Reduce online payment fraud to sustain the health of your ecommerce businesS
Anyone who has worked in the world of e-commerce is well aware of what chargebacks are. Simply put, it’s when a customer disputes an online purchase—that they deem to be invalid—and the credit card company issues a refund to the original form of payment.
Seems pretty innocent so far, right? Let’s take a closer look.
You’ve got three players involved in this process: the customer, the retailer, and the bank. Customers, however, have the easiest job here. All they have to do is make a dispute. Then it’s up to the retailer and the bank to hash it out on behalf of the customer.
In all reality, while this may sound like an organized process with well-intended checks and balances in place, chargebacks oftentimes put retailers on the defensive right from the very start, giving them no option but to either accept a dispute or refute it with evidence. And that takes time and effort, which, as you may have guessed, can have a negative long-term impact (and cost) on your business.
Unfortunately, the other downside here is that once customers realize just how easy it is to make a chargeback and recoup their money, there’s nothing really stopping them from doing it over and over again. In fact, they are nine times more likely to do so.
You might as well think of this like a “tipping point” that turns what should normally be considered to be a simple, corrective transaction into a potential source of widespread fraud—something that’s been shown to cost global businesses up to 1.8% in revenue every year. After all, every time a chargeback happens, retailers are charged a fee, regardless of the outcome of the dispute. (And it adds up fast!)
WHAT ARE THE MAIN CAUSES OF CHARGEBACKS?
There are a number of reasons why chargebacks occur—some can be avoided while others are, for all intents and purposes, out of your control. Here are the most common:
The complete list of why a customer may request a chargeback is actually endless. Some reasons are 100% valid while others skew far into fraud territory. Therefore, generally speaking, we can organize chargebacks into three primary categories:
(Chargebacks911, February 2019)
WHY ARE CHARGEBACKS SO PROBLEMATIC?
In many ways, you could say that chargebacks are worse than simple fraud. Why? First off, the fees alone really start to add up. In 2018, for example, for every $1 in fraud from online chargebacks, e-commerce businesses lost $2.94. And this delta grows more and more every year.
Additionally, as merchants and retailers incur more chargebacks, banks and credit card companies begin to apply penalties (typically in the form of higher processing fees). While perhaps an increase of 0.5-1% may seem small on paper, that seemingly small increase in fees amounts to less revenue for retailers with every purchase—and, again, that adds up fast.
Furthermore, for merchants that have fallen prey to growing chargeback activity, many credit card companies will either suspend a retailer’s ability to fight chargebacks or, even worse, put them on a chargeback monitoring program. If the situation gets out of hand, they could choose to decline processing payments for that retailer altogether, which gives customers one less payment method to choose from and, thus, negatively impacts the overall customer experience.
Chargebacks, in essence, can become a vicious cycle if not put in check immediately and can also quickly start to eat into a business’s bottom line. Unfortunately, this, too, comes at a time when online businesses will lose up to $130 billion in payment fraud between 2018 and 2023. Therefore, the stakes are high; retailers must nip the chargeback problem in the bud.
REDUCING FRAUD REQUIRES THE RIGHT SOLUTIONS
There are a number of solutions that can help minimize the risk of fraud and chargebacks. This includes implementing 3D secure, fraud detection monitoring, address verification services, credit card verification code validation, and beyond.
Why try to figure this out all by yourself when you can work with a partner like Nexway that, as your Merchant of Record, already has all of these solutions in place to help you run a more successful, efficient, and profitable e-commerce business?
Don’t try to combat fraud all on your own. Let Nexway help. Contact us today to learn more.
The Nexway Team
Cookie | Type | Durée | Description |
---|---|---|---|
__zlcmid | persistent | 1 year | Ce cookie est utilisé par le chat en direct de Zendesk et sert à stocker l'identifiant du chat en direct. |
_ga | session | 2 years | Ce cookie est installé par Google Analytics. Le cookie est utilisé pour calculer les données relatives aux visiteurs, aux sessions, aux campagnes et pour garder une trace de l'utilisation du site pour le rapport d'analyse du site. Les cookies stockent des informations de manière anonyme et attribuent un numéro généré de manière aléatoire pour identifier les visiteurs uniques. |
_gid | session | 1 day | Ce cookie est installé par Google Analytics. Le cookie est utilisé pour stocker des informations sur l'utilisation d'un site web par les visiteurs et permet de créer un rapport analytique sur le fonctionnement du site. Les données collectées comprennent le nombre de visiteurs, la source d'où ils viennent et les pages visitées sous une forme anonyme. |
AWSALB | third-party | 1 week | AWSALB est un cookie généré par l'équilibreur de charge de l'application dans les services Web d'Amazon. Son fonctionnement est légèrement différent de celui de AWSELB. |
bcookie | third-party | 2 years | Ce cookie est défini par linkedIn. Le but du cookie est d'activer les fonctionnalités de LinkedIn sur la page. |
cookielawinfo-checkbox-necessary | persistent | 1 year | Ce cookie est défini par le plugin GDPR Cookie Consent. Les cookies sont utilisés pour stocker le consentement de l'utilisateur pour les cookies dans la catégorie "Nécessaire". |
cookielawinfo-checkbox-non-necessary | persistent | 1 year | Ce cookie est défini par le plugin GDPR Cookie Consent. Les cookies sont utilisés pour stocker le consentement de l'utilisateur pour les cookies dans la catégorie "Non nécessaire". |
lidc | third-party | 1 day | Ce cookie est défini par LinkedIn et utilisé pour le routage. |
test_cookie | third-party | 15 minutes | Ce cookie est défini par doubleclick.net. Le but du cookie est de déterminer si le navigateur des utilisateurs supporte les cookies. |
UserMatchHistory | third-party | 1 month | Linkedin - Utilisé pour suivre les visiteurs sur plusieurs sites web, afin de présenter une publicité pertinente en fonction des préférences du visiteur. |