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Report: #215230

Complaint Review: Transtech Merchant Group. First American Payment System. Summit Risk. - Fort Worth Texas

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  • Reported By: montgomery Alabama
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  • Transtech Merchant Group. First American Payment System. Summit Risk. 201 Main St. Suite 1000 Fort Worth, Texas U.S.A.

Transtech Merchant Group. First American Payment System. Summit Risk. ripoff dishonest cant honor contract. run around on refund.wont respond in writing Fort Worth Texas

*Consumer Suggestion: Understand Credit Card Processing Costs

*Consumer Suggestion: Understand Credit Card Processing Costs

*Consumer Suggestion: Understand Credit Card Processing Costs

*Consumer Suggestion: Understand Credit Card Processing Costs

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tom roberts sales man for transtech . had come by to show me how they can save me money on creid card processing. showed tom rates , need better rates on commercial card and getting billed 200.00 extra on statement. i faxed a copy to toms team leader#6, chris johnson. chris and i talk about extras , chris told me that visa - mc dont do that . it is my processing co. screw you. gave ck. for set up, contract stats 1.72 rate . 4 days later rena calls , to set terminal. i asked her about the rates. rena said that rate only appiles only to swip cards. i told i dont swip cards ,and chris johnson that would be the the only rate. rena said i will find out about that. they cashed my ck. and the rest is the corp. run around. then i get a bill for services i dont even have. called jonathan hughes at 800-701-2831 at fist american payment sys. told me he has nothing to due with transtech. call andy frankel at 888-415-0004 leave message3 times. call chris johnson he transfer to first american payment sys. they say we have nothing to do with transtech. you need to get refund from transtech.

Ron
montgomery, Alabama
U.S.A.

This report was posted on Ripoff Report on 10/11/2006 11:38 AM and is a permanent record located here: https://www.ripoffreport.com/reports/transtech-merchant-group-first-american-payment-system-summit-risk/fort-worth-texas-76102/transtech-merchant-group-first-american-payment-system-summit-risk-ripoff-dishonest-can-215230. The posting time indicated is Arizona local time. Arizona does not observe daylight savings so the post time may be Mountain or Pacific depending on the time of year. Ripoff Report has an exclusive license to this report. It may not be copied without the written permission of Ripoff Report. READ: Foreign websites steal our content

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#4 Consumer Suggestion

Understand Credit Card Processing Costs

AUTHOR: Jason - (U.S.A.)

POSTED: Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Unfortunately, it sounds like you have been misled. It is often a lack of understanding about how merchant processing services are priced that leads merchants to make poor decisions about their processor based solely on perceived costs instead of on areas where there are actualyy important differences - like service, support and education. In a nutshell, the only way you will realize big savings on your merchant processing statements is if you are currently being ripped off.

Visa and MasterCard, the card associations, receive the majority of the fees that merchants pay for their processing services. The remainder of the fees, or the margin, is what the merchant processor receives. The card associations have designated over 240 different card categories that each merchant processor must recognize and process. Every merchant processor, no matter how big or small, is charged the same rates and fees by the card associations and every merchant processor differentiates each card category utilizing exactly the same card category name as designated by the card associations.

The card categories are designated in the following manner:
1.) Industry Retail, Restaurant, Hotel, Government, Utility, Service Industry, Gas Station, Supermarket, etc.
2.) Type of Card Personal Visa or MasterCard, Visa or MasterCard Debit, Visa Rewards, MasterCard World, Commercial Visa, Corporate MasterCard, etc.
3.) Method of Processing Face-to-Face (swipe), Mail Order/Telephone Order, Key Entered, E-Commerce, etc.
4.) Processing Efficiency Address Verification, Authorization/Settle Match, Timeliness of Settlement, etc.

These categories are as diverse as they seem. If a cardholder uses the same card to buy something from a retail establishment, lunch at a restaurant and pay their electric bill, all three of these transactions will be designated as a separate card and rate category. If a retail establishment accepts two different types of cards (ex. - a Visa Debit Card and a Visa Rewards Card) for a purchase of the exact same amount, both of these transactions will be designated as a separate card and rate category. The same is true for a Face-to-Face transaction as opposed to a telephone order. Furthermore, if a merchant does take a telephone order and doesn't enter the required cardholder information, the transaction will be downgraded to a higher priced card and rate category than a properly executed telephone order.

So what does all of this mean to you?

For many merchants, the hardest thing to do is accept the fact that the merchant processing system, to some extent, simply is what it is. There really are that many card categories. There really are that many different rates and fees. Your merchant processor deals with and manages this system they do not have the power to change it. Any merchant processor who claims to be dealing with a better or more advantageous system than other processors isn't being honest.

Sure, some merchant processors offer a simplified statement format with bundled categories, but only to keep from disclosing individual rates. The simpler the statement format the less a merchant knows about what their true credit card processing costs are or should be. A simple statement also makes it very difficult to perform an accurate comparison to other programs. For many merchant processors, their most successful customer retention tool is their customer's complete inability to understand their services.

