Payment Gateway

Mobile Credit Card Processing: Fees and Pricing Explained

Today’s business owners have a lot of options when it comes to accepting credit card payments on the go. But how much does it cost to make a business mobile? Perhaps this chart will help you to decide whether or not to have your business go mobile :

Just like traditional credit card processing, the fees and pricing structures associated with mobile payment processing can get complicated. Here’s a simple guide for understanding the complex costs associated with mobile credit card processing:

Set-up costs 

Because mobile payment processing doesn’t require much hardware, setting up a mobile merchant account is typically cheaper than setting up a merchant account with a traditional payment processor.

In fact, many mobile processors offer free card readers to new merchants. Additional card readers, which are compatible with specified smartphones and tablets, usually cost between $10 and $15 and can be purchased in retail stores or directly from the processing company or merchant service provider you choose.

If you already have an account with a merchant service provider or credit card processing company that also offers mobile credit card processing (most of them do), you may be able to start accepting mobile payments right away. Of course, you’ll want to contact your company of choice for detailed information about the costs associated with accepting mobile payments.

Some mobile payment processors charge merchants various fees for setting up a new merchant account or updating an existing account. Depending on which processor you choose, you may have to pay a fee just to apply for mobile credit card processing (application fee or sign-up fee). Some processors also charge merchants a set-up or activation fee before allowing them to accept mobile payments.

Monthly fees

Most mobile credit card processors charge a monthly fee for the use of their services. This fee goes by several names— statement fee, account fee, bundle fee, payment gateway fee, wireless access fee, etc. However it’s referred to on your monthly statement, you’ll want to make sure you understand what’s included in the amount you pay per month.

Some credit card processing companies, charge what’s known as a “monthly minimum fee.” In other words, if the fees you incur every month don’t meet a minimum threshold, you’ll be charged the monthly minimum fee, rather than the amount you actually owe. Monthly minimums vary greatly from processor to processor, so you’ll want to know whether such a fee applies to your account before signing up for a service.

While many mobile processing companies follow a monthly pricing structure, others choose to forgo monthly payments altogether for a pay-as-you-go model. Nevertheless, some companies do not charge for monthly fee at all.

However, opting out of monthly payments usually means paying higher discount rates and transaction fees, and merchants need to consider whether this price structure is really the best option for their business. Some mobile processing options let merchants choose whether to pay as they go and incur higher rates or opt for a monthly charge with lower rates.

Annual Fees

Some credit card processing companies may charge merchants an annual account fee in addition to their regular monthly account fee. Others may charge a PCI compliance fee.

Knowing if such charges will apply to your account before signing up for a service can save you a lot of money (not to mention frustration, headaches and regret) in the future.

Discount rates

While not all mobile payment processors charge a monthly fee for their services, they all do charge fees for every credit card transaction you process. Typically, processors charge a transaction rate (a percentage of the total sale), plus a separate fee per transaction.

A discount rate is actually a number of different charges that merchants incur in order to process a credit card sale. Part of the rate represents the fees paid to the credit card processing organization and part represents the fees paid to the merchant’s acquiring bank. This rate is expressed as a percentage of the total sale. Discount rates vary depending on the type of transaction processed.

This discrepancy in discount rates is based on a few factors. First, it reflects the rate structure, known as tiered pricing, that many credit card processing companies use for merchants.

Merchants should also keep in mind that keyed-in transactions are almost always more expensive than swiped transactions because they are classified as “card-not-present” transactions, and are therefore viewed as being more susceptible to fraud.

Transaction fees

In addition to charging a discount rate for every credit card payment processed, most mobile payment processors also charge an additional per-transaction fee. For most companies, this fee ranges from 10 to 25 cents. Swiped transactions, in addition to incurring a different discount rate, will also typically incur a different per-transaction rate.

Considering how complex pricing is for credit card processing, it should come as no surprise that transaction fees are often more complicated than they appear on paper. Unlike discount rates, more than one transaction fee may apply to a single credit card transaction.

Miscellaneous fees

In addition to the many fees and charges already listed, some mobile payment processors also charge a number of other fees, which fall under the category of “miscellaneous fees.” Such fees can include charges for canceling a service before the contract with the processor has expired, bank routing fees and other service fees.

 logo Facebook   Twitter   LinkedIn   Website

Six Things You Need to Know About Chip Cards (EMV)

The days of credit and debit cards with black magnetic stripes across the back are not the future. The U.S. is moving toward EMV and chip cards. The media has been abuzz recently with references to this important change. So what do you need to know?

Q.  The Basics – What are Chip Cards?

EMV chip cards have computer chips embedded in them. They are widely used in Europe and Asia and are beginning to be adopted in the U.S.

