I am sure some of you had this system down pat within 10 minutes, understand it intuitively and wonder what all the fuss is about and why I am devoting blog space to credit card processing. Some others of you will worship the ground I walk on after this little series. I will update credit card processing on the blog as I learn more, but I think I now have the basics down.
I have posted the separate blog entries at the same time so that you don’t have to wait for the information. This first part will introduce you to all of the players involved in processing a credit card transaction. The second part will cover fees, and the third part will cover the questions we have learned to ask when shopping for credit card processing, The PayPal system, and anything else that might be helpful.
Processing a credit card transaction involves five to six different entities:
1. The reseller
2. The gateway
3. The processor, and possibly a separate billing company
4. The credit card companies
5. Your bank
I will now attempt to explain each of these entities, in order of their importance, not as listed above.
The Processor
This is where it’s at. This is the company that receives your credit card transaction request from the gateway and then passes the transaction along to the Credit Card Interchange (a network of financial entities that communicate to manage the processing, clearing, and settlement of credit card transactions) for approval and payment, receives the approval, and then transmits approval information back through the gateway to your terminal or computer. The part up through receiving all approvals takes about three to six seconds. Getting it into your bank account takes from 48 hours to 14 days, depending on the processor. Go figure.
The Gateway
Just as you sign up with AOL or Comcast or some other company to access the Internet, so you sign up with a gateway company such as AuthorizeNet or LinkPoint to access the credit card processing “Internet”. These companies take your transaction information and forward it to the nether regions for processing. They do not process anything or take a fee per transaction; they just receive your transaction information and pass it along to your processing company.
The gateway company also sends confirmation emails to the customer (you can customize them) and emails confirming the transaction to the merchant. Your shopping cart is hooked up to the gateway so that when a customer enters financial information on your website, it is automatically sent to the gateway and on to the processor, the merchant receives an email notice of the transaction from the gateway, and the customer receives a customized email confirmation.
There are several gateway companies and some processing companies have their own gateways. It seems that most resellers utilize AuthorizeNet. If you know of any others, please add a comment to share your information with others.
Because of our low volume, when selling retail we use a manual credit card imprinter and then enter the transactions on the computer later. To enter the transaction, we go directly to the gateway (AuthorizeNet), sign in and then enter the information directly to AuthorizeNet’s system via Virtual Terminal on their website. The transaction then goes into the system and to our processor, Nova, for the actual processing. More information regarding software and entering transactions is below in the Reseller section.
The Reseller
This is the company that packages credit card processing and gateway services and sells you those along with all of the other retail kitsch that comes with processing credit cards.
Instead of having to look for a separate gateway and processor on your own, the reseller does that for you. Most resellers represent a certain gateway/processor combo. The reseller takes your information, opens accounts with the gateway and processing companies on your behalf, sells you software you most likely don’t need, sells or leases you machines of various kinds, supplies those little Visa/Mastercard signs and stickers, supplies credit slips and other supplies, and handles your questions, problems and complaints. As far as I can tell, the reseller usually only represents one gateway/processor company combination.
It is important to note that the reseller usually does not set the fees for credit card processing, nor does it actually collect them. Resellers typically have deals with the processors and they can offer special fees or deals to you, the merchant, based on these underlying relationships. The reseller makes its money on things like processing machine sales and leasing, software for entering the transactions, monthly fees for software maintenance and upgrades, shopping cart services, and miscellaneous other fees and services.
A word about software. If you enter your transactions manually online, I am going to discourage buying software to enter your transactions from your reseller. Why? Because it’s expensive and unnecessary in most cases. The software a reseller sells does exactly the same thing that AuthorizeNet’s Virtual Terminal does--sends the information into the gateway--and Virtual Terminal is a free, web-based application (see previous information). Resellers have quoted us $149 to $230 for the software and most want a monthly “maintenance” fee of $8 to $20. Once your account is set up through AuthorizeNet (you can create an account directly with them or through a reseller), you should be able to access Virtual Terminal and use it. I don’t know if other gateways have similar systems available.
Merchant Express and Costco are the two resellers with which we have experience. Resellers are all over the web. This is a commission-driven business, so beware of the person on the other end of the phone. You will most likely end up with someone who resembles the stereotype of the used car salesman. Many banks are now contracting with resellers and their associated gateway/processor. That way, they can still offer credit card processing to their business customers without having to maintain their own complex, expensive processing/gatway apparatus.
Purchasing Services Separately
We just discovered that you can put together your own package of gateway and processor, if you dare. I was recently able to go directly to AuthorizeNet, set up a new account and then because of our low volume, get a monthly fee quote directly from AuthorizeNet that was $5 per month lower than what the reseller was quoting. I then had to get a couple of codes and numbers from the processor and enter them into my account information on the AuthorizeNet website to allow the processor and AuthorizeNet to talk to each other, and it was relatively easy to do. I probably won’t be purchasing services separately anytime soon, but I mention it for those of you who might want to try to do it.
Now that I have succeeded in giving you a mother of a headache, I will end with a quick summary of what actually happens when you swipe a card or enter a transaction on your computer:
1. Card is swiped and information is transferred to the gateway company. Alternatively, information is entered directly into the gateway.
2. Transaction information is sent to the processor.
3. The processor sends the information on to the Credit Card Interchange.
4. The approval/rejection information goes back to the processor.
5. The information then goes from the processor back to the gateway.
6. Acceptance/rejection information is transmitted from the gateway to the merchant.
The above all happens in about 3 seconds.
7. After about 48 hours to 14 days, money is deposited into the merchant’s bank account.
For a graphic representation, here is a website that you might find helpful:
3 comments:
Your right Gretchen, I have a headache! But this is so timely and important that I am going to ploy on and learn more. Thanks for sharing.
Cathy
www.cathyswraps.com
ps. I hope to add a shopping cart soon, when I finish reading what Gretchen has to teach me.
Good words.
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