WebMaster Solutions
eCommerce
Accepting
Credit Cards on your Website
by Kenneth Catto
If you are
building an online shop, you will need to
address the question of taking payments for
orders. You can, of course, request that a check
payment be sent to you in the mail. Most
shopping basket software allows you to select
this option when you are setting it up. If you
already have an offline, bricks and mortar
business, you may simply wish to accept credit
card payments over the phone.
However, there are
some basic problems with these solutions and it
all comes down to the way people shop on the
internet. Customers expect to be able to add
items to their basket and proceed to the
checkout to pay. If they then find they must
telephone you or print out and send their order,
they may simply abandon their order and hop over
to another website. Shopping online is all about
convenience and if you are unable to provide
this, you may be losing customers without even
being aware of it.
So, what are your
options and what is it all going to cost? Well,
the good news is you can do it all very simply
and cheaply. PayPal does not have a set-up
charge and is a large and trusted online payment
processor servicing 78 million accounts
worldwide in 56 countries. Your only cost is a
small percentage on each sale; a transaction
charge. Payments from your website go straight
into your PayPal account from where you can
transfer amounts to your bank account with the
click of a button.
Once you sign up
with a payment processor, you can either link to
their secure server from your shopping basket
facility or build 'add to basket' buttons via a
simple web query form. The html generated is
then pasted next to items on your web page and
your customers will be transferred to a secure
server when they go to checkout.
Traditional
merchant accounts are normally set up through
your own bank and will become integral to your
business account. Having your own merchant
account gives you the choice of many different
online payment gateways. Most, however, do
charge a set-up fee, monthly fee and transaction
charge. Just as you would offline, do make sure
you research any company you sign up with on the
internet. Print out and read their terms and
conditions. Take particular notice of where they
are operating from, their fees, when and how you
will receive your money into your account.
Another point to
consider is the question of chargeback's. This
happens when a buyer requests a refund of an
amount already paid to you. Reasons include not
receiving goods ordered or items arriving
faulty, damaged or not as described. Sometimes
requests are made if the buyers card was used
fraudulently.
If the chargeback
request is successful, your merchant payment
processor will charge you a processing fee.
However, some companies will now provide you
with insurance against chargeback's inclusive in
your monthly fee. It's certainly worth shopping
around for the right solution for you but
knowing you have done your research will give
you some peace of mind.
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