Forum Moderators: buckworks
A customer of mine has just told me she has stopped the credit card payment for a transaction, which will be my first.
In my infinite wisdom I decided to then issue a refund straight away to the customer. The amount is very little, so I'm not worried about the amount, it's the very fact I'll have a chargeback, especially as I am now looking around for a new merchant account as I can no longer boast a 'no chargeback ever' record to them.
My question is, will the bank still issue the chargeback once they have seen that the refund has been issued.
The thing that really bugs me is the customer left me a phone message asking for me to call back at my earliset convinience. I couldn't get to the phone when it rang, but went straight up and called him back (no more than 5 minutes later) and she said she had just rang the bank.
Thanks in Advance
Interestingly, I'd part refunded an order recently due to one of the items being out of stock. It turned out the order was on a stolen card, and the card owner started the chargeback process. But the bank saw the 'refund' and I won the chargeback!
A charge back is when the processing company takes the money out of your account, a refund is when you issue the money back..your ok.
I really don't see why a customer would care if you lost money on a bad charge but each to our own.
How will these charge back affect my profile in terms of my merchant account?
I know how difficult it could become if I refunded and then they charged me back anyway which seems commonplace with these big companies.
They also may start the process after the credit is issued, and will stop there.
Or, the customer's bank may be big enough that it doesn't care--they may just refund it to the customer and never initiate the chargeback process at all. For many banks, it is not worth their time to do the work. It all depends on the bank.
But, I think the important thing to remember is: don't sweat it. If you do enough business, you are going to get chargebacks--people are unreasonable sometimes and don't understand the merchant's side at all. Any reasonable merchant account provider will weigh the number of transactions with the amount of chargebacks. And, if you hadn't gotten the letter yet, you really don't have a chargeback...so continue to look for a new merchant account and say you have never gotten one...
Also, once a customer does a chargeback NEVER negotiate directly with the customer or issue any refunds. It has become a legal matter and should be treated as such. It is then up to the bank to decide which party can prove their case through written records (including emails which customers like to use against you at every opportunity).
Also, once a customer does a chargeback NEVER negotiate directly with the customer
Depends on the circumstances, really. I've had a couple of chargebacks that were simply the result of customers not recognizing the name on their statement. A quick Email or phone call later and they willingly contacted their bank and nullified the chargebacks.
Chargebacks that are the result of a lengthy dispute will obviously need to be handled differently.
Edit: by refund, I see you mean "refund of the funds from my own account"
I don't know exactly how a chargeback works in that regard - I don't think the funds are instantly "taken" from a merchant's account - that will be the final result of a successful chargeback, but some sort of "hold" is placed on them.
A customer that does a chargeback without trying to work with the merchant is the worst kind of customer in my book.
CaboWabo