Posts Tagged ‘Fraud’

Whose Fraud is That Anyway?

Wednesday, June 8th, 2011

Visa has issued new operating regulations regarding fraud chargebacks that took effect April 16, 2011.  The online regulations were just recently updated. Visa has their take on the changes to the chargeback process available.

In a nutshell, Visa has changed the rules to allow issuing banks to issue so-called “Fraudulent Transactions” chargebacks of reason code 83 without any requirement for documentation to be made available to merchants. Before these changes, issuing an 83 chargeback required the end-user to physically or e-sign a statement that there was fraud on their card, and provide a basic reason about why the charge was fraudulent.  In addition an issuing bank had to provide the cardholder’s name and details on other fraudulent charges that occurred in the same general time frame.  Now issuing banks can present type 83 chargebacks without even disclosing the cardholder name, much less the rest of the information that traditionally had been provided.

One might think, “these are just fraudulent charges so isn’t this more efficient?”  Historically, 60% of the chargebacks that digital services companies receive are in reason code 83. Over the two years prior to April 2011, we’ve generally found the need to dispute between 28% and 33% of reason code 83 chargebacks and we’ve won between 60% and 63% of the ones we fought depending on vertical. What that means is that “friendly fraud” in chargebacks marked with reason code 83 make up at least 11% of the volume of all chargebacks received by digital companies.  Since the average chargeback value is typically twice the average ticket of a digital merchant, we’re talking about issuing banks taking 0.2% of all digital services revenue and pocketing it by allowing their cardholders to get away with theft.

Of course those statistics were in a soon to be bygone era where merchants and Vindicia could hold issuers accountable. When the business imperative for the issuing bank is to retain the cardholder while they are talking with them on the phone, it should surprise no one that issuers will route many more chargebacks into reason code 83. With no accountability, they’ll be able to make their cardholder happy by allowing them to steal a digital service while extracting the cash from the merchant’s pocket and adding the additional insult of a chargeback fee!  Everyone but the digital leader wins.

We’re frankly not happy about this turn of events and think that it violates some fundamental rules of law. Stay tuned as we hope to be able to create some more fairness and accountability on behalf of our digital merchants.

Payment Ecosystem Myths – Part 2

Wednesday, December 8th, 2010

In part 1 of this topic, we discussed common myths around chargebacks and the difficulties of being the merchant of record.  Here are some additional myths that we’d like to refute:

“The more payment methods, the better” – This revolves around the “bright, shiny object” theory. Companies are easily swayed by new payment methods and promises of better monetization, leading to a plethora of options available for customers. Studies have shown that three payment methods are optimal for most online purchases. More can be provided, but not on the initial purchase page; otherwise they’ll just confuse your customers.

Another way of looking at payment methods is to look at the margins, the customer dispute process, and the potential for cannibalization.  The most common payment methods in the US are still credit and debit cards. You’ll obviously need to modify this thinking based on the geographical focus for your service and the demographics of your audience, but implementing 10 payment methods is rarely profitable.

“Everyone pays with PayPal, that’s all I need” – PayPal is a very ubiquitous payment method, especially for digital goods. However, offering only PayPal for payments excludes a much broader market of potential buyers. The customer purchasing process for credit cards is much smoother outside of the PayPal flow. Your users should be incentivized to spread the word about your product, not sign-up for PayPal.

“The customer payment experience is less critical than new product features” – The customer’s purchasing experience is incredibly important and companies ignore it at their own peril. Companies like Zynga and Netflix are hugely successful and known for their optimized and customer-centric purchasing process as well as their products. Dedicated customers will find a way to pay despite the experience, but the broader population of customers will abandon purchases if the process seems too difficult or unsecured.

“I don’t need to worry about fraud” – Fraud is a reality for any company selling services and content online, especially digital goods. Companies that ignore fraud will soon find themselves in severe trouble with the card networks (and their payment processors).  The path to online success is littered with the stories of companies that were driven out of business by ignoring the fraud risk.

Read the final set of myths in part 3 of this series.

Genuine progress in fraud prevention!

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

Wells Fargo announced a few days ago that they were taking advantage of a new Visa feature. Of course, I had to immediately enroll. You then receive text message alerts when certain types and size of transactions occur. The idea is that if it isn’t you, you can immediately respond and become part of the fraud prevention paradigm. I was somewhat skeptical, as usual, but as it turned out hours later I was picking up my wife’s BMW from the shop (ouch $1200!!!) and while I was still standing at the check-out desk, my phone got a text reporting the transaction to me. It was very descriptive, telling me that my “Wells Fargo Card ending in xx was used at xxx Motors in xxx town for $xxxx.xx ….

This is real progress.

I had previously enrolled in their alerting offer but due to the number of different acquirers and issuers and the batch nature of credit card processing, these often did not arrive until days later.

Since, Visa’s switch is involved in the authorization of all Visa transactions, these alerts can go out literally in real time.

Of course someone will try and call this a mobile payment! (see my article in Venture Beat!)

http://venturebeat.com/2010/03/10/what-will-it-take-to-make-mobile-payments-mainstream-in-the-us/