PayPal's Seller Protection Program shields merchants from two complaint types, unauthorized transactions and item not received, but only when an order meets PayPal's strict eligibility standards. Merchants can further cut chargebacks by sharing contact information, responding quickly to inquiries, posting a clear return policy, giving realistic delivery dates, and shipping with tracking and insurance.
Making secure online sales can be a challenge for businesses. Online retailers enjoy the benefits of being able to sell their products at anytime to anyone who may be interested, but this comes with the added risk of not being able to adequately collect the money they are due. In this blog let's take an in-depth look into Paypal's protections for businesses that aim to minimize claims, merchant fraud, and chargebacks.
Seller Protection Program
More than almost anything security and peace of mind are essential for online retailers. Paypal created a seller protection program to give retailers and merchants the invaluable assets of these two things by focusing on guarding businesses from losing money to claims and chargebacks. Paypal's Seller Protection Program zeros in on the two types of consumer complaints unauthorized transaction and item not received.
If a consumer complains that they never authorized the charges made to your business or never received the items they ordered this could affect your Paypal balance. However, Seller Protection vigorously analyzes these contested charges, and ONLY if they pass Paypal's rigorous standards then your business's account balance will not change despite the fact that the consumer claims that they never authorized the charges or received their items. These rigorous standards sometimes give head ache to merchants, one of the reasons that could be easier to rely on a fraud protection solution instead.
Tips On Avoiding Chargeback Disputes
Chargebacks are no good for your business, but if you follow a few easy tips on your end then you may find that the number of chargebacks occurring to you significantly reduces. Let's explore some ways that you can avoid chargebacks or make the process that much smoother.
Tips to Avoid Item Not Received Claims
Item not received claims are one of the most common reasons chargebacks occur to businesses. You can avoid these types of situations by following a few simple tips that will not only give you peace of mind but ensure that your shipments are always accounted for.
There are many different facets to operating a business that sells products online especially when there are real cases of fraud that do occur to businesses and to consumers alike. It is important to be careful about all of the transactions that you make online, and to be understanding to your customers when they are the victims of fraud or have simply forgot that they made a charge to your business.
In card-not-present transactions, merchants alone bear the brunt of chargebacks, so it’s important to be prepared — and protected. E-commerce survival means minimizing fraud losses while successfully processing legitimate sales; a solid risk management solution can help you do just that.
Contact us today to learn more about how ClearSale’s Chargeback Protection Insurance solution can help you increase your revenue, let you approve more orders and guarantee you’ll never again pay for chargebacks.
It focuses on two consumer complaint types: unauthorized transactions and item not received. If a contested charge passes PayPal's rigorous standards, the merchant's account balance is not affected even when the buyer claims they never authorized or received the order.
Coverage applies only if the transaction meets PayPal's strict eligibility standards, which can be hard for merchants to satisfy. Because many disputes fall outside those standards, some merchants find it easier to rely on a dedicated fraud protection solution.
Provide clear contact information so customers can reach you before disputing, respond quickly to buyer inquiries, point disputes to the PayPal Resolution Center, and publish a clear return and refund policy in plain language to remove ambiguity.
Give customers realistic delivery dates so they do not file claims while a package is still in transit, ship with a service that offers online tracking to confirm delivery, and add shipping insurance, which also provides tracking and delivery records.
It is a space where buyers and sellers can work out contested charges and disagreements. If a customer threatens a chargeback with their bank or card issuer, a merchant can suggest using the Resolution Center to resolve the issue first.
In card-not-present transactions, merchants alone absorb the cost of chargebacks. That makes prevention and a solid risk management solution essential to minimize fraud losses while still approving legitimate sales.