For consumers whose credit cards are used in online fraud, there's no loss. The bogus charges are almost always refunded. But for online retailers who get conned into processing the orders, there is no relief.
If it's fraud, you get a chargeback. You're out the order, the merchandise you shipped and the online fees charged by your credit card processor.
Those chargebacks are never pleasant. In the early days, I had my share. But after plenty of grumbling, I decided to consider them what financial expert and radio talk show host Dave Ramsey calls a "stupid tax."
Then, I set my mind to learn from them so I wouldn't keep paying the "stupid tax."
I started by making a list of every chargeback I was hit with over a 12-month period. I rigorously examined them, looking for patterns and similarities. As a result, I instituted some security procedures and checklists that have worked well in greatly reducing the fraud losses from my stores.
I still get stung, but very rarely these days.
The one single step that has most helped reduce fraudulent orders for me and my stores is to eliminate shipping to any location other than North America. I know, that's a drastic step. But while I no doubt do indeed do lose some legitimate business from overseas customers, it has been my experience that most fraud originates overseas.
And my experience is not unusual. Once recent study I have seen, from Cybersource, notes that fraud rates on overseas orders are four times the level of North American orders. Thus, not allowing orders from places other than the U.S. and Canada helps eliminate many of the problems.
Still, almost every day, some thief still tries to get through. Most of them are from criminals trying to see if a credit card number they have is still good. They'll place an order and provide a ship-to address in the U.S.
Below are my top 10 suggestions for catching the fraud before you complete the transaction. As many of these flags as you have on an order, the more apt it is bogus:
1) Shipping FedEx overnight is a frequent marker. The thief figures the merchant will move so fast to process the order that there won't be too much scrutiny. A dead give away and cause for you to seriously question the oder is when the overnight shipping costs approximate the item's cost.
2) Look at the phone number and e-mail address provided by the customer. Does the area code match the city and state of the customer? If the customer uses a free Yahoo!, Hotmail, or Google account, does it correspond to the customer's name? Thieves always use these free accounts. So, of course, do many genuine customers. But an e-mail to a domain not associated with free web-based accounts, with a username (the part before the "@" sign) that matches the customer, is usually good.
3) If your store has referrer info on orders, like Yahoo! Stores provides, for example, examine how the customer found you. My store's order info lists the search phrase they used, or the last page they came from. Thieves tend to search on phrases like "international shipping" or "overnight delivery" instead of the category or keywords products are advertised under.
4) Check the IP address. And IP (Internet Protocol) address is a unique numerical identifier that much like a house address. In this case, it identifies the computer network that the order came from. Your oder processing software should also show you the IP address that the order was sent from. Check it out. On my Yahoo! Stores, all I have to do is click the address and it does a trace, identifying the network location. If it's overseas, shipping to the U.S., I consider it fraud unless I can call the phone number and talk to a real customer.
5) Beware of mail forwarding operations and shipping to Post Office Boxes. Watch out for mail processing locations. Many thieves order your items from overseas and have them shipped to maildrops. Often, instead of a box number, these locations can be spotted by having a "suite" number under the address line. Miami and Houston have a bunch of maildrops serving South America. Seattle and Los Angeles have them for Asia. New Your City handles Africa and Eastern Europe. If suspicious, run the customer address through Google. Often you'll see it listed to a service for mail forwarding company.
6) Be suspicious if the shipping address and the billing address on the order are different. At the very least, whenever this happens, don't process the order unless you call the customer to confirm the order. Some stores even make it a policy to ship only to the billing address listed for the credit card. I get a lot of orders from parents buying my products for their kids who are away at college so that's not a policy we impose. But we always call when the addresses are different.
7) Always expect fraud when you get multiple orders submitted from the same customer in sequence, using the same credit card, or the same ship-to address.
8) Beware of unusually large orders. You know from your oder processing reports,what the average customer buys. You know what is a big order. Is it over $250? Over $500? Over $1,000? When the norms are exceeded you should carefully examine the order.
9) Be skeptical when you get orders with multiple quantities of the same product. It is common for fraudulent orders to be large quantities of a single item.
10) Look for typos, grammar and punctuation errors. Serious customers make mistakes in filling our your oder forms. But not nearly as often as thieves do.
