Away We Go When it came time to decide whether or not Pay Anywhere should give away its card reader for free or charge a fee as some of its competitors do, Gardner said that the decision ultimately came down to the opportunity at hand. “We wanted to grab a lot of the opportunity,” Gardner said. “We felt that in order to grab a material amount of market share, we needed to make the platform. We couldn't give away the phone because Apple AAPL has already taken care of that. Historically, we used to give away the credit card terminal, which acted as the device that accepted the credit cards. Wireless providers like AT&T T, Verizon VZ, Sprint S, etc., are already giving away the phones. So the device we're giving away is just the card reader that plugs into the audio jack or the 30-pin port for the Apple iPhone.” Gardner also stressed Pay Anywhere's goal to stand out from the pack. “We really wanted to have the opportunity to differentiate our offering from those of our competitors and to provide no fees for the software,” he said. “Some of our competitors actually charge for software. And you don't need a card reader to use Pay Anywhere. It actually does reduce your rate if you swipe the card. But if you don't have the card reader with you, you can still manually enter the credit card transactional information into the phone – into the Pay Anywhere software.”
A Simplified Solution Finally, Gardner sums up Pay Anywhere – which plans to expand to Canada in the near-term – as a really simplified solution. “The one thing that's most surprising is that we're seeing more and more brick-and-mortar merchants utilizing credit card acceptance on their smartphone versus a traditional countertop terminal because of all the features and functionalities within the software,” Gardner revealed. “So the amount of memory in your phone far exceeds the amount of memory in a VeriFone PAY or Hypercom HYC credit card terminal. Where those units are traditionally a few gigs, most phones are 16 to 32 to 64, depending on what the consumer opts in for. So the amount of memory that we're able to utilize within the software – it just provides such a better user experience for the merchant that it's just shocking how many vets, how many radiologists, doctors, lawyers, would rather accept credit cards on their phone versus a clunky antiquated terminal.” Gardner said that he and his team never anticipated that. “We anticipated this being for micro-merchants and for mobile merchants,” he said. “You know, your limousine driver, your tow-truck service provider, etc. We're seeing a real material propensity for brick-and-mortar merchants to utilize this because they like the interface, they like the software, they love the form factor. It's one less piece of hardware clustering up their countertop.” Photos by Louis Bedigian
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