Here’s What Small Business Owners Should Know About Merchant Services

Here’s What Small Business Owners Should Know About Merchant Services
Merchant services include everything from hardware to software needed to accept and process payments. Which service should you consider for your business?
by Deborah Findling Dec 18, 2020 — 2 min read
Here’s What Small Business Owners Should Know About Merchant Services

This article is for educational purposes and does not constitute legal, financial, or tax advice. For specific advice applicable to your business, please contact a professional.

According to Finder, 62.8 million UK adults had a credit card in their name by January 2021. With so many consumers using credit cards to make purchases, business owners can prepare themselves to meet those needs by looking into merchant services.

What are merchant services?

Merchant services encompass everything from hardware to software that is needed for businesses to accept and process credit or debit card payments for both in-store and online sales.

A merchant account is a type of bank account that lets businesses accept payments by debit or credit card. The merchant account acts as an agreement between your business, a merchant bank and a payment processor. Once you establish an account, the payments processor works with the issuing and acquiring bank to process that payment. A merchant services provider is an entity that allows you to accept payments by credit card, debit card, or NFC mobile wallet.

Consider some of these merchant service tools

Understanding the different types of merchant services can help you determine which solutions are right for your business. Here are a few merchant services to consider:

Credit card processing

Debit and credit card processing products allow you to accept payments from customers. There may be different fees depending on the method of processing and credit card merchant services. Here’s how it works:

Point-of-sale solution

A point-of-sale system is the hardware and software that enables your business to make sales when customers check out online or walk up to your counter to make a purchase.

A point-of-sale system can allow you to accept payments, track sales, manage your team, offer a loyalty program, and more (different systems have different features). Unlike traditional registers, POS systems have hardware and software components. These features help business owners be more efficient by combining many capabilities in one central place.

Virtual terminal

Virtual terminals are virtual representations of credit card terminals. They let you accept transactions using a computer rather than a physical card reader. With a virtual terminal, you can charge customers, itemise sales and create one-time or recurring payments. While any business can use a virtual terminal, some may choose it over other options. Here are a few examples:

 

The flexibility of not always meeting face to face makes a virtual terminal advantageous if you don’t need as much physical hardware.

Gift card and loyalty programs

Gift cards and loyalty programmes can grow customer retention and loyalty. With loyalty programmes, you can incentivise customers by money spent, return visits or purchase of specific items. Gift cards can be used to attract new customers, increase sales, or deepen customer loyalty. According to the Gift Card & Voucher Association, the UK gift card market was worth just under £7 billion in 2019.

BACS

BACS (Bankers’ Automated Clearing System) is a financial network used for electronic payments. Sellers using BACS can transfer money from one bank account to another. BACS payments are most commonly a substitute for cheques but can also be used in the place of bank transfers, cash or credit card networks.

Using merchant services can allow you to expand your customer base beyond cash and cheque buyers. By processing payments electronically, customers have the opportunity to shop online or in-store, and payments are received more quickly than cheques, cash, or mailed invoices.

Deborah Findling
Deborah Findling is an Executive Managing Editor at Square. She also writes about investment, finance, accounting and other existing and emerging payment methods and technologies.

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