Skip to main content

Powa Technologies’ pioneering PowaTag service goes global

Retail technology business Powa Technologies has signed up more than 950 retailers and brands worldwide to its PowaTag solution and is set to become a dominant mobile retail sales platform, says the company’s founder.
November 5, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Powa’s founder, chairman and CEO, Dan Wagner

Retail technology business Powa Technologies has signed up more than 950 retailers and brands worldwide to its PowaTag solution and is set to become a dominant mobile retail sales platform, says the company’s founder.

The service, which soft-launched this summer, harnesses a number of technologies including QR codes, NFC, Bluetooth beacons and audio tags to help buyers make purchases in seconds - in the high street, in front of the TV or online. They can also get product information and attract product offers. Retailers and brands can also use it to enable instant transactions through Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram. Powatag’s value will lie in its ubiquity as a service that works for retailers and brands while also giving consumers a convenient way to shop and get offers across a range of retailers using a single application.

“There’s nothing like this out there today,” says e-commerce veteran entrepreneur Dan Wagner, Powa’s founder, chairman and CEO. “We have created an ecosystem in a number of sales channels that was not there before.” No rival service exists, giving the company - which claims to be signing up 150 new brands a day - a clear first-mover advantage, he adds. “It’s also a scale play. We have the backing of some of the biggest brands in the world.”

PowaTag’s benefits include the ability to make sales when a shop is closed and eliminating the need for shoppers to key in sensitive data every time they buy - as data is held in the Cloud with PCI Level 1 certification. Wagner says the technology helps retailers respond to growing pressures from customers. “Retailers can no longer afford to think in terms of online verses offline,” he says.

“They must seriously rethink how they connect in-store and online strategies to provide the agility and innovation needed to enable customers to buy whenever and wherever they may be, when they are at that critical buying-decision moment.” PowaTag also provides unprecedented levels of data and documentation to press and broadcast advertising, adds Wagner.

“We believe that PowaTag is the future of true multi-channel advertising as well as retail,” he says. “It enables merchants and businesses to collect smart data and quantify exactly how successful an advertising campaign has been.” Wagner adds that sales of the Powa POS all-in-one tablet, printer, scanner and chip&PIN terminal it launched in April had reached $40 million.

Related Content

  • September 28, 2020
    The benefit of Lidar: touch, don’t look
    The benefits of Lidar as a safety device for automobiles rather than as an enabler for AVs are easy to overlook – but Dr Jun Pei of Cepton Technologies tells Adam Hill why that would be a big mistake
  • November 13, 2012
    'Conservatism hampering ITS technical evolution'
    Nick Lanigan, managing director of Clearview Traffic, considers the current outlook in the ITS sector from an SME's perspective. Interview with Jason Barnes. When times are hard, businesses can invest or cut. Either way, they need guidance from customers – governments – on where best to concentrate their efforts. Prolonged economic slowdown is currently an issue. A short recession, however sharp, would have left many industry players able to ride the bow-wave of governments’ multi-year spending on strategic
  • November 4, 2014
    Q&A: PAX Technology
    Jack Lu, CEO of PAX Global, and Gilberto Novaes, regional sales director, offer some thoughts on new markets and the challenges of integrating online and offline payment solutions
  • August 17, 2022
    ITS investment on upward curve
    More money is coming into the ITS sector – but where is it likely to go next? And what are the pros and cons of all this cash? Adam Hill talks to ITS veteran and corporate investment adviser Greg McKhann