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Tuesday 16 October 2012

Developing a Payment Strategy-Step 5- Building a seamless payments process.

In exploring what is involved in developing an overall payments strategy, in this fifth and final article in the series we will look at building a seamless payments process.

There is no “one-size-fit-all” payment strategy for every organisation, as there will be many individual factors to be taken into account in every case, and this is likely to affect the choices made. However, one aspect about a payments process appears to have almost universal appeal when it comes to customers-they want a “seamless” experience as much as possible. “Seamless” means without joins or to be continuous or even “flowing” from one stage in the process to the next. For a payments process this entails that every step needs to flow in this smooth way to ensure that the customer experience is a straightforward and relatively painless one (given that few people probably like actually paying bills).

Research again and again confirms that flexibility and choice should be a major driver in making the customer experience a positive one, when it comes to rendering payment and the web can now deliver much of this with a little careful pre-planning. In practice, this suggests that the entire payment strategy can be centred around an Internet web site (whether this is in-house or an third-party one). On this site, all the payments process steps of issuing the invoice, offering various payment channels, taking different kinds of payments, reconciling payments to invoices, banking the payments and accounting for the whole payment transaction are possible-a one-stop shop. Of course, some customers either will not or cannot transact on the web and the organisation may therefore have to continue to physically send, email or SMS invoices and even accept telephone based or postal payments. The key issue here however is that this population of customers can be kept to a minimum and encouraged to transition over time. For example, those people making telephone payments can be shown how easy it is to do make the same recurrent payment online (especially when the convenience of doing so 24/7 and 365 days a year is appreciated and not just when call centre lines are open for instance).

In summary then, all organisations of all sizes and types should develop and continue to hone a payments strategy that offers more flexibility and choice to customers. In the chosen approach, being fast and efficient in making the bill available is critical, as is making the whole experience as user-friendly as possible. By doing this, an organisation will usually get the change pioneers and early adopters to experiment with the new approach, and it is their experience that that will have a “viral” influence on those customers who do not like to be the first to try new things. Organisations therefore have to be patient and take a long-term view, but in doing so, can drive both bill presentment and payment acceptance costs down substantially.

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