Fortis is a Sage Recommended Solution

The Fortis Platform is a Sage Recommended Solution that seamlessly integrates with Sage enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems and products.  This makes it easier than ever for businesses to accept payments. As the leader in embedded payments, and a Sage tech partner plus, we are dedicated to elevating Sage solutions and providing more value to your customers. 

As a Sage Recommended Solution and Sage Tech Partner, the Fortis Platform combines the latest payment technology with industry-leading expertise to provide a unified commerce experience in multiple channels. In addition to allowing clients to send electronic invoices and get paid immediately, a customer using the Fortis Sage integration can expect: 

  • Level II and Level III Data Enrichment 
  • Flexible Pricing Options 
  • Payment Acceptance (CC, ACH & EFT) 
  • Omni-channel Capabilities 
  • Click-to-Pay/Email Invoicing 
  • Online Customer Portal 
  • Customizable Reporting 
  • Unrivaled PCI Compliance Reputation 
  • Access to Industry Experts 

Even more, our award-winning API set allows for platform customization, built to fit your specific business needs. 

If you use Sage products, consider elevating your payment experience by using the Fortis Platform. To get started with Fortis, click here.  

Merchant Spotlight: Ricochet Home Consignment

Welcome to our first merchant spotlight – Ricochet Home Consignment! Ricochet partnered with Fortis because of our robust omni-channel payment systems and innovative embedded features that help merchants further connect with their customers.

Merchants using Ricochet now have an efficient way to go beyond taking payments and adopt digital receipts, rapid terminal deployment, text message payment links, and more without having to work with several third-party systems.

Being in a niche business has many rewards. While they can be quick to make decisions and personable to help their customers in a meaningful way, the problem merchants encounter is finding solutions that fits their business needs.

Established in 2014, the Ricochet POS software is a niche solution for those in retail and consignment verticals. Their focus was building a platform to free their clients from the constraints of old technology and outdated practices.

Currently, they supply their end-users a way to manage inventory, keep track of consignees, and other general business functions. When it came to payments, it was up to the customer to find a third-party provider to take credit card payments. While stand-alone solutions would perform the basic tasks, managing the communication between the POS and the payment terminal would be difficult for front and back-of-house employees.

With Fortis, all POS and payment features are under one system making it more efficient for staff to track payments. With text message payment links, merchants can send a text message to their customers who are making phone orders or deposits and collect payments. By offering digital receipts, their customers are now tapped into a digital atmosphere. It is now possible to submit their ratings on their experience without moving to another platform. Merchants have the opportunity to display interactive marketing messages on their customer’s phone.

Having this extra integration layer removes the hassle of implementing third-party services. Fortis goes beyond the basics of taking payments. The payment integration provides a value-add platform that helps Ricochet develop a multi-functional product.

To learn more about how Fortis can help your business, visit our consignment solution page.

Six Tips for Fewer Chargebacks in Hospitality

Our last blog in this series will discuss six different ways to reduce chargebacks and improve your hospitality business. If you missed the first two posts, you can find them on our blog page

Six tips for fewer chargebacks

To reduce chargebacks or improve dispute success, you can:  

  1. Settle authorizations within seven days. 
  1. Ask for ID proof and card copies for card not present (CNP) transactions.  
  1. Use EMV terminals that capture card chip data.  
  1. Refund the amount to the same card and do not refund a card without an offsetting charge. For example, if a customer pays with cash, do not refund them via credit.   
  1. Monitor guests for expensive purchases and insist on signed authorization forms.  
  1. Require advanced payment for large bookings and keep a file on the cardholder including their name, address, signature, and guest information.  

Using a payment processor that makes it easier to spot a fraudulent transaction through enhanced analytics can also help you to lower your chargeback ratio.   

Better Chargeback Management for Hospitality Businesses

Monitoring and recording transactions is a laborious task for any organization.   

To protect against fraud and chargebacks without sacrificing the guest experience, the right payment platform can help. A payment solution can help hotels and lodging organizations maintain pristine records and easily handle chargebacks — while making payment a breeze for guests.   

To learn more about how chargebacks can impact your business and how to avoid them, you can download our guide, here. Consider working with Fortis for custom payment solutions within the lodging industry.  

 

How to Prevent and Dispute Chargebacks

In our last blog, we talked about chargeback basics. In this post, we provide best practices and guidance to prevent chargebacks. 

Defending chargebacks is time consuming to businesses, and it affects retained earnings. If the number of chargebacks received exceeds card brand thresholds, this may impact a merchant’s ability to continue processing payments. 

