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by Ayesh
1387 days ago
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I see.
One similar food delivery business I consulted at had a healthy (for the startup) margins at 30% from each order, so I suppose it's beefy enough to absorb some fraud. Not to derail from the discussion about Stripe, but having a local payment processor helps a lot. In countries with foreign reserve woes (Sri Lanka and Turkey for example), Central Banks impose additional restrictions when paying foreign entities with cards. This can be in stamp fees (about 2.5% of the amount) or a daily/weekly cap on the amount. For example, hardly anyone uses their credit cards with Uber in Sri Lanka because of this, and a local startup takes many times more orders because they partner with a local payment processor and charge the card as a local entity, sometimes with lower fees too. |
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The suggestion for a local payment processor is a good one. We have another processing entity here in Canada called Interac whose fees are considerably cheaper, though consumers don’t reap the benefits of credit since it’s debit.
I’ve also read about Uber’s efforts accepting cash payments which I found to be very interesting: https://www.uber.com/en-EE/blog/india-growth-cash-payments/