websites Archives - Payment Processing News
September 30th, 2014 by Elma Jane

Email remains king in the types of digital marketing businesses. Fifty four percent of businesses view email as the most effective form of Internet marketing. However, a number of other types of digital marketing tactics aren’t far behind. More than 40 percent of the businesses surveyed believe optimized websites and blogs, search engine optimization (SEO) and social media are among the most successful online marketing tactics. Mobile marketing and e-commerce marketing are viewed as the least effective forms.

Contributing to email marketing’s success is the ease in which it is conducted. Eleven percent of the businesses surveyed thought email was one of the most difficult types of digital marketing to execute. Social media tops the list, with nearly 50 percent of businesses saying it was the hardest to accomplish.Content marketing and SEO were among the other toughest tactics to execute. Overall, the vast majority of businesses using some form of digital marketing report seeing positive results from it.

Businesses have a wide range of motives for using Internet marketing. Wanting to increase customer engagement, sales revenue, leads for their sales teams and brand awareness were the most important reasons. Reducing marketing and customer service costs are surprisingly least important. Majority of the businesses believe their digital marketing efforts are only getting better. In order to achieve all of their goals, there are a number of challenges businesses are facing:

The most challenging obstacle to success is clearly the lack of an effective digital marketing strategy.

Followed by an inadequate budget to fund programs.

Other challenges business must overcome to achieve better digital marketing results include a lack of training and expertise.

Inability to prove a return on investment and increasing competition.

 

 

Posted in Best Practices for Merchants, e-commerce & m-commerce Tagged with: , , , , , , , , , , ,

September 12th, 2014 by Elma Jane

If you needed a loan, would you shop around first or go with the first lender you found? Small business owners are more likely to do the latter. For small business owners, personal interaction is key, and with many lenders focusing strictly on online marketing methods to reach new customers, these findings may come as a surprise.

While there is a plethora of alternative online lending options for small businesses, 44% of all loan applications are completed in person, even though business owners of all ages surveyed reported using an online process for researching and initiating a loan application, only younger business owners were very open to using it to complete the process.

User-friendly websites do help aid in conversion, but they don’t influence lender choice. Small business owners are more likely to use the first lender they meet, proof that even in an age of technology and advancements in online lending, human interaction is still one of the most important parts of the loan process, this may be due to the challenges small businesses face during the loan process as restrictions have increased on traditional loans.

First thing business owner do is ask rate…When it is more important to get the terms you want. If a lender term wants a higher rate, but let you pay it off on a longer term you may find more is less!

Despite great interest in strictly online alternative lending, many business owners still desire personal interactions with financial providers that will take the time to discuss business challenges and solutions. National Transaction standout over competitors because of its human/personal interactions.

 

Posted in Small Business Improvement Tagged with: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

August 27th, 2014 by Elma Jane

Backoff malware that has attacked point of sale systems at hundreds of businesses may accelerate adoption of EMV chip and PIN cards and two-factor authentication as merchants look for ways to soften the next attack. Chip and PIN are a big thing, because it greatly diminishes the value of the information that can be trapped by this malware, said Trustwave, a security company that estimates about 600 businesses have been victims of the new malware. The malware uses infected websites to infiltrate the computing devices that host point of sale systems or are used to make payments, such as PCs, tablets and smartphones. Merchants can install software that monitors their payments systems for intrusions, but the thing is you can’t just have anti-virus programs and think you are safe. Credit card data is particularly vulnerable because the malware can steal data directly from the magnetic stripe or keystrokes used to make card payments.

The point of sale system is low-hanging fruit because a lot of businesses don’t own their own POS system. They rent them, or a small business may hire a third party to implement their own point of sale system. The Payment Card Industry Security Standards Council issued new guidance this month to address security for outsourced digital payments. EMV-chip cards, which are designed to deter counterfeiting, would gut the value of any stolen data. With this magnetic stripe data, the crooks can clone the card and sell it on the black market. With chip and PIN, the data changes for each transaction, so each transaction is unique. Even if the malware grabs the data, there not a lot the crooks can do with it. The EMV transition in the U.S. has recently accelerated, driven in part by recent highprofile data breaches. Even with that momentum, the U.S. may still take longer than the card networks’ October 2015 deadline to fully shift to chip-card acceptance.

EMV does not by itself mitigate the threat of breaches. Two-factor authentication, or the use of a second channel or computing device to authorize a transaction, will likely share in the boost in investment stemming from data security concerns. The continued compromise of point of sale merchants through a variety of vectors, including malware such as Backoff, will motivate the implementation among merchants of stronger authentication to prevent unauthorized access to card data.

Backoff has garnered a lot of attention, including a warning from the U.S. government, but it’s not the only malware targeting payment card data. It is not the types of threats which are new, but rather the frequency with which they are occurring which has put merchants on their heels. There is also an acute need to educate small merchants on both the threats and respective mitigation techniques.. The heightened alert over data vulnerability should boost the card networks’ plans to replace account numbers with substitute tokens to protect digital payments. Tokens would not necessarily stop crooks from infiltrating point of sale systems, but like EMV technology, they would limit the value of the stolen data. There are two sides to the equation, the issuers and the merchants. To the extent we see both sides adopt tokenization, you will see fewer breaches and they will be less severe because the crooks will be getting a token instead of card data.

