Posts Tagged ‘Payment’

Chaos in the Payments Biz

Thursday, May 6th, 2010

Just when you thought it was safe to go outside, yet another new payment method arrives on the scene. I follow at least a dozen different news sources and being in the payments biz for 30 years I get a lot of whispers sent my way too. I would strongly suggest that you seriously consider the consequences of leaping at every new payment method with the hope it is going to be the “killer app”. There is a point of diminishing returns in terms of upside. Offering more than 3-4 types of payment or multiple brands of the same basic scheme will lead to confusion at check-out. And, your customer service department with thank you!

Oh Canada, or why TX success rates matter

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

Of late, Vindicia has been welcoming quite a few Canadian based gaming, software, and social media companies. We also work in partnership with Tier 1 payment providers like Litle and Chase Paymentech. This brings up an interesting issue as these merchants think through their business structure and monetization plans.

Visa and Mastercard rules require that for US dollar transactions be presented by a merchant as a US domestic transaction, the merchant must have a “presence” in the US. The card associations rules may seem confounding but they’re much to do about making sure that the associations comply with US regulatory requirements and so that the associations and the card issuing banks can have some confidence about the risk created by the merchant for any given transaction. This leads to a requirement that Canadian and other foreign domiciled companies have to set up a “presence” in the US. The alternative is to use a Canadian merchant account to present international transactions priced in US Dollars.

The extra effort  may seem painful, but that leads to an important consideration every company should be considering and that is the statistical likelihood that any given credit/debit card transaction will go through at any given time. One of the reasons that Vindicia has chosen to work with the very best payment providers is that, on average, those payment providers are more likely to complete a successful transaction. We often see prospective clients compare one of the top provider’s pricing to that of less capable providers and the variable most often missing in their ROI analysis that offsets their sometimes perceived higher cost is the change in revenue that an even .05% better success rate completing one time and subscription transactions creates in terms of dollars saved. When the cost of payment processing is less than 3%, it doesn’t take a lot of 97%+ transactions to offset small cost deltas between the pricing of the best in class and all the rest.

Returning to Canadian companies, analyzing the average likelihood of success of any given transaction shows that the slight extra effort is well worth it. Requests to bill a US customer from what appears to be a foreign (even just Canadian) bank will lower the statistical likelihood of each transaction that a Canadian merchant attempts as card issuers assign more risk to non domestic transactions. It takes very few incomplete transactions (from customers who wanted to buy from you!) to offset the small cost of creating a US subsidiary in a favorable US taxing area.

Why the CCARDA matters to subscription services

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

Today marks the effective day of the Credit Card Accountability, Responsibility and Disclosure Act. Our friends at PaymentsNews posted a round up of the coverage over the weekend.

The changes that will most impact game, software, social networking, and online content companies have to do with the new requirements upon offers of credit to college students. College campuses had become one of the most effective new credit card customer acquisition tools for the credit card issuers. With the new rules, it’s going to be a bit harder for those of college age to establish new credit and thus the 18-22 year old market is going to have incrementally less buying power.

What this portends for subscription services is a shift in payment method mix to other alternates. Primarily it will mean a mix more strongly weighted toward debit cards for those services with large “under 25″ populations. This is on top of a general trend we’ve noticed after the credit contraction late last year toward debit being a larger percentage of subscription payment methods. Services should be reviewing their subscription business practices with the higher debit mix in mind.

Questions about Payments? – Ask me anything.

Friday, February 12th, 2010

Hi, please feel free to post any questions you have about payments and I will do my very best to respond. It can be about payment types, payment processors, you name it.