoin Apple?
and that must have just been an incredible experience.
Yeah, I was super fascinating.
So I came back to work for Tim running the online stores.
I was where the e-commerce was really emerging on the internet,
which made my Netscape background pretty relevant.
But when I came back, actually the first new platform was really iTunes and the iPod.
So the iPod was introduced, I think, in 2001.
I came back in 2003, and that's when we really launched iTunes for Windows,
which is where the growth really started to take off for the company.
When I came back in 2003, they'd been pretty flat.
And while we weren't running out of cash, we weren't growing the business that great.
But once we released iTunes for Windows, that trajectory really started to change.
And then that became the platform, if you will, for the iPhone and iOS.
And so the company reinvented itself many times.
You know, we used to be a computer company, and then we were sort of this music player company.
and then, of course, the phone company.
And that continued to provide great growth opportunities
and challenging roles within the company
to do new things
and continue to really grow the footprint that Apple had
and the consumer base that we had.
So how did, I assume that there's a magic link
in a very, very narrow one between running an online store
where you accept lots of payments
and the beginning of Apple Pay.
Am I correct on that or am I incorrect?
Well, I mean, my story to come over to Apple Pay
sort of an interesting one. I had been running the online store for 10 years and I was ready for a new
growth opportunity and I went to Tim and I said, you know, I'm ready to do something else. And he said,
well, do you want a big operational job or do you want to do something that's more like a startup?
And I said, well, I think I'd rather do a startup, you know, because that's what my background had been in.
And I love that part of the creation phase and the risk taking phase and all of that. And so there were a few
things that he had me go look at, and there were some engineers working on the core
technologies associated with Apple Pay, like the NFC, and wireless capabilities and the secure
elements, some of the technologies that we were using. And so really was in the formation stage
from a technology standpoint, and we decided, yeah, we really want to do this mobile payments thing.
And it turned out, I knew a little bit about payments from the online store, not a ton, but
new enough, I think, to come in and help start the business and get it formulated and bring the
resources together into a cohesive team. What was the inspiration? Because if you're the platform,
which Apple was becoming, there are so many different directions that you can go. I remember talking
to this guy at Facebook. Yeah. And we were talking about a couple ideas. And he said something to me
that I'll never forget. He's like, Alex, that's a good idea. But there are so many gold bricks lying
around that are closer. We just like every day, we can just pick up gold bricks because we're the
platform, we have all these things, and, you know, which gold bricks do you pick up in which order?
Controlling payments is very useful, but there were so many other things that I imagine Apple could
and thought about doing. Why do payments? We just felt like payments was an area that had a couple
of friction points and things that we could really solve for customers that we thought were really
important. And the first was obviously making payments much more secure. You know, these plastic cards
had been around for a long time. We looked at that and said, hmm, gee, I think there's some better
technology than using plastic cars to do this kind of thing. We thought we could make it easier,
we thought we could make it more private for customers. And with the technologies that we
had developed as we looked at the user experience back then even, I think there was a view that
in some number of years, everyone should be paying this way. And I remember 10 years ago,
this idea of contactless payments, had the EMV switchover, the liability shift, been
formalized at that point or no?
No, one of the things you find out about payments when you get into details is very different
on a global basis.
So in the U.S., contactless was not a thing, right?
When we launched Apple Pay, I believe contactless acceptance was at 3%.
But we saw outside the U.S. in places like the U.K. and Australia, high adoption of
contactless cards where regulators there had mandated the move much faster and much earlier
than in the U.S. So as we launched in these countries, we could really see.
see the benefit in the uptake of Apple Pay, where acceptance was high. And so we knew that
the experience was fantastic. People were going to love it. But we had to work through this
acceptance program. And what helped us was as we were launching Apple Pay, they were mandating
chip acceptance, which really required merchants in some ways to upgrade their hardware. So if they
were upgrading their hardware to do chip, they might as well upgrade it to do contactless as
well. So that helped us as well, but still took time in the U.S., as you probably know, has taken
time in the U.S. to get to the acceptance levels that some of these other countries have.