The good news is that it’s possible to minimize chargebacks. Best practices include:  

  • Provide a refund and return policy that is agreed upon by the cardholder at the time of purchase. 
  • Make it easy for customers to contact you.  
  • Ensure services and products are described accurately across all marketing materials.  
  • Confirm the address verification service (AVS) and card verification value (CVV) response for card not present (CNP) and online transactions. 
  • Monitor complaints online and frequently review for new chargeback cases. 

Can you rebuttal on chargebacks?

Once a cardholder submits their chargeback request, you’ll receive a chargeback notification. Each card issuer has its response timeframe. Generally, a merchant has 10 days to respond to a chargeback and await the issuer response within 14 days. 

If you decide to defend the case, you’ll need:  

  • Proof of delivery  
  • Cardholder service records and cardholder communication  
  • Signed card authorization forms and receipts  
  • Proof of lodging stay  
  • Evidence of EMV chip transaction with the approval code 

Looking for more ways to prevent fraud and chargebacks? Consider downloading the Fortis chargeback guide.  

All You Need to Know About Chargebacks

With the dramatic increase in fraud over the past few years, more and more merchants are dealing with chargeback fraud. 

When handling a chargeback dispute, it’s important to know the nuances of the entire chargeback process. In this article, we’ll dive into the key aspects of a chargeback claim and how you can reduce your chargeback ratio.  

What are Chargebacks?  

A chargeback is when the cardholder’s chargeback claim is processed by the issuing bank, and the cardholder is granted a provisional credit in the interim of the dispute. A common chargeback type is when a cardholder or business sees suspicious activity on their credit card. They can then directly dispute the transaction with their credit card issuer. 

For merchants, chargebacks can cause havoc in understanding your cash flow. Hospitality businesses, especially hotels and lodging, often encounter chargebacks since they have often already provided services and may have even turned cardholders away.   

In addition, processing banks scrutinize merchants who have a high number of chargebacks. For all businesses, it’s critical to keep chargebacks to a minimum.   

At the same time, many cybercriminals use the chargeback process to commit fraud.   

Here are two types of chargeback fraud:  

  1. Friendly fraud — When a cardholder claims the product wasn’t as described, they canceled a reservation, or the charge is related to suspected fraud. Sometimes these complaints are valid, but fraudsters can use chargebacks to get refunds after services are rendered to get free items.  
  1. Criminal fraud — When a reservation or service is used with stolen card details.  

Sometimes, a merchant error can also result in a disputed charge. For example, when a refund or cancellation policies aren’t disclosed, or when the hotel marketing didn’t match reality. Essentially, an error or miscommunication on the merchant’s part instigated the cardholder chargeback.  

How do chargebacks work?

The chargeback process is a tedious one, but it does include an opportunity for a business to handle the disputed charge.   

In short, here’s how it works:  

  1. The cardholder submits a chargeback request to their bank.  
  1. The card issuer reviews the request.  
  1. The card issuer forwards the request to the merchant’s processing bank.  
  1. The merchant’s bank account is debited for the chargeback amount.   
  1. The merchant can accept or rebuttal the dispute.  
  1. The original card issuer reviews the merchant’s case.   
  1. The card issuer determines the outcome, and in accordance to card brand policies, will provide a provisional credit back to the merchant.   

This entire process, from the request to case closed, can take up to three or four weeks. The cardholder can request a chargeback up to 120 days after purchase, and sometimes they are given a full year with continuing service agreement. Meaning many merchants may need to argue chargeback requests months after the initial transaction.  

When defending a transaction, a merchant only has ten days to submit compelling evidence. 

But what happens if the case results in the cardholder’s favor?  

If the cardholder continues to dispute the transaction with their card issuer, the merchant may elect to review the chargeback case by arbitration with the card brand. If during arbitration the case is decided in the cardholder’s favor, the merchant will be assessed a fee by the card brand arbitration committee.   

What causes chargebacks?  

There are many reasons why a cardholder might request a chargeback. Some reasons include:  

  • A fraudulent transaction was made with a stolen card  
  • Intentional chargeback fraud  
  • Misleading service descriptions  
  • Duplicate payment or the wrong amount  
  • No cardholder authorization 

Interested in learning more about how chargebacks can affect your industry? Consider downloading the Fortis chargeback guide

Your Ideal Embedded Payments Solution

The third blog in our Embedded Payments series discusses features to look out for, as well as a deeper dive into the Fortis Platform. In case you missed it, you can find the first blog and the second blog of the series at their respective links.

What Features Should You Look for in the Ideal Embedded Payment Solution?

While making payments easier and faster is a win-win for customers and businesses, there are several points to consider when choosing the right platform. Security is paramount in financial transactions because of the amount of sensitive data they contain. But you also want to think about what kind of platform will allow you to grow in the long term.

Some key features that both software providers and merchants will appreciate are:  

  • Security – You want an embedded payments platform that invests in fraud protection and PCI DSS compliance. Ideally, they will do more than encrypt payment data—they will tokenize it for future use.  
     
