Forum Moderators: buckworks
For all you ecommerce people, I know this is a ridiculous question, but please take pity on me - what's the best, cheapest way to have online customers pay you easily, for total sales of under 10,000 USD/yr? I signed up for a p$ypal acct today - it looks like there's a 3% commision and that's it, but I'm still rather foggy on it. Most of the funds have to come from international to Canada. Will this method work, and if it's not the best, what is better?
Again, excuse the complete lack of knowledge on this, but I'm a speleologist trying to scrape up funding, not a businessman. If this post doesn't get answered, I'll just keep bumping it up every couple of days, so if you want to see the last of it, please offer advice ;-)
You can sent a bill in the form of an email. The users receives the email and clicks on a link to make the payment. When the payment goes through (usualy right away) the funds will appear in your paypal account.
The other method it to merge your paypal account to your wesite. You can use a web script to handle the entire transaction for you. User comes to your site, places an order. He/she is then sent to paypal to make payment. They are then returned to your site to complete the transaction.
You may want to do some searching on the topic of paypal ipn.
Mack.
However, if you only set up your payment options in a single currency, then you would not need to convert funds after a payment is complete. Instead, any customer wanting to pay using a different currency would have to convert that currency into your currency before sending the payment. So, if I sell one item on my website for 5 USD, every payment I receive for that item will have a Gross payment amount of 5 USD, regardless of how the customer funded it. The only thing that might differ on my side (as the merchant) would be the fee rate, if I am receiving both domestic and cross-border payments. (Refer to the Fee table on the website to see the relevant rates.)
However, if you only set up your payment options in a single currency, then you would not need to convert funds after a payment is complete. Instead, any customer wanting to pay using a different currency would have to convert that currency into your currency before sending the payment.
Great info, thanks. That being the case, I'll probably do all pricing in CDN$, because that's where my main expenses are. It's been very strong the last while, anyway, so I've been steadily getting less by quoting prices in USD - I guess I'll just leave it up to my hoped-for customers to check the exchange rate before they consider buying. Actually, I could just update the .htm with the approximate rates every few days - it would keep the pages fresh for the bots as well.
Thanks again, everyone - that was just what I needed to know.
Just make sure you clearly indicate that all payments and S&H are calculated in $CDN, with a disclaimer that conversion rates are done by the appropriate banks and everyone will be delighted.
Just make sure you clearly indicate that all payments and S&H are calculated in $CDN, with a disclaimer that conversion rates are done by the appropriate banks and everyone will be delighted.
Indeed, I'll have to make it quite clear. It might actually work to my advantage - people will see the price in CDN, then US or Euros, and think, "my, that's fairly cheap then" :-)
*There are a couple of exceptions:
1. The customer might select not to have the currency conversion performed by PayPal, in which case PayPal cannot quote the exact exchange rate that will be used when the charge is processed.
2. If you are using Express Checkout for your PayPal payments, PayPal can display the available exchange rate but will not display the total amounts, since you can adjust the total amount before finalizing the payment on your site.