Adopting Electronic #Payments – #ePayments

There has been more interest in companies paying their bill using virtual credit cards as a form of payment. Virtual credit cards (VCC) are a secure source of payment that is easy to create and easy to apply, and the great news is VCC will put you in a position to get a rebate, and everyone loves a rebate. Banks are in the forefront of managing these types of payments. Going to your bank is a natural first step, but there are a few things they don’t know… secrets

First!

Frist, what is a virtual credit card and why is it important? A virtual credit card is a limited time used card with a defined limit. Sometime these cards can be used for a month with a small limit, other time these cards can be used one time for a specific dollar amount. Its popularity has come about because of the internet where people were looking for secure ways to make single transactions. VCC don’t have personal information like a normal credit card so it is a very good vehicle to protect identity theft. The opportunity or trend is to take your payment file (not all) and apply that file of payments to be made through a credit card program that will leverage virtual credit cards. Also, there is the rebate factor. Meaning that each payment that gets paid by VCC will be eligible for a rebate. The vendor who is opening their credit card merchant account to receive the payment has the benefit of receiving a payment quicker where the funds are backed by the credit card company and they don’t have to exchange any bank account information with their client to make any of the transactions possible (win – win).

1 – Adoption

Adoption is the first place that banks are unaware. Typically the burden of introducing companies (Vendors) to receiving payments by way of credit card or merchant accounting is left to the client not the bank. Because of this dynamic organization that are wanting to really press a VCC program will need to hire skills they do not possess. Skill like tele-prospecting, sales, and closing transactions. Normally these skill are not part of finance departments’ as much as sales departments. There are synergies with the departments, meaning sales can help recruit, but because of the ongoing nature of vendor VCC adoption finance and accounting will need to look for alternatives.

2 – Options

Another thing your banks doesn’t understand is the vendor needs options. Options like paper checks and ACH are needed to help the recruitment process for VCC. They don’t seem related and they even seem like they are competitors, but they all work together to achieve the same goal. Here are a few facts:

  1. Vendors don’t like paper checks either – but don’t know any other option
  2. ACH are difficult to administer by both the vendor and client. In a recent survey by AMEX they found out that:
  3. 20% of Vendors Addresses change each year
  4. 10% of vendors change banking relationship each year

3 – Don’t Forget the Invoice

The third and final thing banks don’t know about your VCC program is that the invoice make all of the security difference. Banks are great with helping you manage your money, but they don’t do much when it comes to managing the expense. The expense, however, starts with the invoice (or PO) and ends with that expense being a payment.

Most businesses have check signers. The role of the checks signer is to make sure the expense and the payment match. It is an extremely important step that can’t be skipped, so when approached with separating the expense (contract or PO) to the payment, finance and accounting professional are forced to say “no”.

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