Every merchant should insist that their merchant processor identify and define the rate category of every type of card they receive so that there is a better understanding of what fees are being paid, why the fees are paid, whether their processing can be done more efficiently and if their processor offers truly competitive services. Any processor that will not assist a merchant in achieving these goals either has something to hide or is not able to offer the services that any customer has the right to expect.

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#3 Consumer Suggestion

Understand Credit Card Processing Costs

AUTHOR: Jason - (U.S.A.)

POSTED: Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Unfortunately, it sounds like you have been misled. It is often a lack of understanding about how merchant processing services are priced that leads merchants to make poor decisions about their processor based solely on perceived costs instead of on areas where there are actualyy important differences - like service, support and education. In a nutshell, the only way you will realize big savings on your merchant processing statements is if you are currently being ripped off.

Visa and MasterCard, the card associations, receive the majority of the fees that merchants pay for their processing services. The remainder of the fees, or the margin, is what the merchant processor receives. The card associations have designated over 240 different card categories that each merchant processor must recognize and process. Every merchant processor, no matter how big or small, is charged the same rates and fees by the card associations and every merchant processor differentiates each card category utilizing exactly the same card category name as designated by the card associations.

The card categories are designated in the following manner:
1.) Industry Retail, Restaurant, Hotel, Government, Utility, Service Industry, Gas Station, Supermarket, etc.
2.) Type of Card Personal Visa or MasterCard, Visa or MasterCard Debit, Visa Rewards, MasterCard World, Commercial Visa, Corporate MasterCard, etc.
3.) Method of Processing Face-to-Face (swipe), Mail Order/Telephone Order, Key Entered, E-Commerce, etc.
4.) Processing Efficiency Address Verification, Authorization/Settle Match, Timeliness of Settlement, etc.

These categories are as diverse as they seem. If a cardholder uses the same card to buy something from a retail establishment, lunch at a restaurant and pay their electric bill, all three of these transactions will be designated as a separate card and rate category. If a retail establishment accepts two different types of cards (ex. - a Visa Debit Card and a Visa Rewards Card) for a purchase of the exact same amount, both of these transactions will be designated as a separate card and rate category. The same is true for a Face-to-Face transaction as opposed to a telephone order. Furthermore, if a merchant does take a telephone order and doesn't enter the required cardholder information, the transaction will be downgraded to a higher priced card and rate category than a properly executed telephone order.

So what does all of this mean to you?

For many merchants, the hardest thing to do is accept the fact that the merchant processing system, to some extent, simply is what it is. There really are that many card categories. There really are that many different rates and fees. Your merchant processor deals with and manages this system they do not have the power to change it. Any merchant processor who claims to be dealing with a better or more advantageous system than other processors isn't being honest.

Sure, some merchant processors offer a simplified statement format with bundled categories, but only to keep from disclosing individual rates. The simpler the statement format the less a merchant knows about what their true credit card processing costs are or should be. A simple statement also makes it very difficult to perform an accurate comparison to other programs. For many merchant processors, their most successful customer retention tool is their customer's complete inability to understand their services.

Every merchant should insist that their merchant processor identify and define the rate category of every type of card they receive so that there is a better understanding of what fees are being paid, why the fees are paid, whether their processing can be done more efficiently and if their processor offers truly competitive services. Any processor that will not assist a merchant in achieving these goals either has something to hide or is not able to offer the services that any customer has the right to expect.

Respond to this report!
What's this?

#2 Consumer Suggestion

Understand Credit Card Processing Costs

AUTHOR: Jason - (U.S.A.)

POSTED: Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Unfortunately, it sounds like you have been misled. It is often a lack of understanding about how merchant processing services are priced that leads merchants to make poor decisions about their processor based solely on perceived costs instead of on areas where there are actualyy important differences - like service, support and education. In a nutshell, the only way you will realize big savings on your merchant processing statements is if you are currently being ripped off.

Visa and MasterCard, the card associations, receive the majority of the fees that merchants pay for their processing services. The remainder of the fees, or the margin, is what the merchant processor receives. The card associations have designated over 240 different card categories that each merchant processor must recognize and process. Every merchant processor, no matter how big or small, is charged the same rates and fees by the card associations and every merchant processor differentiates each card category utilizing exactly the same card category name as designated by the card associations.

The card categories are designated in the following manner:
1.) Industry Retail, Restaurant, Hotel, Government, Utility, Service Industry, Gas Station, Supermarket, etc.
2.) Type of Card Personal Visa or MasterCard, Visa or MasterCard Debit, Visa Rewards, MasterCard World, Commercial Visa, Corporate MasterCard, etc.
3.) Method of Processing Face-to-Face (swipe), Mail Order/Telephone Order, Key Entered, E-Commerce, etc.
4.) Processing Efficiency Address Verification, Authorization/Settle Match, Timeliness of Settlement, etc.