  • Customization – Every business has different needs, and its customers have unique payment expectations. Your solution should provide payment and front-end customization options for an on-brand experience.  
  • Variety – There are several components your business may need for a seamless payment experience. Some features around integrated payment software should include are customer portals, payment facilitation, text-to-pay support, card account updater, and EMV Card Present transactions.  
     
  • Visibility – You’ll want a program that keeps track of invoices and scheduled reports for a clean auditing process.   
     
  • Sound APIs – The payment API is the cornerstone of your embedded payment solution. Your chosen API should be easy to implement and well-developed, with plenty of technical specs you or your IT team can look through, depending if you are a software developer or a merchant.  

The Embedded Payment Solution You’re Looking For 

When it comes down to it, you want a payment platform that makes sense for your industry, integrates with your ERP or software that runs your business, and provides a seamless payment experience. 

Fortis has an easy and robust embedded payment solution that provides everything you need to optimize your payment process and grow your business. For more on how our expert team can help your service providers and merchants accept more payments securely and scale, contact us today to get started.  

Who Uses Embedded Payments and What Are the Benefits?

In our last piece, we talked about Embedded Payments and how they work. In this blog, we discuss the ideal audience for Embedded Payments and the respective benefits of using this solution. 

Who Uses Embedded Payments? 

In all likelihood you’ve already used an embedded payment system. Any application or website that keeps you on its site for the entire checkout process is probably using an embedded payment processing gateway. 

Some examples you are sure to recognize are:  

  • Uber  
  • Amazon 
  • Starbucks 
  • Tesla 
  • Walmart 

And the list is only growing. In the last year, Fortis experienced an 80% growth rate–in part because of the high demand for embedded service solutions from businesses, software providers, and ERP solutions.  

The reason why integrated payments are so popular? It boils down to a few different benefits.  

What Are the Benefits of Embedded Payments? 

There are several reasons to invest in an integrated payment solution—whether you are providing software solutions, allowing customized ERP access, or you’re a merchant looking to grow.  

Here are five distinct benefits: 

  1. Customer retention – When purchasing a product is secure and easy, without all the hassles of redirects and one-time passwords or codes, customers are more likely to return. This translates into boosted customer lifetime value.  
     
  1. Seamless experience – An improved experience is at the core of embedded payment solutions. Providing an end-to-end, simple payment process makes it easy for customers to say “yes.” 
     
  1. More control over the front end – An embedded payment solution isn’t just about keeping everything on-site. The best-in-class providers offer a seamless, front-end check-out experience for the end user that is close to invisible.
     
  1. Cross and upselling opportunities – When you use an integrated commerce solution, you have more chances to offer cross-sells and upsells to customers already in the process of checking out. Thus, improving your product awareness and potentially growing revenue.  
     
  1. Fewer risks – Since the payment facilitator takes care of payment authorizations, fraud detection, and security, the merchant or service provider can minimize risks without sacrificing quality.  

Overall, these five primary benefits lead to generating more income.

When you make it easier for consumers to buy, then more customers return, and you have a recipe for increased revenue. And once it’s in place, you don’t need to put much work into maintenance—your embedded payments platform will do that for you.  

To learn more about the Fortis Platform’s Embedded Payments solution and to explore partnership with us, visit our website

What Are Embedded Payments and How Do They Work?

Over the past decade, financial technology has continued to evolve to meet the needs of customers and merchants alike. With embedded finance, sometimes called integrated commerce, and in particular, embedded payment technology, merchants and software providers can take another step toward seamless customer experience and improved retention. 

All while boosting their bottom line. 

Within the next decade, embedded commerce solutions are expected to generate $7 trillion in value.  

Out of all the embedded commerce software solutions, payments are the most in demand. Around 83% of businesses want to offer integrated payment solutions within the next five years. 

While there are several types of integrated commerce solutions, such as embedded lending and embedded banking, we’ll focus primarily on payment innovations in this article, and how merchants and software providers can leverage payment technology.   

What Are Embedded Payments?

Embedded payments make the process of “paying” close to invisible, allowing customers to make purchases with just a few clicks, and in some cases, no clicks at all. It replaces tedious form-fills and several redirections, and instead, reconciles the transaction all the way back to the merchant in an automated fashion.  

There are generally only a few steps involved: 

  • A business embeds the payment facilitator’s payment processing technology into their website or application.  
  • The customer shops for a product and makes a purchase decision or enjoys the seller’s service.
  • The payment facilitator receives the amount owed from the software application via a trigger, automatically.
  • The buyer provides their payment details the first time they visit a seller, and on future transactions (or using a wallet, like ApplePay), just authenticate their credentials.
  • The payment facilitator handles payment authorization, security, fraud detection, and deducts the funds from the card holder.
  • The payment facilitator then syncs the payment data with the business’ general ledger in the POS/ERP or Accounting Software.

