SMB Virtual Card Acceptance Drives Payment Automation Innovation

In 2018, the acceptance of virtual cards, also known as v-cards, by small to mid-sized businesses (SMBs) increased significantly as suppliers embraced the improved security and convenience of this digital payment method over paper checks. Still, making the leap to fully automated payments remained a challenge for most within this market segment.

FinTech Weekly
Fintech Weekly Magazine
3 min readDec 12, 2018

--

by Blair Jeffery, COO Noventis, Inc.

While FinTechs have delivered feature-rich, automated reconciliation and straight-through processing (STP) solutions for large businesses, the needs of SMBs were largely underserved in 2018: mostly because many in the industry have believed that the benefits of serving a market that generates smaller and less frequent invoices has been lacking.

In 2019, market momentum should finally tip in favor of SMBs. As v-cards have become more widely accepted by smaller businesses, FinTechs have taken notice. Now innovative banks, processors and A/P and A/R solutions providers are positioning themselves to serve this market of 5 million or more potential customers. With the incentives increasing, you can expect FinTechs to become more creative and flexible in how they deliver payment automation tools and systems to meet the unique needs of SMBs in 2019.

As companies work together to close the payment automation gaps for SMBs, the entire ecosystem will profit from a decreasing dependence on paper-based processes and checks.

Enabling STP Using V-Cards

Straight-through processing minimizes the time required for payment remittance and settlement. The objective is to streamline payments so that once a transaction is initiated, all activities associated with payment processing are automated from start-to-finish without manual intervention.

By electronically receiving payment information, suppliers can achieve faster, more secure and effective transaction processing. Additionally, errors are reduced as accounts receivable employees are freed from manual tasks of entering information and verifying that transactions have fully processed.

For SMBs, in particular, virtual cards offer a number of benefits that make them an ideal complement to the goals of STP. In addition to the speed of payment, virtual cards greatly reduce the risk of fraud and identity theft through their limited, one-time use, and by protecting the customer’s personal and financial details.

What SMBs are Seeking in a Payment Automation Solution

The industry successfully broadened the reach of payment networks in 2018 by continuing to break down traditional v-card acceptance barriers by delivering payments via SMBs’ preferred delivery methods, such as web, Interactive Voice Response phone systems (IVR), email, phone agents, and secure fax.

Even still, it is estimated that 70 percent or more of payments touched by A/P and A/R solutions providers, processors and corporate payables departments at mid- to large banks are not deliverable via virtual cards due to the supplier’s inability to accommodate the manual reconciliation of payment information, thus continuing the ecosystem’s dependency on the same costly and archaic delivery methods we’ve seen for decades.

Innovation is key to overcoming adoption barriers for SMBs. In recent months, we’ve seen significant progress toward the goal of creating SMB-friendly automated reconciliation and STP solutions. Some of the best innovations offer simplified user interfaces, minimized authentication processes, and the facilitation of downloading remittance information to commercially available products like QuickBooks and Xero.

Capitalizing on Innovation Opportunities

In 2019, it is highly likely that we will see more FinTechs collaborating to develop innovative STP solutions for SMBs because it’s ultimately a win-win proposition. Suppliers receiving payments will benefit from the security, efficiency and cost savings of automation, while those who send and deliver payments will benefit through increased revenue and improved service for their clients as more payments are delivered electronically through increased. Therein lies the golden opportunity to finally make payment automation accessible to SMBs in 2019 and beyond.

Thanks for reading. We hope you enjoyed another contributed article by hands-on industry experts. Let them know you liked it by clicking the 👏 button — as often as you like.

Visit us on Twitter and don’t miss the current fintech newsletter issue here.

Blair Jeffery is the Chief Operating Officer for Noventis, Inc. Blair has over 18 years of payments industry experience with a strong focus on B2B payments.

--

--

FinTech Weekly
Fintech Weekly Magazine

FinTech Weekly is a news service for the FS industry. Our newsletter comes out weekly, wrapping up the most important insights and strategies from the past week