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Showing posts with label e-billing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label e-billing. Show all posts

Monday, 18 November 2013

Electronic billing and payment-a win-win for everyone?

Electronic billing and payment is one of those rare organizational change measures that can create a number of so-called win-wins. The merchant wins on efficiency and effectiveness (and with the right solution on the cost side too) and the customer wins on speed and convenience (and can save a little money as well). Let’s briefly look at why.

For the merchant on the direct or visible cost side, there’s less paper, less envelopes, less ink and less postage when customers elect to discontinue getting a paper invoice. Even though these are often significant in and of themselves there are also even bigger potential cost reductions on the indirect or more hidden side of things...less customer support (handling queries or phone-in payments) and much less time spent on reconciliation and settlement. In addition, online bill presentment and payment has been shown to lead to much quicker settlement by the customer-which substantially aids cash-flow for a merchant. All these savings add up significantly on the merchant side.

For the customer they win by eliminating or simplifying the tasks of organizing bills, querying them, and storing them (in a good online system forever) and being able to make payments in many ways (all being possible both safely and securely and at a single web site, and ideally only with a few clicks). Digitally-based billing and payment means more free time for the bill payer, and less to worry about when dealing with paper (including having to put the bill or invoice somewhere safe, finding it when needed and even losing it occasionally).

And above and beyond the merchant and the customer in the relationship, the environment wins too.  Electronic billing is a simple but significant step that every organization can take with a little focus, effort and determination, and encourage their customers to make a small “green” contribution of their own.  Less paper eventually means less use of trees and less transportation (and gas), reducing a merchant’s carbon footprint. Not all customers will be happy to turn off paper immediately but some will and they will slowly encourage the others to do the same.

So, in summary merchants will save money on:

                  Printing paper bills

                  Fulfillment and postage

                  Undeliverable mail

                  Chasing as many late payments

                  Handling manual payments

                  Archiving paper bills

                  Reconciliation/bill matching/banking payments

And customers will save time on:

                  Checking and paying bills

                  Hunting for previous bills

                  Checking funds and means to pay

                  Writing and mailing checks

                  Waiting for a merchant to be open for business

                  Paying by IVR or phone

                  Worrying over lost checks and late delivery

And all this is “green” too.

Saturday, 24 August 2013

Can Merchants really turn off paper bills with digital billing?

Within the billing world, going paperless has been almost like a “Holy Grail” for many merchants, and especially those who are sending out thousands, hundreds of thousands or even millions of bills a month in some cases. And who can blame them? Merchants who send out more than just a few hundred invoices each month are typically spending a great deal of money on printing, putting invoices into envelopes, sending out reminders and/or statements, franking the envelope, having to engage in making sure bills are filed or stored properly and fielding calls from customers who don’t receive a the bill in the mail at all (so it has to be resent) to name but a few things.

By adopting a paperless invoice or digital bill only solution, a merchant can technically avoid all of the above and “switch off paper” immediately. However, despite the apparent significant  advantages to the merchant, this may not be the best way to go (and it should also not be the driver of the change to digital billing).

Most customers have been getting bills in the mail, or at least ones they can print if they are sent by email, for many years and many want to stick with a process that they well understand. Hence, any merchant that removes the option of receiving a paper bill risks losing a customer’s business altogether. Far better therefore to retain the option to receive a physical bill and either deliver it by cost-effective e-mail or allow a customer to retrieve it and print it for themselves from a central website.