So Apple Pay is 10 years old now. What were the biggest challenges that you had getting that
kicked off? Because it was banks, it was merchants, it was issuers. There were lots of different
parties involved, and everybody kind of probably saw you as a threat and an opportunity to some
degree. As you point out, it's really a multi-sided network. And so those are hard. You know,
you have the chicken and egg problem. I think the good news here is that the banks, particularly the
early banks that we worked with, both in the U.S. on a global basis, really did see the benefits
of the privacy and the security and could understand that customers would really want to do this
over the longer term. So there were technical requirements that the banks had to do. And so that
took time, but I think the value proposition that they saw, they liked. And they were also in the
phase of trying to drive more mobile engagement with their customers, more mobile downloads of their
apps. And so having Apple Pay helped achieve not only better security and payments, but also more
mobile engagement and download of their banking apps. And so that was really positive. The biggest
challenge was really acceptance and trying to get acceptance really.
as ubiquitous as possible.
And also, there is Apple Pay online and Apple Pay offline.
And what I thought was interesting is that you picked the harder problem first to a certain degree, which was offline.
How did you decide to do the offline before the online?
How did you think about that?
Well, first of all, at the time, and still today, obviously the vast majority of payments,
if you look at the aggregate, I think 80%, something like that of the transaction volume is still really coming offline.
And so I think that and the combination of the hardware technology and the capabilities that we had,
we felt like it was a fantastic use of NFC and the secure element chip.
And just the whole technical architecture was really made for offline in many respects.
And so I think because the scale was there, we obviously saw these markets outside the U.S.
that had fantastic contempt.
So going after the offline market seemed to be.
where the most consumer impact would be.
Got it.
There's a famous line from the book,
The Sun Also Rises.
It's actually about bankruptcy,
but it's like one character asked another one,
like, how did you go bankrupt?
And he said two ways slowly than all at once.
And if I kind of think through Apple Pay,
I remember like, I heard about it,
and now it's all at once.
I mean, there's not a single place
that I can't pay with my watch.
It's incredible.
I go around the world.
How did it really take off?
Or when did you feel like it was really taking off?
When we launched in the U.S., we knew it would be slow going given the acceptance infrastructure here.
As we looked outside the U.S., though, we could really see, and as we launched in more of these countries that had contactless acceptance, we could really see it take off in the consumer base.
So we knew that the, I'd like to call it the formula, you know, the formula of the value proposition for the consumer was really there because we could see the growth happening in these other markets.
So when you look at it in global terms, I would say, maybe three, four years into Apple Pay,
we felt like, okay, this is really going to scale, given what we were seeing primarily in the international markets.
And then at that time, we started adding functionality like online.
We started adding transit and some of the other wallet capabilities that also take advantage of some of these technologies that we have built into the phone.
And so with those additional capabilities, we knew that we could get this,
to a global scale.
What was the order of operations for global?
A lot of companies that want to go global.
There's the domino version, which is you start off in one country, then you go to the
adjacent.
You're in Canada.
Then you go to the U.S., and then you go to, I don't know, Mexico or something.
How did you think through global expansion?
What were the biggest surprises or challenges in scaling it up globally?
Yeah, it's a great question because, as you know, payments can be a very local thing in
countries.
Most financial services are very local, country-specific.
When we looked at expansion priorities, we really were looking at a couple of things. First of all, obviously, how large was the active iPhone base? Because you can't do Apple Pay unless you have an iPhone. The second thing was contactless infrastructure. Was it an early or a late market? And then the third was really was the ecosystem available and ready to do the work in integration and sort of willing to do the integration? And where that's important is when you look at countries that have large domestic or dominant
domestic, typically debit networks. So you might think of carte-banker or GiroCard in Germany,
F-POS, and Australia. Those were the factors that we would look at. We were really started in the
biggest iPhone markets first, where we could get the right level of payment infrastructure support
and looked at contact list. And then from there, we just kept going down. So, you know,
some of the markets were truly fascinating. Like Saudi Arabia was a country that we worked with the
domestic network, it's called Mata. And from a regulatory standpoint, they basically mandated everyone
to go contactless, all merchants at once. And so Saudi Arabia skipped the whole contactless card
evolution. They just went straight to mobile. And so there were countries like that where from a
regulatory standpoint, they're much more coordinated than in a country like the U.S. And then we would see
countries like France and Germany, which have been on the slower adoption curve contactless, but are now
really taking off from a contactless perspective. Those were big markets for iPhones, though,
so we went pretty early and then just started to do the business development work and market
development work to get the acceptance that we needed in the footprint that we needed.
