5 reasons how Stripe eliminates payment worry

This is the second part of Payment Gateways series. In the previous part- How payment gateways have advanced over the years?, it showed how the technology in Payment Gateway has come a long way from being only a money transfer portal to customized payment platform.

Payment Gateway: Stripe

Payment Gateways have been proved as a boon for online businesses and customers as well. In earlier Blog, we saw different payment gateways and their market share. PayPal no doubt owns major market shares but it currently suffers from scale, age, and bureaucracy, whereas Stripe with improved technology is hustling for market share. Some of the reasons for Stripe eliminating payment worries are:

1. Simple Transaction fee structure

Stripe charges a uniform fee of 2.9% + $0.30 per transaction with no monthly fees or service charge. There are no additional charges for failed transactions, American Express cards, international cards, stored cards, currency conversions, refunds or recurring payments. Incidentally, PayPal also charges the same amount and but it has a complex fees structure (including service charges, cross-border fees etc) which makes it expensive. But, they offer discounts as volume goes up. Stripe’s close competitor CCBill charges 3.9% + $0.55 per transaction and higher for specialized business models. Thus, Stripe helps in the projection of sales revenue and processing fees.

2. Enhanced data security

With the inclusion of Stripe.js, Stripe has gained competitive advantage and encourages good security practices. Stripe.js is Stripe’s foundational library for securely sending sensitive information to Stripe directly from the customer’s browser bypassing user’s server. This feature adds security because breach of your servers won’t result in any stolen credit card data. Thus adherence to PCI guidelines is automatically taken care leaving no room for the developer to make wrong decisions. Other payment gateways notably PayPal has taken steps to incorporate security features, but they are nowhere close to Stripe.

3. Clean and user-friendly API

Stripe gained immediate popularity with a clean, user-friendly and well documented API. Stripe’s API is easy to integrate with the website. Stripe’s API and documentation saves users’ engineering time, at the time of launch and maintenance of integrations over time. Stripe offers amazing user experience through ‘Stripe Checkout’. Stripe builds and styles the credit card form for the businesses. Additionally, you can also customize the form to look like your site. Other competitors have complex APIs with different permissions (classic APIs such as Adaptive Payments, Adaptive Accounts, Merchant APIs, etc.).

4. Data portability and Customer first approach

Credit card data portability is clearly the best feature from business perspective. If you decide to leave Stripe, they help you in migrating the credit card data in a secure and PCI-compliant way. Thus, your existing customers would not have to sign up again and there is no chance of losing customers. Barring a few new players such as Recurly and Stripe, no popular gateways are offering the feature. Stripe provides excellent customer service through open channels for email support, and they also have an IRC channel (#stripe on Freenode) where developers can chat and get live help from real engineers. This is invaluable if you’re working through a tough problem and need some live help.

5. Powerful Dashboard and Fast Interface

Stripe’s interface is fast and clearly shows bank transfers and HTTP request logs. It also provides instant type-ahead search over all your data and makes managing your business simple and enjoyable. Once they get up and running, PayPal users often experience issues with the account management interface. It’s slow and hard to perform functions like refunding transactions.

Stripe with enhanced data security adhering to PCI guidelines, user-friendly API and customer-centric approach offers an improved payment gateway solution to businesses. Currently, Stripe, valued at $3.5 billion in a recent funding round, has a customer base that includes OpenTable, Salesforce, and Rackspace. It has also struck deals to handle payments on Facebook and Twitter’s sites/apps.

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The article was originally published at the Maruti Techlabs.