Five Considerations When Developing an Embedded Payments Strategy
Before engaging a payments partner, software companies should develop a payments strategy
Cloud technology, code-programming developments, the COVID-19 pandemic, and general cultural shifts are driving the world’s merchants to increasingly leverage embedded software solutions that bring together a variety of operational functions within a central place.
Increasingly, payments companies are looking to embed more value-added solutions, such as inventory management, scheduling, and more, to their offering. Software companies are looking to embed payment processing capabilities into their platforms. Both entities have the same goal; create more value for the merchant by providing streamlined solutions. This goal is driving closer cooperation and integration between software and payments.
Making a Plan
Getting involved in the payments space requires careful planning. Software companies must determine their risk tolerance, the amount of resources they are willing to dedicate, the type of payments partner that would fit their operation, and more.
Below is a general framework for software companies to consider:
1: Get organizational buy-in
Software companies need to understand how payments and payments monetization fit into their strategy, and to what extent. Going a long way involves ensuring that management aligns and implementation leaders fully grasp the vision.
2: Define goals
Software companies will want to determine what metric(s) define success as it relates to monetizing payments. Is there a revenue goal, a customer retention rate, and a greater desire to control the user experience further for operational singularity and efficiency?
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3: Determine risk appetite
Software companies will need to determine the levels of risk they are willing to take on. Since payments monetization can bring in a variety of risk aspects, ranging from merchant underwriting, transaction fraud, chargebacks, reserves, regulatory awareness, and more. There are payment processing monetization models for software companies that involve low risk, and others that involve high risk, each with unique levels of reward.
4: Define resources
Once the initial groundwork has been laid, software companies will want to determine their needed resources, including software tools and staffing.
Payment processing partners that support software companies ideally have programs to optimize payment processing opportunities for their software company partners.
5: Lay out internal and external processes
Clear and communicated processes can go a long way in avoiding pitfalls in payments. Details on eligible merchants, application processing, developer documentation, etc. must be defined. More broadly, determining which aspects of operations are managed by the software company vs. their payments partner will be key. It is recommended that software companies and their payments partners have regular status meetings marked by transparency in conversation.
Software companies are monetizing payment volume into meaningful revenue streams via stickier users, resulting in higher profitability and valuations. As software companies, private equity firms, and other stakeholders continue to take on more traditional payment roles, education and collaboration between individuals from these groups will become ever more important.
Payment processing is an industry full of nuances, regulations, and changing technologies. Understanding trends, participant roles, and regulations will ease the transition to a connected future.
The ETA community is here for software companies. Upcoming events such as the?Strategic Leadership Forum?and?TRANSACT Tech?in NYC actively bring together leaders, innovators, and investors in payments to discuss trends and explore new opportunities. Paired with the?Transactions Trends?publication, ETA provides a wealth of support for those on their journey to payments.