You mentioned privacy and security as a key impetus for developing Apple Pay to begin with,
particularly when I pay online, if I'm entering my CVV and all of these account details,
I don't know what happens to them when the merchant receives them and they might just store them.
And again, if I'm paying with Apple Pay, I don't have to worry about that.
Apple is very privacy and security concerned.
Yeah.
How did you try to reinvent things?
And I'm sure there was some back and forth with kind of old-fashioned infrastructure along the way.
Yeah, definitely.
In the early days and the early design of Apple Pay, we were collaborating with obviously
internally on the engineering side, but also with the networks.
You know, the tokenization schemes that we use are network base.
So Visa, MasterCard, Amex, and then now we work with these dimensions.
networks as well. And so it took collaboration and design really across these parties to agree on
what was the best technical architecture and the most secure architecture. And so there are pieces
obviously on the phone side, the things like taking a token, encrypting it, storing that in the
secure element, and it can only be released with a biometric. And then on the network and bank side,
being able to take those tokens, validate the cryptogram, validate and translate the token in a way
that the banks could process the transactions. So it was collaborative. And we really focused on
security first, as you mentioned, with a lot of these technologies that were just in the early
stages of coming to life. The second thing that we did on the privacy side, I remember really some
very specific design meetings where we would talk through different architectures about how the
transactions could flow and how they would be detokenized or how the cryptogram would be read.
And we were very clear and specific in our design goals that we did not want to have that data.
We didn't want to be able to see it. We didn't want to be able to aggregate it.
It was very clear in our design that when you pay in store today using Apple Pay, we don't see that transaction.
It goes up the traditional payment infrastructure into the network and into the issuers through the
requires, et cetera. And so that was a very specific design goal of ours, which was to make sure that
we weren't, if you will, a honeypot for all of its very sensitive transaction data. So it was
really designed from the beginning to be architected that way from a privacy perspective.
So maybe we could leap from Apple Pay to Apple Wallet. I'm a big fan of this, because last night I
took my 15-year-old to a San Francisco Symphony Orchestra concert. My parking pass was in my Apple Wallet.
tickets were in my Apple Wallet, and now that we've already seen that show, they've disappeared
from my Apple Wallet, so I don't have to worry about them cluttering it up. But I have all sorts of
things in my Apple Wallet. How did Apple Wallet become a thing? Maybe kind of talk about the origin
story of that. The precursor to Wallet was really when we started airline boarding passes a long time
ago. And ever since then, I think we've had a goal, I would say that in the long arc of time,
we would like to replace your physical wallet. And so as the years have gone by, we have folks.
focused on different things that are in your wallet. Tickets is one. Transit passes is another.
You can now tap to ride in over 250 cities globally just with your phone or Apple Watch.
Some of those use proprietary transit cards. Some of those use what we call open loop,
which would be standard debit and credit cards. We've done work around loyalty. As you know,
now we also do student IDs. So many campuses on the United States now, you can add your
student ID to wallet. You can tap to get food.
tap to get into your dorm, tap to check out library books, if anybody does that anymore.
Car keys, we have launched with about 10 brands now.
I have one.
I don't even have a car key.
It's my watch.
My watch opens by BMW.
It's amazing.
I love that feature as well.
So we have car keys.
We've worked with Disneyland on access passes to Disney World.
We just launched scooter keys in Taiwan, and we'll be expanding that into other Asian countries,
as well as hotel keys.
I think all those things that you think about that you carry in your wallet or your keys,
you know, we're really on a path to try to replace those with more secure and private versions of all
of those. And so we know that in the future, you know, you will be able to leave your wallet
at home. The last area I forgot to mention, we are starting to work on IDs. We work with a number
of states in the U.S. to provision state driver's licenses into your Apple wallet. First acceptance
is at TSA locations typically in those states.