Posted in Best Practices for Merchants, Credit Card Security, Payment Card Industry PCI Security, Point of Sale Tagged with: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

June 10th, 2014 by Elma Jane

Local businesses with brick-and-mortar stores have not been early adopters of ecommerce. But, with the proliferation of mobile devices and with changes in how consumers research and buy products, most local businesses now have websites, many of them mobile optimized. Smart brick-and-mortar retailers invest in local search engine optimization to ensure that their stores are found when a local shopper searches on products that they sell. More aggressive retailers also invest in pay-per-click advertising on Google to ensure that their store names, phone numbers, and addresses are visible to a local shopper that is researching on a smartphone. Google is by far the primary search engine used by mobile shoppers. Google favors mobile friendly online stores and rewards mobile sites with high search rankings. The next logical step for local retailers is investing in on online store.

There are several reasons:

1. Having an online store will help local retailers optimize Google rankings for specific products and brands.

2.  Being able to show that an item is in stock may eliminate competitive shopping.

3. Eventually local retailers could sell products to consumers outside the retailers’ immediate area, and thus expand their business.

Many local businesses are hesitant to open an online store. Here is why:

1. Local businesses are typically unfamiliar with running an ecommerce business.

2. Have little ability to ship or fulfill online orders.

3.  Cannot accommodate sales tax collection outside their local area.

4. Avoid the investment required.

To be sure, adding an online store is not for every local business. But, if a local retailer offers a unique set of products, she may want to evaluate the concept.

 

 

Posted in Best Practices for Merchants, e-commerce & m-commerce Tagged with: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

October 22nd, 2013 by Elma Jane

The best place to start understanding your customer is to put yourself into every step of a buying cycle and analyze what influences various purchase decisions.

Who is your customer?

Basic demographics and usually includes the following: 

Age range                                                                                                                                            Education level                                                                                                                                        Gender                                                                                                                                                   Income level                                                                                                                                            Location                                                                                                                                                 Marital status                                                                                                                                          Profession

Many of these basic demographics can be inferred from your interactions with customers. In many cases, you can simply ask them.

Beyond the basics, you will also benefit from more personal data, such as the following:

Interests                                                                                                                                                 Activities                                                                                                                                                 Political affiliation

That data is harder to access, but there are databases that will allow you to target individuals based on those criteria. Facebook’s ad platform provides an incredible amount of targeting data. You can infer your customer profiles by the types of results you get by running ads aimed at specific target markets. That will help identify the interests of your customers.

What? consider what consumers need to know about a product to make a purchase.

Are there ongoing costs?                                                                                                                                Does it need anything else to make it work?                                                                                      How big is it?                                                                                                                                           How does it function?                                                                                                                               How long will it last?                                                                                                                                How much does it cost?                                                                                                                           Is there a warranty?                                                                                                                                 What are its specs?                                                                                                                                 What does it look like?                                                                                                                             What options are there?                                                                                                                           What sizes and colors are available?

To find those details, shoppers will seek different sources: articles, websites, blogs, and actually looking at products and trying them on. Make sure you understand the “what” questions for your products. Then, provide answers to those questions.

Why? The “why” questions are important. Do you know why your customers buy your products?

It could be for the following reasons.

Address an immediate need or desire.                                                                                                        Loyal to a particular brand or store.                                                                                                                Need flexibility to return products.                                                                                                            Need product occasionally or on a regular schedule.                                                                                  Purchase because product is cool or trendy.                                                                                                Seek bargains.                                                                                                                                              Seek high-quality products                                                                                                                        Seek little or no shipping or sales tax.                                                                                                    Seek the lowest price possible.                                                                                                                Shop around every time they buy.

Answers will surely vary. Consider also, what motivates your customers to purchase the products you sell and also why they purchase them from your company versus your competitor. This will help you better refine your value proposition of why shoppers choose your company.

How? This area is the most significant change in a consumer’s shopping cycle. As recently as 15 years ago, most product research was done in stores or catalogs or magazines. Today, product research is done in many ways. In the living room, in the boardroom, at the hospital, you name it. Most shoppers start their search at Amazon.com or on Google by searching on a product.

Many searches start with an opportunistic email promoting a product. From there, we may find the shopper looking at the item on that store’s website.

Consumers likely check product reviews, from other consumers. They may read professional reviews. Browse the Internet on SmartPhone.

The point is to understand your customer’s research process. It will vary widely. But in many cases it’s something like this.

An event triggers an interest in a product.                                                                                                       Check other brands or alternative products.                                                                                                     Conduct research by looking at a product’s pictures, reading descriptions.                                               Evaluate the product’s real value, and eventually make a purchase decision.                                             Narrow your selection and shop for price.                                                                                                   Seek out reviews or ask friends.

Where? That leads us to the where customers are researching. They could be reading relevant blogs, going to brick and mortar stores, checking comparison shopping engines, and reading trade publication articles. They may be looking at Pinterest boards, Facebook posts, and checking with their network of friends on Twitter.

They will be using tablets (increasingly the shopper’s preference), smartphones, laptops, desktops, Xboxes, and store visits.

Can an ecommerce merchant be in all of these places with your message? Likely no. But you can identify where your customers are looking for information as they move through their cycle and try to make sure you are seen. You can also ensure that your messaging and content are mobile friendly.

To compete in the future, your store needs to provide input and information to support all those steps. If you lack reviews, your customers will seek them out elsewhere.

Most ecommerce merchants can describe their customers in a general way. They likely know basic demographics –  age range, gender, income level. But, do they understand the “why, where, when, and how”  their customers make their purchases? These basic tenants of marketing are more important than ever.

The buying process has never been more complex. Consumers have hundred of places online to purchase products that meet their needs. They may shop at home, at work, in the grocery store. They may be using an Android phone, an iPhone, or an Xbox.

Posted in e-commerce & m-commerce, Electronic Payments, Internet Payment Gateway, Mobile Point of Sale, Point of Sale, Smartphone Tagged with: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,