High Ticket Porduct/Service - Payment Processor

by StexM Banned
7 replies
Hey Warriors,

I have an important question for the community on a topic that I think is not well treated.

I'm going to start a series of online events through which will be sold high ticket products and services (around $ 2000 - $ 3000).

My doubt is this. How to pay for this type of product?

I know that PayPal creates problems when the figures start to be high (closed accounts, frozen or blocked funds, etc. etc.).

We will have to collect tens of thousands of dollars in a few days.

Portals like Jvzoo or ClickSure not seem indicated (always work through PayPal).

ClickBank is good, but unfortunately offers refund to customers. For this type of service can not be provided for refund.

I could use a simple bank transfer, but the risk is to lose a large part of the buyers along the way.

Well ... I have this big doubt that this is holding me back!

Each your opinion or advice will always be well regarded!

Have a nice day!
#high #payment #porduct or service #processor #ticket
  • Profile picture of the author seoworkingclass
    Whatever platform you use, refunds would be something of concern. Try a merchant account or services like worldpay.
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  • Profile picture of the author StexM
    Banned
    My concern is not the refund.

    PayPal blocks accounts regardless of the refunds.

    PayPal hates a high number of transactions at high costs.

    So I have to use a portal / platform that has PayPal, but that does not touch my PayPal business account.

    Any advice?
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    • Profile picture of the author Kay King
      I'd think you'd want your own merchant account and the ability to accept credit cards. That's how I would expect to pay for an expensive event in the US - UNLESS there were tickets that could be purchased through a company such as Ticketmaster.
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  • Profile picture of the author nizamkhan
    Jvzoo have Authorize.net as a payment processor for vendors. And, if you need more payment options, then Zaxaa.com has multiple payment integration options (2Checkout, Stripe) besides PayPal and Authorize.net.

    - Nizam
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  • Profile picture of the author Ron Killian
    I agree with Art, just talk to pay pal and let them know the plans, sure they will work with you. Unknown, or out of the ordinary transfers is what raises a flag.
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    • Profile picture of the author Alexa Smith
      Banned
      Originally Posted by StexM View Post

      PayPal hates a high number of transactions at high costs.
      This simply isn't correct. I've heard all the same stories as you, about this, but I've interpreted them differently. I think the reality is that PayPal hates sudden, unexpected, high-level transactions from people about whose accounts they already have other reasons to feel less than confident and comfortable according to their internal risk-assessment criteria.

      Originally Posted by StexM View Post

      So I have to use a portal / platform that has PayPal, but that does not touch my PayPal business account.
      There's 2Checkout, if you want to look at something that takes PayPal payments from customers without the merchant needing to use his own PayPal account to receive the funds. But it's by no means clear that it's any safer, in the long run, than PayPal. And (understandably) it will cost more.

      It seems to me, as Kay suggests above, that you perhaps need your own merchant account, to do this economically and efficiently?

      .
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