With a cloud-based system such as PaySwyft, not only can any merchant post a digital bill but allow customers to print the bill whenever they like. Even better a merchant can email the bill if they so wish, including follow-up or chase bills. And once customers are using such a fully digital portal they can also use a whole range of convenient technology to manage their bill in more flexible ways. This includes:
Receiving a monthly e-mail notification when a new invoice is available to view.
  • Decreasing the possibility of mail fraud and identity theft.
  • Automatically calendarising or secheduling payments at a time or date to suit them
  • Set email and/or SMS alerts as they like
  • Store and retrieve all invoice and payment records whenever they like, forever
  • Make payment 24 hours a day, 365 days a year
  • Pay in a multitude of ways at the same portal and get a receipt there and then
  • See all of their invoices and payments when they want
  • Analyse invoice trends and patterns as they wish
This does not mean that they will necessarily “turn off” the paper bill, or stop printing it, but over time the resistance to doing so will clearly lessen. And in the meantime, not only is the customer getting a convenient service for free, that they can use at work or home on their computer (and save themselves time if they were previously paying by cash or cheque in particular), but a merchant is saving money on many fronts, including fielding less phone calls, accelerating cash-flow with earlier online payments and reconciling payments in a much more straightforward way than ever before. Given all of this, getting to a paperless world, if and when it happens, is only a minor bonus.


Thursday, 17 January 2013

Will Mobile Phones Become the Dominant Channel for Bill Delivery?

 
There are now a multitude of channels available to customers to pay their bills. These channels include:

1. Print and mail (paper-based)

2. Fax

3. Email with embedded data

4. Data interchange (system-to-system)

5. Email with PDF and/or link to on-line

6. Online (customer portal)

7. Mobile (MMS; HTML; WAP; USSD)

8. Mobile via App

9. Mobile Tablet

10. Emergent technology (via cable TV etc)

 
Only print and mail on the above list existed as an option until around 30 years ago when fax arrived and 25 years ago when email came along (both of which still have quite a strong following today). Data interchange options were mainly evolved and used in the B2B rather than direct Business to customer or B2C space but again are still around today as a strong channel, supported in the main by large international software companies, who have sufficiently large installed volumes to want to protect their position in the billing market.

Web based technology has driven the greatest change in the billing space in the last 10 years or so and seen the emergence of both consumer and merchant portals (for presentment and payment) and the use of mobile technology as 3G and 4G have made the internet available to mobile phones.
 
Even though each of these channels presents a new and perhaps better and more convenient choice to a given customer (and are often presented as the channel to replace earlier channel choices) in reality, they are often just additional options. In other words, consumers have shown time and time again that they like the extra choice but do not necessarily want to be driven too quickly to only one channel (however “efficient and effective” it is presented to be).
 
The implication of customers wanting lots of channel choice to both view and pay their bills is that the same bill may need to be presented and rendered possible to pay in several channels, at least for now.
 
Today’s challenges
Some technology experts are starting to say that customers will be move rapidly away from e-billing to m-billing (m for mobile of course) in the next few years. Modern mobiles can certainly handle very complex tasks today - just look at the hundred of thousands of Apps available for all different platforms. These Apps can do complex tasks, even generating bills “on-the-fly”. A mobile can also handle a simple task such as bill presentment with ease today – in some cases on quite a detailed basis (even though reading it may present quite a challenge!). However, viewing a PDF bill attachment on a mobile (as opposed to a tablet) is often a long scrolling exercise, making it impractical in most cases. There is a solution to this but it needs the biller to solve the problem of displaying their bills in more flexible ways according to the kind of mobile platform to which it is being delivered. In this way, a customer can see a simple version of the way and then “drill into the detail” as they wish when they want to see itemisation. 

However, perhaps all of this is a false dilemma. In the final analysis, customers do not care if a bill is delivered to their computer, their tablet or their mobile (or even all three). In fact, many want to see it delivered in as many ways as possible to allow maximum flexibility, including by email or by PDF attachment and even in the physical mail or fax on some occasions. This multi-channel approach is therefore a customer centric approach. The challenge for billers then is how to provide as many of these channels as possible at the lowest coat possible. In the end there is only one solution to this –use a full digital bill presentment and payment portal such as PaySwyft for example. This not only means that a bill can be sent in all 9 of the current channels above but means that a biller would be well-placed to take advantage of the new emergent technologies that will come along as in the near future.

Tuesday, 4 September 2012

Developing a Payment Strategy-Step 2- Focusing on how to issue bills and invoices in a fast and efficiency way

In exploring what is involved in developing an overall payments strategy, in this article we will look at the second phase of five in total, which is how a business can issue bills and invoices in a the fastest and most efficiency way.

