How do you reduce your credit card processing fees?
It’s the age-old question.
How do you pay the lowest rate possible?
Can you get away with processing for free? What’s the deal with interchange levels? And, what the heck is a discount rate?
Suffice it to say credit card processing is a strange,
multi-faceted beast. There are lots of moving parts, and things going
on that even your processing statement, which is confusing enough in itself,
doesn’t detail for you.
Talking about it all would take me the length of a tome, and
nobody wants that, so I’m just going to cover what you pay today. Even what you pay has a few different levels
to it – it’s not just a single rate
that you sometimes hear about in advertisements on the web. Without further ado, let’s move to the first
item to look at to reduce what you pay out.
Wait too long, pay the price
Good things don’t necessarily come to those who wait – it’s
best to strike while the iron’s hot, in my opinion. While this is an adage I live by, it can very
well be applied to credit card processing too.
If you’ve authorized a charge on a credit card and wait more than 48
hours to charge that credit card, you’ll be charged a “standard” processing
rate – and, that can be as high as 2.95%, a fair bit higher than what you’ll
usually pay. (And, we’re just talking
about the set interchange cost, not the processor’s markup!)
In order to alleviate those sorts of charges, simply make
sure you’re settling authorized charges at the appropriate times, taking care
not to wait too long. If you use a
virtual gateway, you can usually set it to automatically batch out at certain
times (or trigger batching out for certain transactions, like pre-auths). If it seems feasible for your business, it
might make sense to nix pre-authorizations altogether and simply charge credit
cards at the invoice level. In any case,
strike while the iron’s hot and you’ll come out on top in this case.
Save some money by saving time
Lots of businesses, especially B2B wholesale companies, are extremely
advanced in almost every sense, except when it comes to payment processing;
they’ll use systems that are quite disconnected, take too much time to use
properly, and, for all their inefficiency end up costing businesses more. This is due in part to the processing
industry, what with most payment processors’ tendencies to rope businesses into
contracts, lie, be ambiguous in their language, and other nasty habits – most
business owners are apprehensive about doing anything differently when they’ve
found a processor that’s at least somewhat
fair. It’s not uncommon to see a
manufacturing company use the most high-tech equipment to fabricate their
products, yet use a standalone terminal (technology that dates to the 1970s)
for credit cards in conjunction with their top-notch accounting programs! It’s unfortunate.
So, is it really possible to get two good things in one
package pertaining to payment processing?
Actually, yes. Using a credit
card processing plugin for your accounting system of choice can effectively
reduce your processing fees automatically while making your workload a lot lighter. Plugins like this work with programs from QuickBooks (as an alternative to Intuit merchant services) all the way to Sage 500 (as an alternative to Sage Payment Solutions). Here’s what happens:
- Rather than using a credit card terminal, you input your customers’ credit card data directly into your accounting system, which you would have had to do at the end of the day anyway.
- The plugin automatically transmits extra information like a PO number, invoice number, ZIP code, freight amount, and other information you enter anyway to the credit card-issuing banks.
- The banks see this extra information and qualify the transactions at higher security levels, since the extra information makes those transactions harder to duplicate or make fraudulent.
- The higher security gives you a lower interchange cost (set cost) for the credit cards entered that way – especially for business-type cards and GSA cards.
And, that doesn’t even touch on the time savings. But, imagine how much time you might save not
having to run all around your office to complete one credit card order, then
stay a half hour (or a whole hour) after work re-entering credit card data to
mark your invoices as paid. And balance
your GL. It’s a lot of work you don’t
really have to do!
Birds of a feather flock together
Ever had the feeling you just didn’t belong? It happens most often in social situations, I’m
sure, but your processor can pull a fast one on you and take you on a bad
spending trip – all because you operate in a “high risk” industry, or some
other industry they don’t particularly like.
Of course, in an effort to earn your business, they may not always tell
you this, but they’ll sure make you pay anyway.
So, what do you do when you’re being silently shunned?
First, take a good look at your processing statement and
determine if your overall costs seem fair (and, they will vary considerably
depending on the type of business you’re in).
If they don’t, you might consider seeking out a processor that caters to
your exact business. Often, credit card
processors will cater to specific industries, like adult novelty shops or firearms dealers, by establishing relationships with
other entities (offshore or local banks) that will allow them to process
transactions that other processing networks might label high-risk. Prices will be lower with a
high-risk-specific processor, for example, than with a run-of-the-mill company
because they don’t have to worry about their backing network kicking merchants
away, and for that reason the processor doesn’t have to worry about recouping
all sorts of administrative costs by charging you. Everyone wins.
Yours,
Jeremy
PS - I'm sorry; you still can't get away with processing for free. When I figure that one out, you'll be the first to know, though ;)
Jeremy
PS - I'm sorry; you still can't get away with processing for free. When I figure that one out, you'll be the first to know, though ;)
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