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The SMB payment space has been getting mighty crowded since Square’s 2010 launch. Major merchant acquirers such as PayPal, Groupon, Intuit, VeriFone, Heartland Payment, Swipely, Merchant Warehouse and Total Merchant Services have joined Square in the battle for small spending but high volume merchants.

Some may even be subsidizing payment fees in order to get around Square’s appealing, flat rate 2.75 percent fee (plus transaction). Groupon, for instance, has a 1.8 percent for its clients (plus 15 cents per transaction.) LevelUp waives the fee altogether for merchants who also run an ad program with it.

Now comes Punchey, a Boston-based, 20 person startup launched by Yodle Founder Nate Stevens. Punchey’s pursuing small merchants who typically use their Visa or MasterCard accounts to process payments over $50 (i.e. beyond food truck merchants and quick service restaurants.)

Like others, it hopes to use attractive payment processing fees to win accounts that will use other services, especially CRM, reputation management and marketing in general. It charges .75 percent on top of Interchange costs – which range from .50 percent to approximately two percent, depending on the card type and merchant risk.It includes a ten cent fee that banks charge to connect to Visa, MasterCard and Discover.

Stevens says Punchey will save substantial money for merchants that don’t need to simplify their business to flat but inflated fees – or bind themselves into high commission sales relationships in order to get a low processing fee.

Merchants start saving money on transactions over $18, with merchants saving 59 cents on a $50 transaction, he says. That translates to $4.55 on a $250 transaction, and $9.43 on a $500 transaction.

From Stevens’ point of view, Punchey’s found a niche that has much lower processor attrition rate than Square’s target audience of very small businesses. Moreover, successful merchants tend to graduate from operating with the single, personal cell phone that was Square’s original forte. Punchey’s typical client will have between two and 10 employees, he notes.

The company has been testing with 500 merchants around the U.S. for several months. Today, it formally rolls out a self-serve product geared to mobile service providers and businesses that take cards on the phone, such as carpet cleaners and contractors. It will soon launch a telemarketing effort for Brick & Mortar merchants as well, such as frame shops, bike stores and salons.

This Post Has 3 Comments

  1. Get A Merchant payment processing services from Payscout and process your credit cards to get Guaranteed payments. Attract new customers and keep the existing merchants come back to you.

  2. I think merchant services have better customer service than mobile payments have. If someone is using a mobile payment device and is not tech savvy… they might have a hard time getting help.

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