Don't take any lessons from big companies - they know very little, except how to do what they've always done.
How did the big Companies get to be big.. if they did not know what they were doing?.... Just luck?
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Don't take any lessons from big companies - they know very little, except how to do what they've always done.
How did the big Companies get to be big.. if they did not know what they were doing?.... Just luck?
How did the big Companies get to be big.. if they did not know what they were doing?.... Just luck?
And google checkout, as viable alternatives go a checkout service offered by the internets biggest and most likeable company is a pretty good one. Also cheaper.
If they had a real rival, with lower charges, better support, an easy set up and a similar customer base then I would quickly move to them. AFAIK no such viable rival exists.
Indubitably.In the grand scheme of things, Paypal has been a huge success.
I am fully aware of what I am doing and I have no reason to bury my head in the sand. I use Paypal and I am happy to accept their charges - it works for me. Why would I change?You seem to bury your head in the sand at this point - taking CC payments the 'old fashioned way', using a PSP and merchant account, is cheaper, more reliable, and more widely used.
Yes, I use Paypal. The FSA only looks after the UK. I buy from vendors all over the World. That's where Paypal beats everyone else it is accepted in more countries than any other form of payment.Would you use a bank that wasn't regulated by the FSA?
Cheaper? How so? Unless they've reduced their prices recently they are eerily identical to Paypal's since their price rise a few months ago, and from a programming point of view dealing with their API is a coder's nightmare compared with dealing with Paypal's API.
There was a thread here about this very subject when Google raised their prices to be equal to Paypal's and the consensus was that by throwing away the only advantage they previously had over Paypal (price) while being harder to code against and harder to deal with the changes amounted to Google Checkout throwing in the towel. But maybe they reduced their prices again? I missed that if so.
Yes, the concensus on another specialist forum that I frequent is that Google Checkout have more or less thrown in the towel.
Just stumbled upon this thread - its been a year, very interested to see if dropping paypal effected sales in anyway?
Background. We run a bunch of online shops. Two years ago we started accepting PayPal in addition to our main card payments (which are SagePay + merchant account). We thought it would be nice to offer an extra option for those who like to use PayPal, and that it would increase conversion rate.
Over the past 12 months, 12% of all of our turnover has been processed though PayPal, with the rest through our merchant account.
I've taken the decision to no longer offer PayPal as a payment option from the 5th Jan, for the following reasons:
1. Fees. Our average fee paid to PayPal over 12 months is 4.4%. This is ridiculously high compared to the sub 2% we pay for our CC processing (and that's SagePay + merchant account fees combined).
2. Chargebacks. It seems that a lot of PayPal users use chargebacks as a routine mechanism for saving some cash. Over the past 12 months, we've had 2 CC chargebacks (88% of our turnover, remember) and 9 PayPal chargebacks (12% of our turnover). The figures are not huge, but they are very annoying.
3. Rolling reserve. We haven't had this imposed yet for some reason, but as far as I can gather it's being rolled out to all accounts, so it's coming soon.
4. Account management. What kind of payment gateway requires you to log in every day to move money out?
Will we see a drop in conversion rate? I don't know. I'll be keeping a close eye on it.
PayPal was ground-breaking, and is a fantastic p2p payment mechanism. But as a business solution is it truly dire.
I see the PayPal bashers are still at it.
PayPal is better than most credit card companies and is certainly more upfront and honest than the land banks. They also work to tougher regulations than most and like for like are cheaper than banks and CC companies.
.
That's simply not true.
Actually, when we did the comparisons, they ended up cheaper than credit card companies and landbanks for CC charges. This is for online transactions not telephone or manual transactions but, even here their price was comparable.
You have to bear in mind that unless you are a big company and can force the banks to reduce their rates, then you will be stung a fairly hefty percentage for transactions.
Recently we even did comparison against Secpay/Paypoint and PayPal were cheaper.
Those of us who have processed large volumes of transactions both ways know that this is not the case.
How many transactions a month do you process?
and how many transactions a month is the company you just set up processing.
and please confirm to me that these figures you are talking about are online transactions as opposed to PDQ transactions.
I would be interested to know what people on UKBF are paying for their transactions. I would hazard the average to be higher than the ones you give. Certainly the experience I have is that the figures are more in the region of 2.4 2.75% for small businesses and its no an issue of laziness but the ability to dictate terms.
If I was transacting 1500-2000 transactions a month then I am sure I would be able to get lower rates with anyone especially if they were after my business. I would even expect the lower rates with PayPal... they do have published rates that are much cheaper depending on values of transactions monthly.