If I had to boil everything down to a single piece of advice, it would be this: When in doubt, try to reach the customer. If the phone is disconnected, mark it as fraud. If there is no answer, leave a message on the answering machine. Then send an e-mail. If after 24 hours the e-mail and the call are not returned, do not process.
These are just some of the fraud indicators and precautions I've learned over the years. They are by no means exhaustive. But I have instructed all my employees to filter our orders through skeptical eyes. As a result, we've diminished our chargebacks to only two or three cases a year.
Top 10 Credit Card
Ever wonder how some people deep in credit card debt manage to come out on top financially? This is the hypothetical but realistic story of Emily, one person who dug herself out of $10,000 in credit card debt in just a few years.
Never a big spender, Emily was shocked when she noticed that her two credit cards had a combined balance of $10,000. What happened?
* Emily took a lower-paying job when the economy went bust at the turn of the millennium.
* Hoping her lower income would be temporary, Emily didn't sell her house to get one with a lower mortgage. She didn't sell her expensive car to buy a cheaper one, since she would get much less than she had paid for it. In reality, the thought of driving a less-nice car was painful
* Emily paid only the minimum monthly credit card payment most months. She was paying interest, and interest on interest, buying the privilege of having the credit card company hold onto her debt another month.
* When one of Emily's credit card balances got within a few hundred dollars of the credit limit, her interest rate on the card skyrocketed from 17 to 27% .
Loans: Emily's Salvation?
Emily considered taking out a loan to pay off her credit card debt. She owned a condominium whose property values had increased 40% since she bought it, so she could easily get a good low-interest second mortgage.
But a loan scared Emily: it would mean admitting her debt would not go away soon. Besides, Emily wanted to get rid of her debt, not trade (her unsecured debt for secured debt). Plus, she knew that if she ever couldn't pay the second mortgage, she would lose her house, while failing to pay credit card bills would just mean a ruined credit rating.
For about a year, Emily argued with herself over whether to take out a loan to pay off her credit card. Then catastrophe hit: her beautiful car was totaled in an accident. While shopping for a new car with friends, Emily finally had to admit to herself that buying another car like the one she had had would be financial suicide.
Finding an Answer
Emily cried and cried as soon as she got home from the car dealership that day. It wasn't just that she would have to admit that she wasn't someone who could afford the car she had been driving. When Emily's parents were her age, they had already bought a five-bedroom house; Emily's one-bedroom condominium was already a stretch. If she ever got married to a man with the same financial picture as she had, she wasn't sure they'd be able to afford children. Growing up, her parents had always told her she'd do better than they had. What went wrong?
Emily did not have to think hard about what went wrong. Her father had been able to pay for college with what he earned at summer jobs, and then got a manager-level job straight out of school. Between college and graduate school, Emily had accumulated $70,000 in student debt that she was still slowly paying off. Houses in Emily's town, even adjusting for inflation, cost several times what they did when Emily's parents bought one. Cars had leaped in price about as much. The only thing that hadn't gone up was income.
Unable to cope with having less than her parents had, Emily had used her credit cards.
Solving the Problem
Emily knew that since her lack of financial skills had dug her into her rut, she would need outside help to dig herself back out.
She had heard about credit counseling services that took large chunks of the payments you made against your debt, so she was careful. She found a counseling agency that was a member of the Better Business Bureau, American Association of Debt Management Organizations and whose credit counselors are certified through the National Institute for Financial Counseling Education. Doing a quick search on the web, Emily verified that these were organizations with real standards and not just empty names.
Here's what Emily got from the credit counseling service:
* Relief. Emily was relieved to learn that her $10,000 credit card debt is in fact about average for Americans. The credit counseling agency showed her that even if she didn't have the advantages she had–a decent job and home equity–she would be able to rid herself of her debt if she just faced up to it.
* Surprise. The agency urged her to put money away for a rainy day fund, even as her credit card interest mounted. But once she started saving, she felt amazing. She realized she had been under enormous stress from always being one paycheck away from poverty.
* Understanding. The counselor understood Emily's reluctance to take out a loan, and helped her create a budget that would let her pay off her consolidated debt within a few years. Besides the car, all Emily had to give up were smaller expenses.
Both Mike Fletcher & Joel Walsh are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Mike Fletcher has sinced written about articles on various topics from About Branding, Nutrition and Iphone Reviews. The author is publisher of the and the. Mike Fletcher's top article generates over 27100 views. to your Favourites.
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