Tag Archives: E-Commerce

Small Business Saturday: Nov. 24th

Today, the Official Merchant Services Blog shines a light on a little known holiday that falls between Black Friday, and Cyber Monday called Small Business Saturday.

Since Host Merchant Services has many small businesses in its customer base, we wanted to take a moment to spotlight this newer day of shopping focus and frenzy. This is the third year that American Express is promoting Small Business Saturday, which encourages consumers to shop from small, local businesses on Nov. 24.

The Basics

First of all, what is Small Business Saturday? It is a shopping holiday created by American Express, held on the Saturday after Thanksgiving during one of the busiest shopping periods of the year. It’s not that old. It was first celebrated on November 27, 2010. Small Business Saturday is designed to be a counterpart to Black Friday and Cyber Monday –– which feature big box retail and e-commerce stores respectively. Small Business Saturday encourages holiday shoppers to patronize smaller, local retail businesses.

Benefits For Consumers

The most basic perk to the Small Business Saturday campaign is that it gives money back to consumers for shopping at local small businesses. As defined by American Express at their Small Business Saturday Page here“You can receive a one-time $25 statement credit when you register any eligible American Express® Card and use that Card to make a purchase of $25 or more at a small business on November 24, 2012.”

Benefits For Merchants

A survey by American Express found 93% of consumers believe shopping at small businesses is important, and are backing that sentiment up by spending about a third of their discretionary income at local small businesses. This prompted AMEX to initiate the campaign in the first place. And if you are a small business merchant, AMEX is going the extra mile to get you involved in the perks and promotions of this holiday.

Even if you are a late-comer to this event, there is still quite a lot of value to be had from participating in Small Business Saturday. The $25 credit program applies no matter what else you do. But there’s also these amazing resources still available:

  • From AMEX you can get free in-store signage, and a free online marketing kit.
  • AMEX also offers a free personalized ad, which geo-targets potential customers
  • You can use AMEX’s Go Social app to create mobile-based deals for your American Express card-wielding customers.
  • A joint venture from Google and YouTube offers up My Business Story which lets you create custom videos using YouTube’s editing tool to entice your customers.
  • For inspiration, you can even view some Small Business Saturday Success Stories on American Express’s website.

Too Early To Tell?

So what do you think? Will Small Business Saturday catch on? Cyber Monday seems to be gaining some traction, fueled by the rapid growth in online shopping and e-commerce, and standing on the precipice of a predicted boom in mobile payment business. Black Friday is still going strong, with big chains like Toys”R”Us and BestBuy fueling it year in and year out. Is there room for Small Business Saturday? Are you a small business merchant and have you participated in this event last year? Will you be doing it this year? Feel free to share you thoughts and insights on this bold campaign from AMEX.

Industry Terms: Basis Points

This is the latest installment in The Official Merchant Services Blog’s Knowledge Base effort. Well we want to make the payment processing industry’s terms and buzzwords clear. We want to remove any and all confusion merchants might have about how the industry works. Host Merchant Services promises: the company delivers personal service and clarity. So we’re going to take some time to explain how everything works. This ongoing series is where we define industry related terms and slowly build up a knowledge base and as we get more and more of these completed, we’ll collect them in our resource archive for quick and easy access. Today’s term is Basis Points, a term used frequently in the industry and one that is pretty simple to understand but very important to all merchants that take credit cards because they apply to every pricing structure out there.

Basis Points

Basis Points are a unit of measurement with a value equaling one one-hundredth of a percent ( 1/100 of 1%). Basis Points, typically denoted as bp, are sometimes referred to colloquially as “bips” or “beeps.” The same unit of measurement is rarely called a permyriad — literally meaning ‘for every myriad ten thousand’ — and will have a strange looking symbol that looks like a percent sign with two extra zeroes at the end.

It will look like this: 100‱

Basis points are frequently used to express differences in many financial and economical areas such as yield differences between bonds, changes to interest rates, equity indices and fixed-income securities. In a lot of news stories from the media, basis points are used to refer to reports from a central bank’s changes to prevailing interest rates.

The term basis point has its origins in trading the “basis” or the spread between two interest rates. Since the basis was very small, the numbers are quoted multiplied up by 10000, and so a full point movement in the basis is a basis point.

The measurement helps in financial analysis because it avoids the ambiguity between relative and absolute discussions about interest rates by dealing only with te absolute change in numeric value of a rate.

But What About Credit Card Processing?

The term basis point in reference to credit card processing and merchant accounts is typically used to refer to the percentage of a sale that a merchant pays to the service provider to process a credit card transaction.

They tend to be used to refer to the discount rate that merchants pay to process plastic. Since credit card processing discount rates are typically less than 5% — with most being less than 2.5% — fractions of a percent often come into play. So basis points make it easier to discuss these tiny amounts without having to resort to extended decimals or fractions.