Hardware stores and builders’ providers have long relied on cash or cheque on delivery, but there have always been risks associated with these methods of payment. Drivers are delivering valuable goods, and there is the risk of these goods being accepted without payment completion. The most common alternative has been to take advance payment by card over the phone. However, collecting sensitive information in this manner carries another set of risks – non-compliance with GDPR, PSD2 & card scheme rules, data breaches, and fraud & chargebacks.
To overcome these barriers and create opportunities for business growth, the need for greater technological investment is paramount. The Open Banking initiative is transforming the way organisations across all sectors, including hardware, request and collect payments. It empowers businesses to build user-driven services on the foundation of transparency, automation, and secure & seamless account-to-account payments. One of the fastest growing paytechs in Ireland – Prommt – is helping hardware vendors seamlessly collect payments using secure, branded payment requests as an alternative to costly card transactions and risky card details taken
over the phone.
An efficient payment alternative for high-value transactions Dublin-based Prommt enables merchants to effi ciently request and collect payment through card and bank transfer using merchant-branded, secure payment requests, and today help over 250 businesses drive revenue by reducing card fraud & chargebacks, minimising payment administration and enhancing customers’ remote buying experience.
Prommt has enjoyed significant success within the hardware sector across Ireland and the UK, with many of these customers including Bradfords, Robert Price, MGN Builders, Howarth Timber and Kew Electrical now utilising their latest Pay by Bank capability (Open Banking payments). Using this feature, customers authenticate and approve a bank payment directly from their mobile banking app into the merchant business account in four easy clicks. Pay by Bank reduces card transaction costs and is a perfect alternative to clunky and time-consuming manual bank transfers.
With the customer’s consent, recurring payments can be initiated for building materials from the customer’s bank account on a continuous basis. Customers enjoy the convenience of not having to navigate the authentication process each time, and merchants benefit from shorter settlement times without any chargebacks. Further, it is often the case that the person placing the order with the hardware provider is not the authorised payer, these digital payment requests can easily and safely be forwarded to authorised payers who may be based at a different location.
Since its launch six months ago, Prommt is seeing interesting insights from the hardware sector. Payer adoption for Pay by Bank has not been as challenging as expected by the industry, and Prommt is noticing that Open Banking payments are quickly replacing traditional bank transfers and higher-value remote card payments. The average transaction size through Pay by Bank is nearly double than through Pay by Card. Pay by Bank is propelling cumbersome bank transfers into Open Banking transactions.
How Open Banking is innovating payments
Open Banking generates real impact
Donal McGuinness
CEO, Prommt
If you’d like to learn more, Prommt is an enterprise grade solution that is built for teams, supporting multiple locations, reporting, and alerting capabilities. Get in touch with Prommt at
sales@prommt.com.
This Business Support article featured in the January/February 2023 issue of The Hardware Journal.