People who frequently travel abroad may already have chip cards or may have seen them used in London, Toronto and Istanbul. The rest of us are likely to have chip cards in our hands by 2015.

Q.  Why Chip Cards?

Chip cards better protect your account information from fraud. And every electronic payment – credit cards, debit cards, digital wallets – is almost always more secure than cash.

The magnetic-striped credit and debit cards you are accustomed to contain “static” data, or payment data that does not change. The data stored in the magnetic stripes includes your 16-digit card account number, expiration date and 3-digit security code (CVC) like the one found on the back of your card.

Chip cards contain the same data and more. Each purchase or transaction that you make generates “dynamic” or unique data that is encoded in a safe mode.

EMV helps protect you even if your card or your card data is lost or stolen, the technology:

  • Makes it difficult for anyone but the rightful owner to use the card
  • Protects against the creation of counterfeit cards because dynamic data is only good for a single purchase or use

 

Q. What is MasterCard Doing?

MasterCard is one of the original founders of the chip card standard known as EMV, short for EuroPay (now part of MasterCard), MasterCard and Visa.

They continue to advance the technology and introduce it to every country around the world . . . allowing users to safely use the MasterCard no matter where they are.

Q.  Will this Change The Way I Pay for Things?

A little bit. Rather than swiping your card, you may soon insert it into or tap it against a card reader so the chip on your card and the reader can “talk” and establish a secure connection.

Q.  Why Isn’t the U.S. Currently Using Chip Card Technology?

Historically, countries with higher fraud rates switched to chip cards earlier than countries with lower fraud rates.

Q. What will I see as a Cardholder?

First, you will see new card readers or payment terminals in your favorite stores and restaurants. Many of the new readers are already in place, especially if the business caters to travelers from outside the U.S.

Next your bank or credit union will send you a new chip card. Some EMV cards are already available in the U.S. However, the chip cards are provided predominantly on an “at request” basis and, as mentioned, most often to international travelers. SOURCE

logo Facebook   Twitter   LinkedIn   Website

6 Common Mistakes People Make When Starting a Business

Expensive mistake #1: Wrong Team

The wrong team Bill Aulet, managing director of the Martin Trust Center for MIT Entrepreneurship and author of Disciplined Entrepreneurship, says choosing the wrong team is the single costliest error entrepreneurs make, resulting in not only lost income and time but depleted morale.

“Choosing who to hire and work with in a startup is like playing basketball in the schoolyard; you can pick your friends and play for them, but if youwant to be good and continue to be on the court, you have to carefully pick your team,” he explains.

It’s crucial to choose people with varying skill sets. However, Aulet says, “much like a great sports team, they must also share some common values and the ability to trust each other in tough situations. That’s why past experience working with your co-founders and early employees in stressful times is much more important than being friends.”

Expensive mistake #2: Bad pricing

“My single biggest mistake with my first business–a handbag company–was in pricing,” says Sarah Shaw, CEO of Entreprenette, a consulting firm in Durango, Colo. Hers is a common misstep for product manufacturers.

“I didn’t understand that with any kind of clothing or accessories, you have to calculate the square footage of fabric, including the wasted fabric,” Shaw explains. Without an accurate understanding of her costs, she couldn’t price her products correctly.

“I thought you sort of doubled everything, but that’s not correct,” she says. “It’s a 2.5-times markup from cost to wholesale, which covers marketing, the showroom fee, all your expenses.”

By the end of her first two years in business, Shaw had put in more than $100,000 of her own money. Thanks to perseverance and media buzz (celebrities loved her bags), she ended up with $1 million in annual revenue and attracted investors, but she couldn’t recover from the downturn after 9/11 and closed the business in 2002.

Entreprenette’s Sarah Shaw (left) misunderstood costs in her first startup, a handbag company.

Like Shaw, Tobin Booth, CEO of Blue Oak Energy, paid dearly for a pricing mistake. It occurred in 2010 when the California-based company, which engineers and constructs solar photovoltaic power systems, took on a contract to install solar units for a retail chain with stores in eight states.

“That was a level of complexity we had zero experience with, in a very competitive market,” he says. “What we didn’t understand across all these states were the tax consequences and how much variation there was in labor rates. Then there were delays because of weather and shipping.”

The company, which also hadn’t planned for project delays that led to incurring storage fees, lost about $500,000 in 2011. Booth says the miscalculation was one of the worst experiences he has been through as a business owner, but there were some positives: “The cliché is absolutely correct. The painful experiences are the ones you learn best from.”

Expensive mistake #3: Waiting for perfect when good will do

When you’ve got a killer idea, it’s natural to want to introduce it to the world in a fully formed state. But it doesn’t take a CPA to figure out that the longer you take to launch, the longer you go without money coming in.

