Sunday, February 12, 2012
Dirty Little Secret Of Equipment Leasing
Labels:
Equipment Leasing
Batching Daily Is Important!
Batching, closing, or
settlement for our discussion here is the same thing: the process of
transferring funds from sales and credits between Acquirers and Issuers,
including the final debiting of a cardholder’s account and crediting a seller’s
account.
Why is this important?
First per the terms and condition every merchant signs, and is required
by Visa, MasterCard, Discover, and American Express you agree to settle
transactions within 24 hours. The second
reason a business should close every day, should there be transactions; it
starts the funding process to the business bank account. If a transaction is over 24 hours and is not
settled, the transaction can down grade to a higher cost of interchange category. It can also increase you
chance of a charge back. Last and
perhaps the most important, with the debit cards you are most likely running,
if you delay your settlement, it can throw the bank account in a negative for
those individuals that may not keep good track of their prior purchases. For example let’s say on a Monday Bob
purchases something at your business with his debit card. When the transaction is approved you are
issued an authorization.
This “earmarks” the amount of purchase on Bob’s bank account and holds
this amount waiting for your settlement.
If you do not settle the transaction after around two to three days the
hold drops off. Later you settle the
transaction the funds are then taken from Bob’s account. Perhaps Bob forgot about the purchase he made
at your store on Monday and thought he had more funds but because of your delay
it throws his account in the negative.
For your sake and your customers’ . . . settle
daily.
Monday, January 16, 2012
Month Minimum Processing Fee
Not
all monthly minimum processing fees is the same from one company
to another. The standard in the industry is $25.00. What is
not standard is how they are calculated. This fee is imposed if your
credit card charges (discount rates) do not add up to
monthly minimum amount. For example if the monthly minimum
is set at $25 a month and the discount fees came to a total of $20, the company
will add $5.00 to make up the minimum. Again the way this
is calculated and what fees are applied to the minimum is not
the same from one company to another. Typically when
a merchant processes $1250 in credit card volume at an
overall effective rate of 2%, they will meet the $25 monthly
minimum processing fee. See below a copy of a statement where this
business processed over $10,000 and still there was charge for minimum
processing fee of over $24. When shopping and comparing services, don’t
just asked about one rate, peel back the onion, look at the total cost and all
the fees.
If you have any question about this,
please feel free to contact us at
info@tampabaymerchantservices.com or call 727-916-7294
Labels:
Monthly Minimum Processing Fee
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
PREVENT CREDIT CARD FRAUD AND PROTECT YOUR BUSINESS
Fighting fraud is all of our responsibility and a
little diligence on your part could save your business hundreds or thousands of
dollars. Don't be shy about contacting a Risk Representative at Capital
Bankcard if you are unsure about an order or transaction. We can help you
determine if the transaction is legitimate and give you guidance on steps you
can take if you are suspicious.
If you believe a card is stolen, fraudulent or
otherwise suspicious, you should train your staff on how to make a Code 10
authorization request. The Code 10 authorization request alerts the card issuer
to the suspicious activity-without alerting the customer. During a Code 10
call, you will speak to the card issuer's special operator, who will provide
instructions on any necessary action. This type of authorization request is the
most likely to result in a call to law enforcement.
Code 10 steps
Keep the card in hand to quickly respond to
questions. Call 1-800-228-1122 and say "I have a Code 10 Authorization
Request." When connected to the special operator, answer all questions
calmly and in a normal tone of voice. Follow all operator instructions.
If the operator asks you to retain the card,
comply with this request only if it is safe to do so.
If you are keying transactions or receiving them
off the internet, you are at even more risk for fraud. Below are some red flags
to watch out for in these environments.
Orders that require you to ship product outside
of the United States. There are obviously very legitimate orders from overseas
but, if your business does not normally receive such orders, or receives any
which seem unusual, you should give them extra scrutiny.
Transactions requiring you to "prepay"
the shipping costs via Western Union to a specific shipping company being used
at your customer's request. Any suspicious sounding shipping arrangements are a
good sign of potential fraud.
