2013年11月25日 星期一

Merchant Account Reviews - Learn to Recognize the Useful & Avoid the Useless - Business

Accurate, useful merchant account reviews do exist, but they're not always easy to find. The majority of merchant account reviews aren't worth the time it takes to read them, but there are helpful reviews out there and we're going to show you how to recognize them.

The following article explains the downfalls that plague many merchant account reviews and it shows you how to recognize a bad review quickly.

Rates and fees change often and for many different reasons

Merchant account reviews are often displayed in the form of a table that compares rates and fees offered by various merchant service providers. These tables are nice to look at, but that's about the extent of their appeal.

Merchant account rates and fees aren't structured like the typical retail pricing that we're used to. Sales agents don't operate with fixed pricing, instead, they use a range of rates and fees to create offers based on what the market and the competition will allow.

In a company with 50 sales agents, it's theoretically possible for a single merchant to negotiate 50 different rate and fee packages just by talking to each agent individually.

Affiliates offer biased reviews

Many online merchant account reviews are created by affiliate marketers whose goal is to create sales for the company that is the subject of their review. For obvious reasons, merchant account reviews run by affiliate marketers are biased toward the partner provider. Later on we'll tell you how to spot an affiliate merchant account review.

Different reps at the same company give different levels of service

Merchant service companies can employ tens or even hundreds of individual sales agents that sell merchant accounts under the parent company's name. Quality of customer service, sales approach, experience and other important factors that create a good representative will vary from one agent to the next.

Merchant account reviews that attempt to evaluate a company's performance are really just reviewing a single agent.

Merchant service providers have their specialties

Merchant service providers often specialize by focusing their product offering on a specific type of merchant account. Merchant account reviews seldom recognize specialties and they lump providers together under general comparisons leaving the important information out.

For example, a provider that specializes in offering wireless merchant accounts may perform poorly in a review based on Internet merchant accounts.

Individual agents work with some people better than others

Going back to the idea that a whole merchant service company can't be evaluated by the performance of a single agent, it's easy to see how personal chemistry can become a factor in a merchant account review.

Some people work well together and some don't. It's very possible for the same merchant to give a glowing review for one agent and a poor review for another agent at the same sales company. The review shouldn't reflect on the company as a whole, it should reflect on the individual agent.

How to recognize good merchant account reviews

The reviews focus on a consistent provider feature

As we've explained above, it's virtually impossible to create a useful review around merchant account rates and fees. Reviews that focus on more consistent topics will always prove more useful. Look for reviews that focus on areas like quality of customer service, industry experience, and depth of product offering. These things take quality and effort over time to accomplish. Rates, fees and other things that can be easily changed with minimal effort don't make for good reference points from which to compare providers.

There's a specific focus

Look for merchant account reviews that compare and contrast specific agents or specific types of merchant accounts. Services like CardFellow.com that review every provider individually are good examples of this. Disregard reviews that attempt to generalize whole credit card processors.

Reviews are based on multiple first-hand accounts

Merchant account reviews that are constructed from a base of first-hand accounts have a better chance of being fair and balanced than those created by a single researcher.

There are no indications of an affiliate marketer

Affiliate merchant account reviews offer biased information. Affiliate ID numbers within links, calls to action like "Buy Now" buttons and overly positive ratings for one company are all solid indications of an affiliate merchant account review.





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