And then we've just enabled this last year,
the iPhone actually to be an acceptance reader.
So if you were a bar as an example
and you wanted to check IDs using your iPhone,
you could do that with an app to check IDs that way.
So I hope soon that you and I
will be able to leave our California driver's licenses at home.
I have a DMV appointment in two weeks,
which was the first one available to get my real ID.
So I'm very, very excited to not do that.
that in the future and just go through Apple. That might be a good question, which is, are most of these
things inbound to you, or do you go out to states or, you know, IDs or just like, you know,
ski ticket passes? I imagine everybody knows what the iPhone is. Everybody knows what Apple wallet is.
Are people coming to you? Do you go to them? And then I guess the kind of natural follow-on question is,
will there be an app store? If I want to apply for my next credit card, why can't I do that within the Apple
wallet? Like, ooh, I don't like my current credit card. I want to add a new one.
Push plus, and then the application is right there.
Yeah.
So let's start with the first part of that, which is whether it's inbound or outbound from our
perspective.
And I would say usually in the very early stages of a vertical, so we would call keys a
vertical and transit is a vertical.
I would say that it's largely us outbounding to a couple of the key infrastructure
partners to collaborate, you know, under NDA on the kinds of experiences we think we can enable.
So just like payments, we have to work really closely with these integrators because we don't
own the whole tech stack. You know, we own the tech stack that sits on the iPhone and some
servers here that, you know, make the connections. But we have a lot of infrastructure partners,
whether it's access partners who do corporate access or it's ticketing vendors who do access
into stadiums, we have to work with them very collaboratively. So it's outbound initially, usually
in a vertical, and then it's very much imbound. So when people understand that as an example that
we're working on IDs, we have a lot of governments reaching out to us like, hey, how can we
work together on IDs as an example? Because they understand that what our technology platform is,
what capabilities we can bring to bear. And one of the things we really work on in terms of
trying to get these to more countries more quickly is the scalability of our ability.
to do these integrations with partners.
I think your second question, remind me your second question.
That was kind of like an app store for my wallet.
Like what do I add to my wallet?
So we have debated this internally.
It's a really good question.
If you think about the marketplaces today that exist,
pick one for financial services,
somebody like Credit Karma as an example.
Credit Karma uses a lot of personal data
to be able to best match you
and the hundred things they have in their market.
that might be related to what you're looking for.
And so I think given that we don't have the data, at least sitting in our servers, which
is the way Credit Karma does it, and most marketplaces are server-based, we have not gone
down a path to do things that are more marketplace-oriented.
I think you could imagine a world where more of that data resides on the device and the consumer
has control of that and can say, yes, I want to provide this data for the purposes of you
giving me the best recommendation in credit cards, or giving me the best recommendation in
whatever financial service you want. But that does not exist today in any sort of real form.
You can imagine things like, you know, we do open banking in the UK, which is a regulatory
enablement to allow people to connect their Apple Pay cards to their bank account. And then
that allows us to show the consumer things like their account balance for their debit. So when
they're making a purchase, they can see, I do have the funds in my debit account to actually make
this purchase. And so in the future, you could see if open banking becomes a reality in the long
term, you could see that data being on the device as we do in the UK and giving users control over it
and that way being able to provide more of this, you know, filtered matching service. But today,
it's very hard to do without a lot of data that sits in servers and that's not a model that we would
pursue. Okay. So maybe.
on that topic, talk about the Apple card. Why decide to kind of both host the wallet and have your own
proprietary product for it? I would say for years and years, and again, I've been at Apple, as you said,
a long time. There's always a discussion about whether Apple should have a co-brand card.
Very common thing for large companies that are merchants in particular, whether you're thinking
Best Buy or Macy's or whatever. And obviously we're a large merchant through the App Store as well as our Apple store.
And I think until we got through, you know, our first several years of Apple Pay and had a lot of experience working with the banks and spent a lot of time in financial services generally, did we get comfortable, I think, with the idea that we could actually create something that was very differentiated and really highlighted and showcased our values around us?
You know, there are a lot of really bad things that credit cards can do to consumers.
