Sean Murray


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The Current Members of NAMAA

August 23, 2011
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NAMAA is the North American Merchant Advance Association. From their website: The North American Merchant Advance Association (NAMAA) is a not-for-profit trade association representing organizations in the United States and Canada that are in the business of providing working capital advance products based on credit, debit or other card and electronic payment-related revenue streams to small and mid-sized businesses (currently referred to as a “Merchant Cash Advance”). NAMAA provides guidance and helps to influence and shape the merchant cash advance industry through leadership, education and the sharing of information.

Currently their members include:

  • American Finance Solutions
  • AmeriMerchant
  • Business Financial Services
  • Business Loan Options
  • Capital For Merchants
  • GRP
  • Greystone Business Resources
  • Merchant Cash and Capital
  • Merchant Cash Group
  • Merchants Money Tree
  • Principis Capital
  • RapidAdvancee

There are a few newcomers to the group it seems and strangely, AdvanceMe, the largest funding source of them all is nowhere to be found. How is it that the oldest and most dominant player in the industry is not a part of it?

Rumors and evidence (I’ve seen it!) shows that NAMAA also has an interactive shared database of defaulted clients, fraudulent applications, and other protectionary services. This information would certainly be to AdvanceMe’s benefit. Does anyone know why they’re not part of it?

How Not to Grow Your Merchant Cash Advance Business

August 23, 2011
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Advertising and marketing are tricky in any industry. The Merchant Cash Advance space has certainly experienced its fair share of trial and error over the past several years. What works for one company, doesn’t for another.

Many argue that there are no virtually no barriers to entry and this causes problematic issues in competition. Some representatives don’t know what they’re selling, how to sell it, or what can and can’t be said when they’re selling it. There are so many fly by night resellers, that states are running out of LLCs  to issue. “Merchant funding capital advance now approved accredited finance business source solutions, LLC” is the going fast! Better Organize it now.

For ones that make it, they have the good leads.

Blake: These are the new leads. These are the Glengarry leads. And to you they’re gold, and you don’t get them. Why? Because to give them to you would be throwing them away. They’re for closers.

But there is good way to not grow your Merchant Cash Advance business and that is to be so desperate, that you buy actual piles of garbage. These leads are obtained through sources that advertise in this manner:

You can find stuff like these in forums, along with a shady hotmail address, no website and a promise of ‘top quality.’ If your business model is to buy leads, then make sure to have your Ch. 11 papers handy before you purchase these TOP QUALITY LEADS!!!

Also watch out for ‘try before you buy’ schemes:  Get 5 trial leads for $50. if you like them, you can purchase a minimum of 100 at a time for a cost of $20 per lead. There are no refunds when you buy them. The 5 trial leads are real. The $2,000 bulk purchase is a flaming pile of crap.

Shelley Levene: The leads are weak.

Hope that helps. I would love to share more insight right now but a payday loan company with a predictive dialer is calling my phone and I’m eager to talk to someone in India who can provide a vague description of the product and have my information sold to 5 companies who swear I had completed a contact form online for car insurance because that’s what their lead sheet says.

-The Merchant Cash Advance Resource

https://debanked.com/merchantcashadvanceresource.htm

Keep a Watchful Eye on Your Merchants Until New Years

August 23, 2011
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If you work in the Merchant Cash Advance(MCA) business, November and December should be your favorite months. Holiday sales translate into enormous surges in both cash advance and processing residuals. If you don’t know what residuals are or don’t have them included in your compensation structure then OOPS! (Your employer won’t like us too much).

A struggling ISO can rise out of the red on the coattails of their merchants and have a very black friday themselves. But proceed with caution for clients that have an outstanding MCA balance. The surge in sales can be all too tempting to keep for themselves. :mad:

   A photo we took at a store on Black Friday

Did your retail store client process a big fat ZERO on Black Friday? Did that liquor store do less business in the days leading up to Thanksgiving than in prior weeks? If so, the merchant may be hijacking your future receivables and with that, your largest residual paycheck of the year.