Unusually large orders or those containing
multiple quantities of the same item. You know your business better than
anyone. If a large order seems particularly unusual in any way, trust your
instincts and follow-up on it. Thieves know a stolen card number won't last
long so they typically place large orders while they can. They are also always
looking to maximize their resale value.
Orders from generic e-mail addresses (ie. john@yahoo.com)
or calls using TDD (telecommunications device for deaf) to place orders. Many
of these orders are legitimate, but they are sometimes indications of a
fraudster looking to remain anonymous.
"Rush" or "overnight"
shipping requests. Crooks want your goods as soon as possible for the quickest
possible resale. The last thing they care about is extra delivery charges.
Transactions with similar account numbers,
multiple orders from one account or multiple orders to one address from
multiple cards. These are all highly suspicious and are worth your attention.
We want to ensure that you and your associates
are able to spot potential fraud and take action quickly in order to prevent
fraud and protect your business, but only when it is safe to do so.
Hopefully these suggestions will help you. If you have any question about this, please feel free to
contact us at info@tampabaymerchantservices.com or call 727-916-7294
Labels:
PREVENT CREDIT CARD FRAUD
Sunday, December 4, 2011
Scam Targeting Businesses Accepting Credit Cards
A
"customer" enters a business and makes a purchase using a credit
card. The proprietor attempts to process the transaction, but every
authorization attempt is declined. The cardholder tells the merchant he will
call the card-issuer via his cell phone. The individual allegedly makes the
call to his bank, but in reality dials the number of an accomplice. The
cardholder hands the phone over to the merchant so the person on the other end
can provide a false authorization number. The merchant then unknowingly forces
the sale through the terminal, using the illicit code. Due to an invalid
authorization being used such a transaction will almost certainly be disputed,
causing the merchant to take a total loss. Merchants should only input codes
obtained directly from the voice authorization center
Another scam similar to the above is the "customer",
presents a Visa Gift Card and after it is declined; the phone call to the accomplice which
results in a credit in the amount of the sale going back on the Visa Gift Card,
while the merchant thinks it is authoring the sale.
If you have any question about this, please feel free to
contact us at info@tampabaymerchantservices.com
or call 727-916-7294
http://www.tampabaymerchantservices.com
Labels:
Credit Card Scam
Wednesday, October 5, 2011
How Does Banks Charging For Checking Accounts Relates To A Business Accepting Credit Cards?
Every
day now we hear about another big bank raising checking account fees. This is because of the Durbin Amendment has
capped the fees on debit cards thru interchange assessments. This does not
mean that you as small merchant will benefit.
If you
have a tier rate structure, as most businesses do, you will not see a
rate reduction. Talk to us so we can review your account and be sure you will
see the savings you deserve
Contact
us at info@tampabaymerchantservices.com or call 727-916-7294
Labels:
Durbin Amendment,
Interchange
Friday, September 9, 2011
Cost To Accept Debit Cards Will Go Down - Will You Benefit?
In case you have not kept up with the Durbin Amendment to the Dodd-Frank Reform and Consumer Protection Act, it will lower the cost to accept credit cards. As of this writing this new reform will take effect in October 2011. This legislation gives the Federal Reserve the power to cap the interchange fees each time a debit card is used. Does this automatically mean that you as small merchant will benefit? The answer is most likely no. If you have a tier rate structure, as most businesses do, you will not see a rate reduction.
We offer a rate structure known as interchange plus pricing. Interchange is the cost from the card associations. Now with interchange going down for debit cards as noted above you will automatically have your costs lowered. Under the tier rate structure your company, also know as the "acquirer" is not covered in this legislation. Don't expect them to pass on these savings to you, the business. It will be a big raise for them.
Contact us today so you can benefit and lower your cost of accepting credit cards
info@tampabaymerchantservices.com or call 727-916-7294
http://www.tampabaymerchantservices.com
info@tampabaymerchantservices.com or call 727-916-7294
http://www.tampabaymerchantservices.com
Labels:
Durbin Amendment
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