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by mrweasel
3820 days ago
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We've had pretty much the opposite experience. We've used PayPal for a little less than a year. Setup is magnificently complex and perplexing. They assume that companies are people. There's no way in hell the CEO/owner of a business would spend 1.5 hour on the phone with an account manager, setting up the account. Want PayPal to transfer british pound to an non-british bank-account, then prepare for a world of pain. Their dispute resolution service is annoying a hell. Not that we don't want to resolve disputes with our customers, but we want to do it using our existing customer support channels. Not via PayPal. Having customers just randomly getting their money back without having contacted the business they bought the product from first isn't acceptable. It's the most expensive of all the payment solutions we offer our customer. Developer support is okay, but not helpful when their stuff doesn't work. We randomly get 500 errors from their REST api, which doesn't handle any sort of real volume. Black Friday pretty much killed PayPal. The PayPal web interface is the worst I've ever used. It's slow and almost impossible to search in. Searching using your own order numbers almost never works and you fall back to searching for customers last name, which is pretty much the only search that consistently work. We wouldn't use PayPal if our German customers didn't expect it. |
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That's actually a legal requirement in many countries, including the US--either the CEO or CFO of the company must directly deal with a financial institution when setting up a financial institution account (i.e., bank account--note that Paypal is a registered financial institution in nearly all of the jurisdictions in which it operates). My clients run into this all the time. It's a hassle, but it's one you simply have to accept as the cost of doing business in the big leagues.
Want PayPal to transfer british pound to an non-british bank-account, then prepare for a world of pain
Legally, yes. Because British law has rules about this, and as a financial institution Paypal is required to follow those rules. Those rules are deliberately onerous because the type of transaction you are describing was once widely used in tax evasion and money laundering schemes.