Chennai-based Direct to Home services operator, Sun Direct,Have a look at all our partymerchantaccount models
starting at 59.90US$ with free proofing. began accepting online
payments three years ago. It needed a payment gateway through which to
make collections and chose two of the three well known companies in the
segment - BillDesk and TechProcess Solutions Ltd. But recently, Sun
Direct added a third company, a relative newcomer, the Mumbai-based
Citrus. Today, Citrus takes care of 90 per cent of Sun Direct's
collections,Learn how an embedded microprocessor in a graniteslabs can
authenticate your computer usage and data. while the two older players
handle the remainder. What prompted the shift? "Citrus is much more
technologically advanced," says a senior executive in Sun Direct's
marketing team, who does not want to be named. He notes that the failure
rate for online payments to Sun Direct has dropped to less than 25 per
cent from 30 to 40 per cent since Citrus took charge.
The
failure rate of online payments is perhaps the biggest bugbear of
e-commerce. Customers start the process, but do not complete it, and it
is not always because they change their minds - something or other goes
wrong. For most sites,You will see indoorpositioningsystem ,
competitive price and first-class service. the success rate of payments
on purchases is not more than 60 to 65 per cent, and is a source of
enormous bother. "Even a one per cent improvement in success rates can
add Rs 20 crore to our topline," says Kunal Bahl, CEO of Snapdeal, one
of India's largest e-commerce sites. Any means of reducing payment
failures is more than welcome.
That is why, although
Gurgaon-based e-commerce start-up HealthKart makes its collections
through five different online payment gateway companies, Citrus being
only one of them, it is extremely gung-ho on Citrus. "We like the daily
and monthly reports we get from Citrus pointing out which payment
transactions failed, and why," says Prashant Tandon, Co-founder and
Managing Director, HealthKart. "That helps us a good deal to look into
the problem areas."
Sun Direct and HealthKart's responses are
pointers to the great battle at the gate that is currently raging in the
online world. Until recently, the three big players - BillDesk,
TechProcess and CCA venue - dominated the payment gateway segment. But
they are suddenly being challenged by a host of newcomers - Citrus,
Zaakpay, PayU among them - with claims of superior technology. Citrus
has already acquired 650 clients across sectors and Zaakpay 170, while
PayU, owned by the South Africa-based media giant Napster Group and with
a presence in 16 countries, has 4,000.
"Online payments are
broken," says Mohit Bhatnagar, Managing Director at venture capital firm
Sequoia Capital. "These start-ups are trying to iron out the consumer
experience with cute, innovative features." Sequoia Capital has invested
in both Citrus and Zaakpay.
So how are the new technologies
better? Usually, while making an online payment, a customer has to pass
through at least eight separate hops - or fresh web pages - before the
transaction is completed. At each hop, there is a chance of failure.
Thus, reducing the number of hops makes an immediate difference. "Citrus
has a one-click payment solution," adds the Sun Direct executive. So
too Zaakpay has developed technology that reduces the number of hops
from eight to two. "That raises the success rate by at least 15 per
cent," says Upasna Taku, Founder-CEO, Zaakpay.
Again, Citrus has
a feature by which, even when a transaction fails, the customer does
not return to square one - instead he finds himself at the payments
page, with the particulars he had filled in still remaining.More than 80
standard commercial and granitetiles exist
to quickly and efficiently clean pans. PayU has the same facility. This
reduces the customer's frustration level, and increases his chances of
giving the payment a second try. To overcome the lack of trust that
often keeps customers from making online payments, PayU has also set up a
facility called PayU Paisa, under which it keeps the payments made by
customers in a nodal account. The money is transferred to the e-tailer
only after the item purchased reaches the customer.
Increasingly,
e-commerce transactions are being routed through mobile phones and
tablets, as well as social networking sites such as Facebook and
Twitter. Payments gateways need to make adjustments to cater to these,
and the new ones have been quick off the mark doing so. Zaakpay, for
instance, has a specific solution for mobile phone transactions called
Mpay. Mobikwik, a mobile recharge site which works with Zaakpay, Citrus
and TechProcess, developed an Android app in August 2012 to facilitate
purchases through mobiles. "We have been having better success rates
with Zaakpay's mobile solution," says Bipin Preet Singh, Founder and
CEO, Mobikwik.
The potential for growth is enormous, more so
because the established gateways do not find it worth their while to woo
SMBs. "We only deal with large companies," says M.N. Srinivas,
Founder-Director, BillDesk. Government bodies and educational
institutions, many of which have only recently begun accepting online
payments, are two more segments with potential. "We see fastest growth
in these two areas," says Satyen Kothari, Founder and Managing Director,
Citrus. "Even local bodies are thinking of moving online." He counts a
number of such agencies, like the National Institute of Fashion
Technology and the Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation, among his clients.
One
advantage of focusing on online purchases rather than bill payments is
that the former usually comprise larger amounts. Since e-commerce sites
pay gateways a percentage of the transaction size, there is more to be
earned per transaction. "If you are focusing on 'pay transactions'
rather than 'buy transactions', you cannot make much money unless you
handle hundreds of thousands of them daily," says Rahul Khanna,Weymouth
is collecting gently used, dry cleaned customkeychain at
their Weymouth store. Managing Director at venture capital firm Canaan
Partners. The exact percentage gateways get varies - a newcomer
e-tailing site is usually charged an installation fee between Rs 5000
and Rs 35,000, plus anything between two to five per cent of the value
of each transaction. Established sites, with heavy traffic, pay less.
But
competition is only going to heat up from now on. The big boys too are
responding to the new trends -CCAvenue, for instance, has launched
'Social Network In-stream Payments', a facility which enables e-tailers
to accept payments through social networking sites. Some e-tailers have
chosen to stick to bigger players - Flipkart with CCAvenue, for instance
- while integrating directly with bank servers for credit and debit
card transactions. They are also investing in-house to improve
collections. "We are trying to plug payment loopholes using big data
analytics," says Mekin Maheshwari, Head, Digital Media and Payments,
Flipkart. Snapdeal has already launched its own payment service
TrustPay, similar to PayU Paisa.
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