(no title)
globile | 5 years ago
However, I'm sorry to always be the sour grapes guy when it comes to talking about Stripe neglecting us SMEs.
I'm pretty sure a lot of these things mentioned in the article are being passed down to "regular" customers, but to be honest, it lately hasn't felt like that.
Last year there were a few price spikes, Radar fees that were initially negotiated where reinstated, same for refund fees.
Radar works great when it does, but has a lot of wonky stuff like not catching heavy carders which defeats the purpose of using rules.
Acceptance rates internationally are still lacking. If you have a European Stripe account, billing US customers will not provide the same acceptance rates as if you use a US account. In some Latam countries the difference can be important.
Stripe is vital to our growth, but it is a complicated marriage.
I really hope they don't forget about us, the regular merchants.
edwinwee|5 years ago
That said, could you email me at edwin@stripe.com and we can take another look at the issues you mentioned? (For example, we honor rates for their negotiated term.)
londons_explore|5 years ago
runako|5 years ago
Is this due to Stripe or due to the credit card providers blocking transactions? I ask because I have a card that routinely declines charges if I am not near my home. (I can temporarily expand "home" by adding travel plans in their app, but it's inconvenient.)
globile|5 years ago
Stripe offers Atlas so you can "easily" open a US Stripe account and serve your US customers from there, but wouldn't it be great if Stripe did that for you automatically?
gingerlime|5 years ago
We’re still a tiny B2C though, so we definitely feel the complicated marriage side of things. Not to mention PayPal. The missing elephant in the room.
thomasfortes|5 years ago
Honestly, it is a mess...
There are specific payment methods that are common in a single country where people prefer to use that instead of credit cards, as a result sometimes we have to integrate a bunch of different payment processors, a couple of them with non-existent or terrible documentation which result in a ton of emails and calls to clarify stuff.
Stripe is in Beta in Brazil for a while but I never developed something with it for the local market, there is a countrywide processor here that have great documentation and support everything that Brazilian customers are used to and the fees are in the same ballpark, so there's no need to use it.
> We heard it’s better than Brazil.
Which is funny for me, integrating payment processors in Brazil isn't a big deal and I had a lot of trouble with a few LatAm processors, but if I had to guess the reason I would say that a lot of old cards and cards for people with low income used to be national only, they couldn't pay anything in other currencies, nowadays the card situation is a bit better and most issued cards can purchase international goods but since stripe apparently is coming to Brazil, if you could process your payments through it it should work flawlessly.
kwanbix|5 years ago
It is from the same company that created MercadoLibre (Market Free) which originally was a clone of ebay. MercadoPago is a clone of Paypal.
Mercadolibre/Pago is worth about 51.000 billion dollars today.
Again no relation.