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Alternative payment options ease online
shoppers’ concerns
Exclusive web-only article for July 2008
By M.V. Greene
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Sponsored by
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As much as Internet users love the
convenience and ease of shopping online, many
get a case of heartburn at checkout over
security and privacy.
A survey done earlier this year by the Pew
Internet & American Life Project reports that
approximately 75 percent of online shoppers do
not like sending personal or credit card
information over the Internet. Arash Fasihi, CEO
of Vancouver, B.C.-based e-tailer Cymax Stores,
understands the discomfort.
“People want to see security,” he says.
Cymax operates more than 100 online specialty
stores selling furniture and other big-ticket
goods. With no bricks-and-mortar stores to fall
back on, Fasihi cannot afford to have potential
buyers get skittish before closing the sale.
Cymax, operating under the CymaxStores.com
domain since 2004, sells big-box items ranging
from bedroom sets and office furniture to living
rooms and consumer electronics. It also sells
under domains that include MoreMattresses.com,
MoreChinaCabinets.com, Writingdeskselect.com and
SleepSofaSelect.com.
Buying bunk beds, dressers, computer armoires
and media storage online requires a greater leap
of faith for shoppers than purchasing T-shirts,
Fasihi says, but consumers will give it a try if
they feel the buying environment is secure.
“First-time shoppers may buy a small item like a
nightstand to get a feeling of buying online,
and, if that goes through well, they will come
back and buy larger items,” he says. “We have
customers who pretty much furnish their entire
homes with products they buy from us.”
Online buyers more than doubled
The Pew survey notes that the number of
Americans making purchases online has more than
doubled, from 22 percent in June 2000 to 49
percent in September 2007, and if merchants can
solve online shoppers’ concerns about the
security of their personal information “the pool
of online shoppers would be greater.”
To help assuage such concerns, CymaxStores.com
has added a payment option that leverages the
manner in which consumers use online banking to
pay bills. It has introduced its customers to an
online banking-based service called eBillme,
which is operated by Ottawa-based MODASolutions.
With eBillme, online shoppers pay for their
goods through their established banking
relationships, never needing to forward credit
card information to the retailer.
“They like it because it’s like paying bills
online,” Fasihi says. “They’re used to that
mentality of paying their bills through their
banking accounts.”
Setting up the eBillme merchants’ processing
system does not require additional work on the
part of users’ banks, says MODASolutions
president and CEO Marwan Forzley. His company
promotes the service as “the only payment option
on the retailer’s checkout” not requiring the
release of financial information, which
encourages shoppers to complete the
transactions, he says.
At checkout, consumers provide a name and e-mail
address and receive an electronic bill. They pay
the invoice by logging onto their online banking
site without providing any additional personal
information, Forzley says. The payment
transaction is routed electronically from the
customer’s bank to the merchant’s bank. Once the
funds are received, the retailer then releases
and ships the merchandise, usually within three
days. Merchants pay a charge of 1 percent per
transaction to use the service.
Fasihi says he appreciates the service because
it eliminates the need for his company to have
access to customers’ financial and personal
information. “We want to prevent any of [that
data from] being in our system,” he says. “It is
unnecessary information and we don’t need it.”
Good funds for the retailer
Customers also have a level of trust that their
transaction is being routed through their banks,
rather than a credit card company, Forzley says.
“It makes it simpler for the consumer: You’re
paying for infrastructure that you trust and
know how to use,” he says. The system also
“makes it simpler for the merchant. There are
good funds that they are receiving: there are no
chargebacks, no fraud with the transaction.”
Once a customer sets up eBillme service under
the CymaxStores.com banner, she can use it on
any of the company’s affiliated sites. Fasihi
says the service also attracts users who simply
prefer cash transactions.
Fasihi finds the payment option valuable in
reaching impulse shoppers. With some traditional
payment services, consumers will have to open an
account, fund it and often wait a week to have
it verified before use, blunting any
quick-buying decision the consumer might make.
The eBillme service also includes a
buyer-protection program that is provided free
to shoppers and retailers. The plan includes
return and price guarantees, as well as
in-transit and fraud protection. (A big feature
for merchants is the fact that eBillme handles
the return.)
Forzley likens the buyer protection plan to a
“debit-like transaction with the benefits of a
platinum credit card.
“If you buy jeans and they don’t fit, you can
return them to eBillme,” he says. “If they are
damaged or lost in transit, it is part of the
eBillme product.” |
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