Tag Archives: mobile payments

About Mobile Payment Processing

Mobile Payment Processing

In modern business, those businesses without a mobile device card reader are missing out on substantial income. Anyone who sells merchandise or services on site will benefit from mobile payment processing through a card reader attachment. Customers are currently paying via mobile devices at a rate of $240 billion annually, and this figure is expected to increase substantially in the coming years.

Landscapers, caterers, repairmen, or anyone who deals with customers outside of their shop or office will benefit from a mobile device payment system. The system is perfect for those attending trade shows or other networking functions.

Cards vs. Cash or Check

Due to the ballooning use of credit cards and debit cards, people do not carry cash like they did in the past. Customers are more likely to spend more with a credit or debit card, because they have immediate access to more resources than the cash they have on hand. Checks must be deposited and there must be sufficient funds for the check to clear. The physical trip to the bank, as well as waiting for the check to clear, takes time and resources away from the business owner.

On the other hand, mobile payment processing insures immediate payment from the customer. The money is electronically deposited into the business owner’s account. An email receipt can be sent directly to the customer for payment. There is an immediate electronic record of the transaction for the merchant.

Initial Investment for Mobile Payment Processing is Small

Some are hesitant because they believe there is large start-up costs or expensive equipment to purchase. Most likely, the small business already has the equipment needed. All it takes is an iPhone or Android smartphone. There is no expensive or bulky card reader to carry around. The reading device is provided free of charge to the merchant.A small device attaches directly to the phone, and an app is downloaded into the phone. The merchant is then ready to accept mobile payments. All the equipment used can be attached to the merchant’s belt. The service is compatible with both iPhone and android software and can be used with all types of mobile calling services, including Wi-Fi, 3G and 4G networks.A reputable mobile processing service will provide state of the art security for the transaction, ensuring proper encryption of the process. The system can be argued to be safer than carrying large amounts of cash or checks on the merchant’s person.

Costs of Mobile Processing

The merchant pays a small percentage of the payment for the cost of the service, often less than 3% of the payment. The small percentage per transaction far outweighs the lost income the merchant suffers. Increased sales means increased profits. Without the cost of equipment purchases, the small fees for the service become even more attractive.

There is no longer any reason for the mobile merchant to remain in 20th century technology for payment processing. Adding another function to their iPhone or Android allows them to use state of the art technology at little cost.

Industry Terms: Payment Aggregation

This is the latest installment in The Official Merchant Services Blog’s Knowledge Base effort. 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: we deliver 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 Payment Aggregation.

Typically, Merchant Aggregators or Payment Aggregators are service providers through which e-commerce or mobile payments merchants can process their payment transactions. Aggregators allow merchants to accept credit card and bank transfers without having to setup a merchant account with a bank or card association. The Aggregator provides the means for facilitating payment from the consumer via credit cards, stored value accounts or bank transfer to the merchant. The merchant is then paid by the Aggregator. This practice gets controversial among the more traditional sectors of the payment processing industry because it makes it harder for networks to monitor just who generates transactions and, most importantly, the attendant risk.

With a traditional merchant account, like the ones Host Merchant Services offers, there is a noteworthy difference in practice for the merchant. The account is in the merchant’s name, giving the merchant more rights as well as more responsibilities. The traditional merchant account also holds Host Merchant Services to the merchant with added oversight on the transaction process. The security and service gives merchants more peace of mind and more value for their effort. Payment Aggregators also have discretion over when a merchant receives their funds, another drawback of the aggregation model.

Industry Terms: QR Codes

This is the latest installment in The Official Merchant Services Blog’s Knowledge Base effort. 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: we deliver 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 I will define the term Quick Response Code, or QR Code. These codes are two dimensional barcodes, sometimes called print based hypertext links, that are designed to be decoded at a high speed. QR codes are increasingly used to identify the URL of a company’s web site so that mobile phone users can photograph the code and retrieve information about the organization. Some companies have even created billboard-sized QR codes for this purpose.

The versatility of the codes doesn’t stop there, a QR Code can also contain a phone number, an SMS message, a link to a photo, contact information or just plain alphanumeric text, and the scanning device will respond by opening up the correct application to handle the encoded data appropriately. With the technology of mobile phones constantly expanding, especially within mobile internet, QR Codes seem like the perfect solution to quickly and efficiently bring mobile phone users onto the mobile web.

QR Codes can also be used to facilitate mobile payments. Recently, Barclays Bank launched a mobile commerce QR code campaign right here in Delaware, called BarclayCard Mobile Wallet.  The program works in conjunction with a merchant’s credit card terminal,  a customer’s smartphone and the corresponding BarclayCard app.  When paying for something, the merchant prints out a special kind of QR code and hands it to the customer, who uses the BarclayCard mobile wallet application to scan the code and authorize the payment.  We went over this program in detail here a few weeks ago, when our own Steve Myers was the first to use the app at National 5&10.  Advancements in technology will lead to expansion and advancement in the uses of these codes, including new games or more advanced methods of mobile payment.

PCI Guidelines for Mobile Apps

Today the Official Merchant Services Blog will examine the PCI Security Standards Council’s most recent guidelines, and their slow crawl towards comprehensive security requirements for mobile devices.

On Thursday, the PCI Security Standards Council released a set of best practices geared toward software developers of mobile devices.  These guidelines come four months after they released some guidance about mobile payments for small businesses.

The PCI Council, based in Wakefield Massachusetts administers the Payment Card Industry data-security standard and affiliated standards for secure payments software and also PIN-based transaction devices. The guidelines were released during the Council’s annual North American meeting in Orlando, Florida on Thursday, after hinting at a possible PCI clarification in early September.  Present at the gathering were security assessors, merchants, processors and vendors, all preparing for the update of the main PCI standard next year.

The Council announced that it is starting to approve hardware for mobile payments such as card readers that plug into smart phones or tablet computers.  The Council has not delved into the approval of software for mobile payments and have they made it clear when that will happen. They have however, announced that more guidance for merchants will come next year and that they will continue to take input from the payments industry on the serious task of protecting card holder data when payments originate from mobile devices.

Correcting software vulnerabilities is the most important aim of the Council’s new guidelines, as app developers crank out new programs for processing payments on smart phones and tablets everyday.  The guidance covers everything from the payment transaction, access protection, and remote disablement of a missing device.

The last point is arguably the most important aspect of a new mobile PCI security system.  Since mobile payments are true to their name, mobile, the chance of someone running away with your credit card terminal is an increasingly possible risk.  The same applies for any tablets acting as POS systems in a store. An unlucky shopkeeper may open up in the morning only to find part of his or her POS system missing, and all cardholder data inside compromised. This is what the PCI Security Standards Council seeks to avoid.