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How Marketplace Payments Solve the Invoicing Problem

Andrew McIntosh
Lead Developer
How Marketplace Payments Solve the Invoicing Problem

With the dramatic rise of online marketplaces we’ve noticed here at Assembly that a key challenge for growth hackers, CEOs, and marketers revolves around solving the invoicing problem.

In this article we’re going to clear things up a bit and demonstrate how properly integrated marketplace payments change the core component of invoicing and remove the ‘chasing payments’ issue.

Typical ways invoicing snags materialize:

  • Lost fees from ‘marketplace leakage’ that drag down ROI and close margins.
  • Significant effort is committed to chasing invoices that could be used elsewhere, reducing overall productivity.
  • The invoicing process begins having a negative impact on user and customer experience.
  • An increased lack of trust between buyers and sellers.

Instead of taking the long path of hard lessons learned and undue misunderstandings, let’s talk solutions.

Avoid This Common Mistake

Don’t introduce payment methods into a marketplace just for the sake of doing it.

Instead, take a more thoughtful and strategic approach to the integration of marketplace payments so they fix core issues like those highlighted above.

When justifying the integration of payments, desired outcomes to aim for should include:

  • Ensuring and improving trust across the marketplace.
  • Improving the number of repeat buyers and sellers.
  • Payments should feel frictionless, too easy not to do.

Get Rid of Off-Platform Interactions

Payments should add service-value, but more importantly, attempt to address behaviors a marketplace can’t control!

When arriving at the register in a busy grocery store checkout line, no wants to be told they must pay over the phone or outside the store within 30 days – chances are they’ll leave (click away) and find somewhere else to shop.

A More Convenient Approach

There are only few things that make a grocery store work. First, customers trust the store has what they need. Then they clearly understand how products and services are outlined, that they’ll need to pay before leaving, and finally that the checkout process will include a familiar set of payment options.

When implementing this analogy in the online space, there are a number of factors that determine the nature of the solution – examples include:

  • The type of industry.
  • Key points of entrance into the marketplace.
  • Incentives needed to earn repeat buyers and sellers.
  • Customer onboarding.
  • Payment flows as well as the understanding of analytics and metrics.

Once a marketplace realizes the need for a payment solution, consider the core issue that drives it. To get rid of the invoicing problem don’t offer payments just because, but instead seek to ensure certain benefits are achieved throughout the entire marketplace process.

Consider designing your payment flow to not just offer payments at the end in the checkout line, but to improve the stickiness of your marketplace overall.

About the Author

Andrew McIntosh

Lead Developer

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How Marketplace Payments Solve the Invoicing Problem

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