How Do They Work?

For example, let’s say your customer wants to make a purchase online. You offer a “pay now” button or payment portal that allows your customer to use whichever payment method they prefer—ACH, bank-to-bank transfer, credit cards, and so on. They can even break up the purchase into smaller payments. 

From adding the item to the cart, to the final payment, your customer never leaves the application, and every step is taken on that platform itself. 

This uninterrupted process defines the usability of embedded payment systems.  

And this financial tool offers a seamless, almost invisible, customer experience while boosting revenue and cashflow for the business by making selling easier, collection of funds faster, and reconciliation simpler. And, this is all while delighting the buyer with a seamless experience. 

To learn more about the Fortis Platform’s Embedded Payments solution and to explore partnership with us, visit our website

Five Payment Processing Terms You Need To Know

Whether you’re a new business owner or a seasoned professional, the payment space is full of confusing terminology. Here are five payment processing terms that you should know:

1. Batch
This is when you, the merchant, send multiple authorization requests to the processor to be settled.

2. Card Present Transactions
This type of transaction occurs when the card is physically present and is generally swiped, inserted, or tapped at a terminal at your business location.

3. Card Not-present Transactions
This type of transaction occurs when the card is not physically present and often requires obtaining additional information to verify the purchase and the cardholder’s identity. These transactions are generally completed over the phone or with online purchases.

4. Gateway
Gateways are what connect your business to the payment processor to help facilitate the transaction process. Not all processors have their own gateways and may partner with another company to provide a secure payment experience.

5. Point of Sale
Oftentimes abbreviated to POS, this is generally where a transaction is completed. Depending on your business, this can be a standard terminal fixed to a certain place (like a front desk or register) or a mobile or on-the-go solution.

Payment processing doesn’t have to be intimidating. Let FortisPay help your business today! Contact us here.

Five Easy Ways To Go Green With Payments

As a business owner, you may think it’s difficult to go green. There are many easy steps you can take that not only help the environment but also improve the safety and savings of your business.

1. Don’t write down credit card numbers 
This not only wastes paper, but it also puts your customer and your business at increased risk. All sensitive information should be entered directly into your payment system for security purposes.

2. Print responsibly
If you need to print something, ask yourself “is this something that needs to be printed?” Especially consider this for lengthier documents or receipts that can be sent electronically. Electronic documents are not only easier for your customer, but also for your business as the information is more readily available.

3. Integrate
Integrating with a payment processor will not only improve your business’s efficiency but also provide one location for all transaction data to be stored. This drastically reduces the time spent reconciling by hand while also adding additional payment functionalities.

4. Provide online payment options
If your payment integration gives you the ability to send invoices or accept payments online, use it! Customers love a variety of payment options, and these features are a simple way to cut down on excess paper.

5. Send digital receipts/invoices
It has become more commonplace for people to request electronic receipts and/or pay their bills online. If your business uses online invoice functionalities, use them to help automate the payment process and reduce waste.

Have a question? Contact an expert, here.

Why Does PCI Scope Matter to Business Owners?

As a business owner, why should you care about PCI scope? It may not seem important, but it can easily impact your business if you aren’t taking the necessary measures.

What Is PCI?

Payment Card Industry (PCI) Compliance, is “a set of security standards designed to ensure that ALL companies that accept, process, store or transmit credit card information maintain a secure environment” (source). 

PCI Compliance is monitored by the PCI Security Standards Council (PCI SSC). They help to ensure that payment and fintech companies adhere to specific guidelines, practices, and standards to ensure payment data is stored and managed securely.

What Does PCI Scope Mean Exactly?

PCI Scope is what parts of your business environment the PCI SSC determines must meet their guidelines. Since their guidelines deal with the proper storing and management of cardholder data, they consider anything that stores, processes or transmits data as “in scope”.

What Does It Mean to Be Out of PCI Scope?

When you partner with a payment or fintech company that keeps PCI “out of scope”, it means that they take the necessary steps to ensure payment data security for your business on your behalf. 

These companies are required to submit thorough paperwork to the PCI SSC every year demonstrating their compliance. They also partake in annual PCI training and require all employees to be knowledgeable in cardholder data safety practices.

Why Should I Partner With Someone Who Keeps PCI Out of Scope?

Partnering with a payment or fintech company that keeps you out of scope for PCI has numerous benefits, such as:

  • Reducing compliance and operation costs
  • Increase cardholder data security
  • Reducing breach risk and liability
  • Expert knowledge and reliability

Ready to partner with us? Click here.