Author Archive for Sanjay Sarathy

Fall 2010 Webinar Series

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

We’ve received great feedback on the topics we’ve handled with our best practice webinar series over the past couple of years (view the archives).  In addition, we constantly get new ideas from viewers on what they would like to hear about.  With that in mind, we’re happy to announce our Fall Webinar Series.  The four webinar topics delve into

  • The pros and cons of the freemium business model, much in vogue these days
  • The impact of Facebook Credits on your monetization strategy
  • A deeper look into the whole payment ecosystem with updates on recent regulatory changes
  • How to strategically manage your chargebacks

We invite you to register for these webinars and, as always, provide feedback on what you’d like to hear about.

Revenue Matters

Friday, May 28th, 2010

Revenue growth is the foundation of all businesses, including our own.  So it’s heartening to see our accomplishments recognized by Lead411 in their recent release of “Silicon Valley’s Hottest Companies”, in which companies had to show 100% growth over the past three years.  At a rate more than double that Vindicia obviously qualified, but more importantly we’ve proven a point that companies can actually show real GAAP revenue growth that encompassed a period of significant economic turmoil.  For that we have to thank our customers who have proven that the digital wave is cutting a wide swath through all businesses, from publishing to video games to software, and that customers are more than willing to pay for a compelling experience that offers more than just access to a service.

We continue to focus our attention on enhancing the capabilities of our clients to broaden their acquisition capabilities and optimize their retention rates.  To that end, stay tuned.  We have some interesting product news in a couple of weeks.

Content Provider Rising

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

The news about Boxee using Vindicia CashBox for their new Payment Platform is about more than just a new client.  As we’ve written about here and here, we are in the midst of a revolution in how people consume online content.  This dynamic is upending digital distribution.  No longer are consumers restricted to experiencing content via specific channels.  Consume that subscription on my laptop on the train.  Check.  Sit in my family room and watch that same subscription on TV via the Boxee Box while eating popcorn.  Check.  As Gene wrote, Netflix knows he has one login across the different channels he uses to consume its content.

For content providers, the ability to deliver that compelling experience while managing the value of that offering across different channels is paramount.  That’s where Vindicia comes in.  The flexibility to define business models, from pay-per-view to subscriptions, and change them on the fly should be the prerogative of the content provider, not of any aggregator.  The primary value of the aggregator comes in helping the consumer choose across different content elements, not simply as a price setter or as a pipe.

Eliminate PCI Compliance With Hosted Order Automation

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

An article in Internet Retailer Magazine discusses the cost burden Payment Card Industry (PCI) regulations place on merchants of various sizes.  Mind-bogglingly, the effort to maintain compliance and pass the annual audit can easily reach $1 million.  To help merchants eliminate this burden altogether, we at Vindicia announced today a new capability in CashBox called Hosted Order Automation (HOA), whereby merchants can completely offload their PCI cost to Vindicia.

Before explaining how HOA works, we’ll briefly describe the background. In a typical online CashBox transaction that’s paid by credit card, a customer who clicks the Buy or Checkout button on a merchant’s site sends his or her credit-card information–securely–to Vindicia for billing.  During that process is a moment in time when the transaction passes through the merchant’s server.  Even if the merchant immediately deletes that credit-card information, the very fact that it touched the merchant’s server requires that the merchant comply with PCI.  That’s true even if the merchant is working with a PCI Level 1 Service Provider in Vindicia.

With HOA, PCI regulations do not apply to merchants who use CashBox because, instead of passing through the merchants’ servers, all credit-card transactions go directly to CashBox.  Not only can those merchants continue to enjoy the other inherent capabilities of CashBox, they still retain control of their customer experience, that is, the look and feel and other user-interface components of the checkout page. Yes, having one’s cake and eating it, too, is actually possible in this situation.

To learn the details about HOA, read its data sheet. Feel free to contact Vindicia for more information or post questions to our community forum.

The Value of Automatic Payment

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

The Services Tsunami–characterized by rapid product iterations, immediate customer feedback, and the growing acceptance of subscription billing–has affected many industries, from gaming to software. Nonetheless, many companies in this era still issue traditional invoices and incur the significant overhead of days sales outstanding (DSO), that is, the average number of days it takes to actually receive revenue from a customer contract. Terms like Net 30 or Net 45 result in fairly significant DSOs, an obvious setback for a company’s cashflow.

To reduce DSOs, consider offering your customers automatic payment so that they can charge their payment method (credit card, debit card, ACH, and so forth) the amount of the transaction when payment is due. Subsequently, your DSOs will drop by a couple of days to a week, a benefit that’s well worth the cost investment of implementing the related payment and billing infrastructure.

Plus, a key factor for successful online services is customer “stickiness,” which, along with other best practices, enables you to maximize customer lifetime value. In sending customers monthly invoices, you give them 12 opportunities in a year to rethink whether or not to continue their subscriptions. With automatic payment, you minimize those second thoughts and the potential delay in cash from 12 separate checks arriving in the mail. Lengthier customer loyalty with more predictable cash in the bank–what’s not to like about automatic payment?