These categories are as diverse as they seem. If a cardholder uses the same card to buy something from a retail establishment, lunch at a restaurant and pay their electric bill, all three of these transactions will be designated as a separate card and rate category. If a retail establishment accepts two different types of cards (ex. - a Visa Debit Card and a Visa Rewards Card) for a purchase of the exact same amount, both of these transactions will be designated as a separate card and rate category. The same is true for a Face-to-Face transaction as opposed to a telephone order. Furthermore, if a merchant does take a telephone order and doesn't enter the required cardholder information, the transaction will be downgraded to a higher priced card and rate category than a properly executed telephone order.

So what does all of this mean to you?

For many merchants, the hardest thing to do is accept the fact that the merchant processing system, to some extent, simply is what it is. There really are that many card categories. There really are that many different rates and fees. Your merchant processor deals with and manages this system they do not have the power to change it. Any merchant processor who claims to be dealing with a better or more advantageous system than other processors isn't being honest.

Sure, some merchant processors offer a simplified statement format with bundled categories, but only to keep from disclosing individual rates. The simpler the statement format the less a merchant knows about what their true credit card processing costs are or should be. A simple statement also makes it very difficult to perform an accurate comparison to other programs. For many merchant processors, their most successful customer retention tool is their customer's complete inability to understand their services.

Every merchant should insist that their merchant processor identify and define the rate category of every type of card they receive so that there is a better understanding of what fees are being paid, why the fees are paid, whether their processing can be done more efficiently and if their processor offers truly competitive services. Any processor that will not assist a merchant in achieving these goals either has something to hide or is not able to offer the services that any customer has the right to expect.

Respond to this report!
What's this?

#1 Consumer Suggestion

Understand Credit Card Processing Costs

AUTHOR: Jason - (U.S.A.)

POSTED: Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Unfortunately, it sounds like you have been misled. It is often a lack of understanding about how merchant processing services are priced that leads merchants to make poor decisions about their processor based solely on perceived costs instead of on areas where there are actualyy important differences - like service, support and education. In a nutshell, the only way you will realize big savings on your merchant processing statements is if you are currently being ripped off.

Visa and MasterCard, the card associations, receive the majority of the fees that merchants pay for their processing services. The remainder of the fees, or the margin, is what the merchant processor receives. The card associations have designated over 240 different card categories that each merchant processor must recognize and process. Every merchant processor, no matter how big or small, is charged the same rates and fees by the card associations and every merchant processor differentiates each card category utilizing exactly the same card category name as designated by the card associations.

The card categories are designated in the following manner:
1.) Industry Retail, Restaurant, Hotel, Government, Utility, Service Industry, Gas Station, Supermarket, etc.
2.) Type of Card Personal Visa or MasterCard, Visa or MasterCard Debit, Visa Rewards, MasterCard World, Commercial Visa, Corporate MasterCard, etc.
3.) Method of Processing Face-to-Face (swipe), Mail Order/Telephone Order, Key Entered, E-Commerce, etc.
4.) Processing Efficiency Address Verification, Authorization/Settle Match, Timeliness of Settlement, etc.

These categories are as diverse as they seem. If a cardholder uses the same card to buy something from a retail establishment, lunch at a restaurant and pay their electric bill, all three of these transactions will be designated as a separate card and rate category. If a retail establishment accepts two different types of cards (ex. - a Visa Debit Card and a Visa Rewards Card) for a purchase of the exact same amount, both of these transactions will be designated as a separate card and rate category. The same is true for a Face-to-Face transaction as opposed to a telephone order. Furthermore, if a merchant does take a telephone order and doesn't enter the required cardholder information, the transaction will be downgraded to a higher priced card and rate category than a properly executed telephone order.

So what does all of this mean to you?

For many merchants, the hardest thing to do is accept the fact that the merchant processing system, to some extent, simply is what it is. There really are that many card categories. There really are that many different rates and fees. Your merchant processor deals with and manages this system they do not have the power to change it. Any merchant processor who claims to be dealing with a better or more advantageous system than other processors isn't being honest.

Sure, some merchant processors offer a simplified statement format with bundled categories, but only to keep from disclosing individual rates. The simpler the statement format the less a merchant knows about what their true credit card processing costs are or should be. A simple statement also makes it very difficult to perform an accurate comparison to other programs. For many merchant processors, their most successful customer retention tool is their customer's complete inability to understand their services.

Every merchant should insist that their merchant processor identify and define the rate category of every type of card they receive so that there is a better understanding of what fees are being paid, why the fees are paid, whether their processing can be done more efficiently and if their processor offers truly competitive services. Any processor that will not assist a merchant in achieving these goals either has something to hide or is not able to offer the services that any customer has the right to expect.

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