AndrewH wrote:Interestingly, Wave Apps is powered by Stripe.
That's very interesting. I was definitely going down the route of Stripe but as it's aimed at web designers and not the layman, I had to get my webguy involved. The cost of setting it up on my website was several hundred pounds. When I then started reading less than favourable reports on Stripe with regards to when you have a problem, I hesitated to make that sort of investment. The main worry is if you have a chargeback, apparently you really struggle to reach anyone with Stripe and there is no contact number.
How does wave actually work? I'm guessing it's not something you need to host on your website? The fees on the main page are different to that in the FAQs so maybe they haven't updated their FAQs.
I suggest you may want to check out the Wave Apps link I had in my post this morning
It cost nothing to sign up ,all you need is the guests e mail address, you send guests an "e mail invoice" which allows them to pay by Credit/Debit card , it uses Stripe at the back end
I think the current commission in the UK is 1.9% which seems very reasonable to me
Found a video on You Tube which helps explain https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NNX54VEU_ag
Thanks Larry, that's really helpful. I had clicked the link and had a quick look but it really wasn't clear how it worked, so that video shows how simple it is. I assume you can choose to pass the fees on should you wish? I currently do this with Paypal so my instinct is to carry on doing that, especially as it's so much cheaper than Paypal.
Actually, Stripe's commission for European customers is only 1.4% plus 20 pence. I think they are lining themselves up to compete with HA and Yapstones.
Nemo, I found Stripe staff (in America) quite anxious to be helpful. Brian, or someone there, kept wanting to "reach out" to me, which had me worried, but I later found that all it meant was wanting to contact me by email!
VillaAntonioLanzarote wrote:I suggest you may want to check out the Wave Apps link I had in my post this morning
It cost nothing to sign up ,all you need is the guests e mail address, you send guests an "e mail invoice" which allows them to pay by Credit/Debit card , it uses Stripe at the back end
I think the current commission in the UK is 1.9% which seems very reasonable to me
Found a video on You Tube which helps explain https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NNX54VEU_ag
kevsboredagain wrote:
I went through the website but could not see how the business is funded. Nothing is ever free so they must make income from somewhere.
Well it's not free as they have the fees, but here's your answer on the about us page.
We’ve been recognized with various industry awards, and have secured nearly $20 million in investment from some of the smartest investors in Toronto, Boston and Silicon Valley.
AndrewH wrote:Actually, Stripe's commission for European customers is only 1.4% plus 20 pence. I think they are lining themselves up to compete with HA and Yapstones.
Nemo, I found Stripe staff (in America) quite anxious to be helpful. Brian, or someone there, kept wanting to "reach out" to me, which had me worried, but I later found that all it meant was wanting to contact me by email!
Those rates make the decision quite easy then. I think I'll give it a try. "Reach out" yes, a very US centric term that makes us over the pond shrink away.
Thanks v much for the tip, Larry / Villa Antonio. Have registered with WaveApps / Stripe and created some professional-looking draft invoices.
I have linked the Stripe end to my bank account, but have stopped short of giving WaveApps all my online banking info. (Think this is to enable them to offer additional services I don't need.)
I have set some draft invoices up and apparently accepted credit cards but it is not clear how this all works! It then led me to connect a bank account which I thought was to receive payments but I'm not sure that was the case, so I disconnected it again. It was showing a bank statement under transactions so I think that's a step too far!
Last edited by Nemo on Wed Jun 01, 2016 6:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.