nightkingdoms
Member
- Reaction score
- 11
- Location
- Arizona
Sorry to hear about all of this, man, it sucks. I wanted to provide a little info on what I did, maybe save some people the time and money from these kinds of companies.
When I was starting my company, directly after getting my approval from the corporation commission I got a bank account for my business. The next thing I knew I had to have was a multitude of payment options. I figured one of the best things to do was to be able to accept anything, anytime. Cash is easy, of course. With the bank account I can accept checks in the company's name, same with money orders or other paper-type payments. Credit cards was the sticky one. I had a PayPal and Google Checkout account, but that was online, not in person.
I already had a smartphone (Android) and at the time Square wasn't really big yet. Intuit's GoPayment, however, was. They had commercials on TV, easy to spot. They give you this big, clumsy-looking thing you shove into the top of your phone's headphone jack for free, too. That wasn't exactly what interested me about the service, though.
The thing that interested me was the fact that they gave you a full merchant account: for free. On top of that, because I have other associates in different states with my business, I needed a way to process credit cards on other phones like Blackberry's, iPhones and using mobile web if they didn't have a smartphone -- GoPayment did that. Best of all, it allows you to key-in transactions online as well so I could take online orders through my web site without having the whole PCI compliance issues with saving the 3-digit CCV number. (Note: Square can't process transactions without the CCV number, GoPayment can with address verification at the same rate.) It just gave me more options.
I eventually started using Square and I love it for taking cards on-site. I still have the clunky GoPayment reader but it's never been out of its box since I played around with it a little when I got it. I go on the Intuit's site for the merchant account and authorize credit cards if I receive an online order and it's not through PayPal or Google Checkout, or even payments over the phone. I also added eCheck processing for $9.95/month simply because I'm about 150+ miles away from the nearest branch of my bank and e-processing is just quicker and more-efficient for me.
All in all is this: I use GoPayment to give me the ability to have a full merchant account which they provide for free. I added eCheck processing for a small fee every month that's taken out of the deposits when it comes that time of the month (e.g. never had to send them a payment for anything, which is awesome). I use Square for on-site processing exclusively. So I actually have 4 ways to take a credit card (Square, GoPayment, PayPal, Google Checkout), I can process checks in as little as 3 days, and I have a cash box with $250 in it for change on-site. Minus the money for the cash box, I have full capability to take literally any kind of payment for a total of $9.95 per month.
Hope this helps you while looking for other processing companies (and anybody else starting out).
When I was starting my company, directly after getting my approval from the corporation commission I got a bank account for my business. The next thing I knew I had to have was a multitude of payment options. I figured one of the best things to do was to be able to accept anything, anytime. Cash is easy, of course. With the bank account I can accept checks in the company's name, same with money orders or other paper-type payments. Credit cards was the sticky one. I had a PayPal and Google Checkout account, but that was online, not in person.
I already had a smartphone (Android) and at the time Square wasn't really big yet. Intuit's GoPayment, however, was. They had commercials on TV, easy to spot. They give you this big, clumsy-looking thing you shove into the top of your phone's headphone jack for free, too. That wasn't exactly what interested me about the service, though.
The thing that interested me was the fact that they gave you a full merchant account: for free. On top of that, because I have other associates in different states with my business, I needed a way to process credit cards on other phones like Blackberry's, iPhones and using mobile web if they didn't have a smartphone -- GoPayment did that. Best of all, it allows you to key-in transactions online as well so I could take online orders through my web site without having the whole PCI compliance issues with saving the 3-digit CCV number. (Note: Square can't process transactions without the CCV number, GoPayment can with address verification at the same rate.) It just gave me more options.
I eventually started using Square and I love it for taking cards on-site. I still have the clunky GoPayment reader but it's never been out of its box since I played around with it a little when I got it. I go on the Intuit's site for the merchant account and authorize credit cards if I receive an online order and it's not through PayPal or Google Checkout, or even payments over the phone. I also added eCheck processing for $9.95/month simply because I'm about 150+ miles away from the nearest branch of my bank and e-processing is just quicker and more-efficient for me.
All in all is this: I use GoPayment to give me the ability to have a full merchant account which they provide for free. I added eCheck processing for a small fee every month that's taken out of the deposits when it comes that time of the month (e.g. never had to send them a payment for anything, which is awesome). I use Square for on-site processing exclusively. So I actually have 4 ways to take a credit card (Square, GoPayment, PayPal, Google Checkout), I can process checks in as little as 3 days, and I have a cash box with $250 in it for change on-site. Minus the money for the cash box, I have full capability to take literally any kind of payment for a total of $9.95 per month.
Hope this helps you while looking for other processing companies (and anybody else starting out).