It is not uncommon for stores to hire temporary workers and open additional lanes and cash registers to accommodate increased foot traffic. It is also the time when their secret backup credit card machine they never told you about rears its ugly head. While we can sympathize with a business for needing extra terminals, we don’t condone the use of ones that breach their MCA contracts.

What to do? If you haven’t already, now is the time to call your clients to find out if they need additional equipment. It can’t hurt to make the first move before they act on their own and intentionally or unintentionally use another merchant processing service.

Additionally, some small business owners may try to process all sales in excess of their monthly average through an alternate machine. So a mall retail store processing $10,000 month on average continues to process that same $10,000 in November and December, leaving you completely unsuspecting that an additional $30,000 was processed elsewhere. Monitor the retail, food service, and liquor store accounts on a daily basis from now until New Years.

Treat your clients right and work with them to ensure they don’t miss a beat. Out of receipt paper? Ship them extra rolls! Processing an unusually large sale? Get the signed invoice or receipt to ensure funds are not held.

Veterans in the Merchant Cash Advance business have come to expect this last month and half of the year to be the most rewarding. But make sure the merchants are equipped to handle the sales, monitor their activity, and keep an eye on them. Happy Year End. :D

-The Merchant Cash Advance Resource

https://debanked.com/merchantcashadvanceresource.htm

Georgia Funding Statistics – November 2010

August 23, 2011
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The below is the number of advances made per funding source in Georgia for the month of November, 2010:


AdvanceMe                                16

Merchant Cash and Capital         8

Merchants Capital Access           6

1st Merchant Funding                  5

Strategic Funding Source            4

Merchant Capital Source             4

On Deck Capital                           2

First Funds                                   2

Max Advance                               2

RapidAdvance                             2

AmeriMerchant                            2

Snap Advances                           1

Business Financial Services        1

American Finance Solutions        1

Bankcard Funding                        1

The Business Backer                   1

Merchant Cash Group                  0

Capital For Merchants                  0

Greystone Business Resources   0

EZ Business Cash Advance         0

GRP Funding                                0


New York Funding Statistics – November 2010

August 23, 2011
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New York Funding Statistics – November 2010
Posted on December 4, 2010 at 3:38 PM

The amount of deals funded per funding source for November 2010:

AdvanceMe 26

1st Merchant Funding 9

First Funds 9

Merchant Cash and Capital 8

Strategic Funding Source 7

On Deck Capital 7

Max Advance 7

RapidAdvance 5

Snap Advances 3

EZ Business Cash Advance 3

American Finance Solutions 3

Business Financial Services 2

Merchants Capital Access 2

Bancard Funding 1

The Business Backer 1

GRP Funding 1

Merchant Advance Funding LP 1

Business Consulting Options 1

AmeriMerchant 1

Happy Rock Merchant Solutions 1

Merchant Cash Group 0

Capital For Merchants 0

Greystone Business Resources 0

Merchant Capital Source 0

10% Closing Cost Rediscovered. Previously Thought to be Extinct

August 23, 2011
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At least two merchants have approached us in the past 30 days and requested an unbiased opinion on whether or not they were getting a good deal. Given that our site rarely gets such requests, we found it quite shocking that BOTH contracts submitted to us for review included a closing fee equal to 10% of the funded amount.

Thought to have gone extinct shortly after the West African Black Rhino, 10% closing fees seem to have made a resurgence in the back corners of big urban phone rooms. While our official position is neither for or against the addition of service fees, almost everyone can agree that 10% is clearly excessive. Some companies just don’t get it. The secret to a successful business relationship is one where all parties benefit.

We won’t name any names here but if someone asks us if they’re getting a good deal with a 10% fee attached, we’ll let them know the truth “no.”

-The Merchant Cash Advance Resource

https://debanked.com/merchantcashadvanceresource.htm

Merchant Cash Advance Animation

August 23, 2011
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Very amateur but worth sharing. I think a better phrase might’ve been “Inflate your profits with a Merchant Cash Advance” since the terminal inflates. Hopefully your computer can handle a 1.4 megabyte animated image.