“This is a common mistake, especially for tech people,” says Drew Williams, co-author of Feed the Startup Beast. “Many want to build an app and won’t let it go until it’s perfect, but then you take too long and spend too much.” Specifically, this error will likely leave you with no “runway”–the cash you’ll need to sustain you as you’re trying to get your product off the ground once it’s ready, but before you have customers.

“You need to come up with the simplest, basic version of your product that gets the idea across and try to find someone you can sell it to,” Williams says. “Find one or two clients who are willing to do a pilot where you build, test and iterate it. Inevitably, your product will be different than what you expect, and then you build it. If you get a real, live client, you create a better product in a very cost-effective way.”

Expensive mistake #4: Not understanding technology

Mary Juetten was no Luddite when she launched Traklight, a software company that helps individuals and businesses identify and protect intellectual property, but she didn’t know everything. “I understood how to lay out what our software would do … but I didn’t know anything about coding software or web development,” says Juetten, a CPA and Canadian chartered accountant.

She relied on a co-founder with that expertise, but when that relationship ended, she floundered. “This is where I made my biggest mistake: I looked for the best deal, and I didn’t educate myself about different programming languages or bring someone else into the mix.”

The team she hired to create Traklight’s software told her that it “couldn’t” be built in one programming language and “had” to be built in another. “If someone designing my website came up to me and said, ‘You should use this color instead of that color,’ I’d be asking 17 questions about why,” Juetten says. “But I never asked why about this, because it was technology.”

The four-month window for software development turned into eight months, then nine more. “With technology, it’s all about time to market,” she says. “So entrepreneurs who are not technical should educate themselves.”

Eventually Juetten took a “tech speak for entrepreneurs” class. She suggests other startup founders who need more expertise find similar instruction at Codecademy or General Assembly.

Expensive mistake #5: Skimping on attorneys

Booth of Blue Oak Energy might like a do-over on pricing that multistate order, but he’s also sorry about skimping on legal fees in his company’s infancy.

“If I could do some of the early stuff over, it would have been to pay a few thousand dollars to have an attorney write up a proper contract,” he says. “I didn’t have the right attorney who really understood my business.”

A few early customers simply didn’t pay up, so Booth tried to move matters to a collections agency. “I found out that there were some clauses [in the contract] that didn’t allow me to collect on attorneys’ fees,” says Booth, whose company now does nearly $20 million in annual revenue.

Shaw, meanwhile, unknowingly signed a contract that gave her handbag company the trademark to her name, so when investors came in, her name belonged to them. “I can’t use my own name in business again,” she says. “I wish I had hired an attorney to watch out for me.”

Social Media Sign

Expensive mistake #6: Being cheap about marketing

“People think, everyone else has to market their product or service, but I don’t because this is so good,” says author Williams. The related myth is that you can rely on social media to build virality and attract customers for free. “Social media is not free,” he says. “To do it properly takes unbelievable amounts of time, and it’ll typically take six months to a year before you’ve got even slight momentum–it’s not fast.”

If you’re not sure how much money to budget for marketing, Williams suggests aiming for 10 to 20 percent of your targeted gross revenue. “As you become a more established business, that drops to 5 percent to 10 percent of gross revenue, and for the largest businesses it’s typically 5 percent or a bit less,” he says.

After launching Traklight, Juetten found that her website wasn’t indexed properly for search engines. “No one was finding us,” she recalls. So she decided to invest in an inbound marketing program. “That initial payment is scary for a small company, but we don’t have to pay developers to make changes to our site, and they do e-mail marketing and CRM,” she explains. So far it’s working: In April 2013 the Traklight site recorded just 100 visits per month; by the end of the year it was getting 2,800.

How much does Juetten estimate she lost early on between the missteps in software development and inbound marketing? “As far as dollars thrown away–actual checks written for useless things–that would be in the tens of thousands,” she admits. “As far as lost time [and] products not developed on time, it’s in the hundreds of thousands. We would be much further ahead now.”

In the end, the best way to avoid costly mistakes is obvious: Save and spend wisely. “Keep spending really, really tight,” Williams advises. “Leverage everything you can and give yourself as long a runway as possible. You’re going to need it.” SOURCE 

logo Facebook   Twitter   LinkedIn   Website

Want to get rich? Here are some ideas to work on

If you fancied yourself as someone who could be turned into a billionaire, you were arguably cheating — these were things everyone has already figured out.

The real challenge, and the greater value and more lucrative pursuit, would be to come up with the solutions to problems that have befuddled engineers for decades or more.