So as we looked at it, we really wanted to create a credit card that people would use to be more financially healthy.
Credit is a thing people need to have, particularly when you live in a place like the U.S., where you can't rent an apartment, you can't buy a car typically.
You can't obviously own a home unless you have an established credit record.
So it's actually very important for people to have credit and to be able to use credit responsibly.
So as we created Apple Card, we really wanted to do a couple things.
One was make it mobile first, of course, all the way to the way we handle chat and customer service.
It's all mobile first.
But the other things that we really wanted to do was to make it, as I said, financially healthy.
And so we have this thing called the interest wheel where you can put in your payment and it's going to calculate how much interest you're going to pay.
We have no fees associated with late fees or foreign exchange fees and all these little gotches that can be not very transparent to consumers.
and we have ways to help people see how much they're spending in an easy visual way and where they're spending it
and to be able to really track their purchases quite easily.
And then daily cash, you know, we thought long and hard about the rewards program for Apple Card.
And many of our executives, many of our designers, had been using points cards, points programs,
which are quite popular, as you know, in the U.S.
And I think the lack of transparency in terms of what I'm actually really getting in terms of value for my points,
And the fact that card companies can value and devalue those points, really without sort of any notice, if you will, to consumers, we felt was not a great value proposition in terms of the lack of transparency.
So we did something called daily cash, and so you get cash back every night that you can spend using your Apple Cash card to tap to pay anywhere or to send to friends and family.
So those were some of the things that we wanted to do with the credit card when we started out to design it.
I love it because my kids' allowance for whatever they spend money on comes from my daily cash.
So how about Apple savings? It's like kind of adding more proprietary products. What was the impetus for that?
Well, back to daily cash. So we thought most points programs over time feel like they're devaluing.
So how can you take a points program or a rewards program, in other words, and help it grow?
And so that was really the idea behind savings. It turns out,
Again, when we're talking about timing, the timing of our launch of savings was fantastic because
it was when interest rates were going up.
And so Goldman, our partner, was able to offer a high savings rate, which actually drove
not only people to put their daily cash into their savings account, but also other deposits as well.
Maybe I can ask two final questions.
Looking back at your time leading ApplePan, Apple Wallet, what are maybe two or three of the
moments that you're most proud of?
I have to say a couple of them which wouldn't maybe seem obvious to people. I would say maybe the first time I stood in Tokyo in one of the stations and used Apple Pay for transit there. You know, the throughput requirements to get people through those turnstiles, as you know, is some second time frame from a performance perspective and seeing people just be able to tap their phone or their Apple watch and go through those turnstiles. It is a phenomenal use of the technology. So I'd say that was a really big one. And I think another one that,
we were just really happy with has been really changing Apple Card and sort of setting a standard
for some even offering and business practice associated with cards that hadn't been in the market
before. And so that was also a great moment. But there are many, as you point out, we've done a lot of
cool things. I think if you legitimately as a founder, you're an entrepreneur, you've built this
thing within this enormous company. But any advice that you have for other entrepreneurs or
entrepreneurs? I'll say this, even though it sounds a little bit overdone and trite, which is,
is truly staying focused on the customer experience.
And I always remember I've had new people start from outside the company and they come in
and they don't really realize how customer-focused we are until they see an executive make a
decision that costs us more, delays the timeline in order to do the right thing for the customer.
So I think a lot of companies say this, but I don't think they actually put their money where
their mouth is. Second thing I would say is patience and tenacity are everything. So I'm sure many of
your entrepreneurs know that, but if you believe what you have is truly valuable from a consumer
perspective, you need to stay patient and tenacious in making it happen. And that's even true at a
large company at Apple. These things are not easy. And so those characteristics come to be very
important. All right. Great. Well, thank you so much for your time. Really appreciate this.
Amazing story. Thank you, Alex. It's great to talk to you.
I'd like to thank our guests for joining in the vault.
You can hear all of our episodes by going to A16Z.com backslash podcasts.
To learn more about the latest in FinTech News, be sure to visit A16Z.com backslash FinTech
and subscribe to our monthly FinTech newsletter.
Thanks for tuning in.