Take Your Rewards Card and Get Out of My Store

August 23, 2011
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2010 has been a wild ride for the payment network giants and card issuing banks. On the one hand, The Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act that went into effect July 21, made significant improvements to card acceptance policies for merchants(summary here). Businesses may now legally offer discounts to customers willing to pay in cash. In the past, business owners have argued that card interchange fees reduce profit margins and therefore they should have the right to incentivize cash payments. This argument won the hearts of lawmakers and is now law.

On the other hand, the U.S. Justice department filed antitrust lawsuits against card behemoths Visa, MasterCard, and American Express on October 4th for anticompetive practices. It broaches the same issue, the ability for merchants to incentivize discounts for cash. Visa and MasterCard settled immediately, citing mainly that the lawsuit sought to challenge policies that had already been changed. They did however agree to expand on a merchant’s right to incentivize discounts, including (and most shocking) their right to discourage the use of a rewards card by a consumer. A direct quote from Visa’s press release on the subject “As part of the settlement, Visa will allow U.S. merchants to offer discounts or other incentives to steer customers to a particular form of payment including to a specific network brand or to any card product, such as a “non-reward” Visa credit card.”

The ramifications of this settlement are earth shaking. A retailer still can’t discriminate amongst card issuing banks and everyone would agree that’s fair. For instance a business can’t choose to only accept Bank of America Visa cards and not accept HSBC visa cards. The problem is that customer John Doe has a rewards card that pays him 1% Cash Back on all purchases. When he makes a $100 purchase, the $1 is credited to him by the bank that issued him the card. Most consumers don’t realize that cost is passed on to the business, who is then essentially being charged an additional 1% in their interchange fees to pay for John Doe’s reward.

Business owners made the case that they should have the right to offer a discount for cash or as it now becomes clear, the right to tell their customer not to use a rewards card.

I use my rewards credit card everywhere I go, and I tend to fall in the obnoxious category of consumers that whip it out just to buy a $1 cup of coffee. Until recently, any retailer enforcing a credit card sales minimum was in breach of policy and subject to termination for card acceptance altogether. Many retailers took the risk anyway. That policy was abolished in the Wall Street Act in July. Businesses now have the right to set a minimum. Having worked in the payments industry for several years, it was a necessary and long overdue step.

The average individual transaction cost is 20 cents, which excludes the interchange rate. A $1 cup of coffee would generate a loss of 23 cents in card fees alone, therein making the sale moot for the retailer. Consumer card behavior is difficult to change. I still try to use my card for coffee for example, regardless of the impact.

Larger ticket items are certain to create a consumer uproar. Here’s the problem:

John Doe goes to Best Buy and pays $100 for DVDs on his regular Visa card. Next in line is myself and I try to purchase the same DVDs with my 1% Cash Back rewards card. The cashier tells me I can either:

A. Pay $101 with my rewards card

B. Use a non-rewards card and pay $100 like John Doe did

C. Pay $98 in cash

While it is great to have options, my non-rewards card is reserved only for emergencies and I don’t have that much cash in my wallet. While it’s only a $1 difference, I’d like to pay the same amount as the previous customer. After all that $1 “cash back” isn’t immediately credited to my bank account, it’s stored as account points which will accrue over time and eventually pay me a reward. As far as I can tell the previous customer was using the same rectangular piece of plastic as me. Why should my personal private rewards contract with my bank now interfere with my ability buy products at the same price as other people?

The cashier argues that the retail price of the DVDs are $101 and $1 off is essentially the discount for using a non-rewards card. The consumer in me doesn’t seem to agree and the fictional Best Buy in this scenario would have a discrimination lawsuit on their hands.

As a card payments veteran, I find this discretion beneficial to the business, but as a consumer I find it intrusive and discriminatory. I would not like cashiers to inspect for reward program clues every time I use my card. If the signatures match, I’d like to pay the same price as every other customer.

My bank recently offered a limited-time-only 3% Cash Back program. I can only imagine what would happen when you actually try to use it. “Hey you, get out my store!”  The new rewards card these days is the card that rewards you with a discount for not using a rewards card. Thank you Justice Department and Congress for making every day ‘opposite day.’

And to the first retailer that tells me they have the right to charge me more for using a Cash Back card, I’ll see you in court.

https://debanked.com