We thought of 10 of them:

1. Wireless Power

Digital devices have become so small that it can be cumbersome to plug them into a power source. Longer-lasting batteries? Nope — Apple iPod God Tony Fadell says pursuing greater efficiency in batteries is a trap. The key is to find ways of squeezing more efficiency out of the devices’ other parts — and stealing power from what’s around you. University of Washington engineers, among others, are at work on harvesting existing TV and cellular transmissions and turning them into a power source. “This novel technique enables ubiquitous communication where devices can communicate among themselves at unprecedented scales and in locations that were previously inaccessible,” they say.

2. Rural, Remote Internet

Everyone agrees this is a priority. But there appear to be a hard way and an easier way to achieve it. The former involves lots of expensive regulatory clearance and installations. The latter, currently spearheaded by Google, is called Project Loon. The company plans to send renewables-powered balloons to the edge of space to create an Internet network in remote parts of the world. “We believe it’s possible to create a ring of balloons that fly around the globe on the stratospheric winds and provide Internet access to the earth below,” they say. Whoa.

project loon

3. Cheap, Scalable Solar

There are two ways to reduce the cost of raw solar power. One is to have a super-cheap photovoltaic cell, with the tradeoff off that it’s inefficient. Of course, more efficient cells cost more to make. So everyone is racing to find a material or process that eliminates the tradeoffs. We may be close: Australian researchers say they’ve achieved commercial-scale efficiency with a set of dirt-cheap materials first experimented with a century ago but never considered for this use: perovskites. The scientists say they could help cut solar costs by 75% to as low as 10 cents a watt.

4. Clean Coal

The technology was recently the subject of a cover story in Wired, which said carbon capture and storage “may be more important — though much less publicized — than any renewable-energy technology for decades to come,” since it would allow the world to keep burning its most abundant fuel source. But it goes on to note that “developing reliable, large-scale CCS facilities will be time-consuming, unglamorous, and breathtakingly costly.”

5. Super-Low-Cost International Payments

While this isn’t a problem that touches the average consumer directly, the fees paid by financial institutions to wire funds overseas can eventually filter down. Remittances, too, while not over burdensome, would be much cheaper if they were sent over a decentralized or distributed network free from network, acquiring or interchange fees (see the chart below). This, of course, is the problem Bitcoin and Bitcoin-like technologies, like Ripple, are looking to address.

goldman bitcoin

Goldman Sachs

 

6. A Pill That Really Makes You Lose Weight

The holy grail of modern society, and another that may prove impossible. But there may yet be a way: In 2012, scientists at UCLA say they’d genetically engineered mice brains to a key compound that craves fats. The results, according to The Week, “These mice lived in a ‘hypermetabolic state,’ burning fat calories far more efficiently than normal mice, study researcher Daniele Piomelli said in a statement. They were ‘resistant to obesity,’ staying thin despite a high-fat diet without exercise. They even had normal blood pressure, and showed no increased risk of heart disease or diabetes.”

7. Cheap Desalination

Water shortages continue to make the list of the world’s most pressing issues. This year’s crippling drought in California further drove the point home. But desalination plants have proved way too expensive and inefficient to build. But earlier this year, Business Insider’s Dina Spector profiled the company behind a kind of solar-powered desalination process that uses one-fifth the electricity of methods that use fossil fuels. If something like this doesn’t pan out, we’ll have to keep relying on massive conservation efforts — which basically means we’ve already lost.

WaterFX

A parabolic trough collects energy from the sun. The heat is used to evaporate clean water from the salty agricultural drainage water of irrigated crops.

 

8. Detecting Or Predicting Major Weather Or Natural Events

A new book about the San Andreas Fault frames the issue like this: “the world community of seismologists remains divided — at times, vehemently — over the issue of whether it will ever be possible to predict earthquakes. It’s a question that’s been raised again as the network of faults in Southern California has awakened with seismic activity in recent months. It is a complex problem. And, to date, no one has yet predicted an earthquake.” Meanwhile the number of billion-dollar meteorological events climbs inexorably higher.

billion dollar weather events

 

9. Unhackable Passwords

Wired has said 2012 was the year passwords broke. Hackers have, through brute force, so far been able to break through practically every firewall ever invented. There must be a better way. And engineers are working on them. Google, for instance, continues to search for ways to turn your smartphone or some other device into a computer “car key,” Another involves what was once thought the holy grail of cryptography, called obfuscation, which masks the inner workings of a computer program.

10. Death

It’s happening. Google — yes, it has appeared several times on this list, but that’s because it’s interested, and it can — just hired biophysicist Cynthia Kenyon from UCSF to join its Project Calico antiaging team. Her experiments have produced roundworm as old as the equivalent of 80 human years but looks and acts the equivalent of 40. Google admits it’s a moonshot, but it’s proved pretty decent at those.

SOURCE

logo Facebook   Twitter   LinkedIn   Website