There are few businesses that fail to readily appreciate that when a customer orders a product or service, they expect to have it delivered as efficiently as possible (and this usually means fast). In fact, some organisations even seek to gain competitive advantage by doing this effectively. However, this would be costly unless the invoicing process is equally efficient, so that payment can be collected as quickly as possible. Streamlining the billing process is therefore a critical activity.

There are essentially three options available to streamline the billing process:

First, a business can seek to make an existing manual bill process “flow” more efficiently. For example, this might involve looking at the simplicity of the invoice design or layout, reducing or even eliminating wasteful work tasks, or even further automating the delivery process (such as faster envelope stuffing). Although this may help considerably, the danger is that these process improvements need to be “locked in” to avoid slippage and the changes may only go a short way in terms of overall improvement from a customer perspective.

A second option is to automate the manual billing process as much as possible. For example, this might involve adopting an email-based invoice delivery process (saving on paper, envelopes and franking (if the customer can be convinced to accept an email as the substitute of course). This can save considerably in direct costs and gets the bill to the customer earlier than the physical mail. However, the business is still delivering paper and may not experience much in the way of faster payment. In fact many organisations find that they end up maintaining both their physical mailing and emailing process (and storing more paper than they did before).

A third option is for a business is to let a third-party specialist billing organisation help to streamline the process. One possibility here is to completely outsource the process of both billing and payment collection. However, a more popular option is to either buy full bill automation software from the third-party (and pay for its maintenance and use) or to use a digital billing service. The latter choice is likely to deliver the most change from a customer perspective. Here, a customer’s bill is made available to view at the third party’s dedicated web site, where they can then pay it by a variety of means (on both the credit and debit side).

Each of the above options needs careful consideration, as all three involve time and cost. However, in terms of savings in direct and indirect cost, option three is likely to be the most efficient and cost effective.

In our next article in this series, we will look at the next phase in developing the Payment Strategy- Giving customers as user-friendly billing and payment experience as possible.

Sunday, 29 July 2012

Can Merchants really turn off paper bills with digital billing?

Within the billing world, going paperless has been almost like a “Holy Grail” for many merchants, and especially those who are sending out thousands, hundreds of thousands or even millions of bills a month in some cases. And who can blame them? Merchants who send out more than just a few hundred invoices each month are typically spending a great deal of money on printing, putting invoices into envelopes, sending out reminders and/or statements, franking the envelope, having to engage in making sure bills are filed or stored properly and fielding calls from customers who don’t receive a the bill in the mail at all (so it has to be resent) to name but a few things.

By adopting a paperless invoice or digital bill only solution, a merchant can technically avoid all of the above and “switch off paper” immediately. However, despite the apparent significant  advantages to the merchant, this may not be the best way to go (and it should also not be the driver of the change to digital billing).

Most customers have been getting bills in the mail, or at least ones they can print if they are sent by email, for many years and many want to stick with a process that they well understand. Hence, any merchant that removes the option of receiving a paper bill risks losing a customer’s business altogether. Far better therefore to retain the option to receive a physical bill and either deliver it by cost-effective e-mail or allow a customer to retrieve it and print it for themselves from a central website.

With a cloud-based system such as PaySwyft, not only can any merchant post a digital bill but allow customers to print the bill whenever they like. Even better a merchant can email the bill if they so wish, including follow-up or chase bills. And once customers are using such a fully digital portal they can also use a whole range of convenient technology to manage their bill in more flexible ways. This includes:
  • Receiving a monthly e-mail notification when a new invoice is available to view.
  • Decreasing the possibility of mail fraud and identity theft.
  • Automatically calendarising or secheduling payments at a time or date to suit them
  • Set email and/or SMS alerts as they like
  • Store and retrieve all invoice and payment records whenever they like, forever
  • Make payment 24 hours a day, 365 days a year
  • Pay in a multitude of ways at the same portal and get a receipt there and then
  • See all of their invoices and payments when they want
  • Analyse invoice trends and patterns as they wish

This does not mean that they will necessarily “turn off” the paper bill, or stop printing it, but over time the resistance to doing so will clearly lessen. And in the meantime, not only is the customer getting a convenient service for free, that they can use at work or home on their computer (and save themselves time if they were previously paying by cash or cheque in particular), but a merchant is saving money on many fronts, including fielding less phone calls, accelerating cash-flow with earlier online payments and reconciling payments in a much more straightforward way than ever before. Given all of this, getting to a paperless world, if and when it happens, is only a minor bonus.

Tuesday, 3 April 2012

What do Postal Price Rises Really Mean for Billing Costs?


It was recently announced that a first-class stamp in the UK will rise in price from 46p to 60p (a 30% increase) and a second-class stamp will go up from 36p to 50p (a 39% increase). This reflects a worldwide trend in postal prices increasing dramatically (as less and less letters are sent in the mail and therefore make the post office burden so much harder to cover) and causing those businesses which bill their customers in the mail to have to bear the extra costs. For a larger biller (perhaps doing 50,000 bills a month) this adds £84,000 p.a and for a small business (doing say 2,500 bills a month) it adds £4,200.

These are significant relative costs in a channel that already presents additional challenges for merchants over other options. This includes the need to have to print and fold invoices and have to stuff them into envelopes, wait the 2-3 days until they are delivered (excepting a small percentage that never reach the customer’s given address!) and even get lost somewhere along the delivery route (and therefore have to be resent). Postal delays, go-slows and strikes can also impact significantly on businesses, and none of these factors does anything to help critical cash-flow (assuming that the customer does not lose their paper invoice and manages to pay on time).

So, what can businesses do about yet more costs that have to be absorbed in these difficult economic times? The obvious answer is to ask customers to accept an online invoice and cut out paper and envelopes and all mail costs completely. In the above two examples this not only removes the respective £300,000 and £15,000 annual postal costs completely, but by the time you add in the extra internal costs of printing, folding, stuffing, and envelopes probably saves twice as much-or around £600,000 and £30,000.

Unfortunately, if the above step of switching to ebilling were easy, every business of any size or type would be doing it. In reality, the inhibitors have historically been many including the often immediately prohibitive need to spend up-front capital on ebilling software (and pay annually to maintain it). In addition, the introduction of a new online billing system typically disrupts normal operations for months (often costing significant time and money) in order to transition to the new approach (not forgetting that customers also have to be converted to use the new system too). This all assumes that you have the customer email addresses to which you can send the bills or invoices of course. In the past, these kind of inhibitors have added too much cost and/or hassle for most businesses and they have no choice but to stay with their traditional way of doing things-until now that is.

In recent years, third-party online ebilling portals like PaySwyft for example, have been developed which overcome many of the problems described above. First and foremost this kind of portal offers almost an immediate opportunity to send full digital invoices to customers (often within days of signing up to use this “cloud-based” service) and on a pay-as-you-go basis, meaning there is no need for any capital outlay or annual software maintenance costs. And because every merchant has a unique merchant number or ID, customers can go to the portal to pay a bill without a business having to know their email address. Customers can then pay instantly, or register at the site (which means that a business progressively “scrapes” the email address for customers (who will often want to use their email or SMS alerts to remind them when bills are due). This means that customers can be weaned slowly but surely away from paper over time, as they become increasingly comfortable that all their bills are stored, emailable and printable whenever they like, and they can therefore safely turn off the paper bill they get in the mail. Best of all, the business not only starts to save the cost of sending paper bills and the postage costs but gains the added advantage of having a fully integrated set of payment options (often greater in diversity than they offered previously) that are now available (such as every credit card for instance). This aids cash-flow, lessens calls to the business to pay by phone and massively helps bill and payment reconciliation.

Summary
The transition to online billing is always a challenge but by using a portal-based system hosted in the cloud, it is many times easier than it was and can almost immediately start to save substantial time and cost. And now that postal expensive are going up so significantly, all businesses have even more reason to therefore consider making the change now.