From Transaction to Experience: Incorporating Value at Checkout


In 2008, Apple introduced the App Store and quietly created an entirely new business model. The iPhone was already a runaway success but opening it up to third-party applications turned the product into a platform with a growing ecosystem of services that could be integrated into what consumers already use every day.

The same lesson applies to business today. Digital payments have been focused on enabling merchants to accept cards online, but this is a challenge that has largely been solved. So the opportunity now lies in maximizing what can happen when a payment is made – whether it’s delivering additional value or enhancing convenience – with the goal of adding new functionality and strengthening relationships with customers.

Embedded finance has been around for years so the concept isn’t particularly new, but the debate continues as technology and expectations evolve. What was once a strategic ideal is now becoming a reality.

Today’s customers simply expect their payment to work which raises the bar for merchants – which is why checkout is undoubtedly so important. Payment flows that refer customers to external banking pages or require manual steps are outdated, with studies showing that nearly 70% of online shopping carts are abandoned before purchase, mainly because checkout is slow, confusing, or has hidden costs.

Speed ​​and simplicity are expected, and payment options are key. A recent survey found that 77% of UK shoppers expect payments to be completed almost instantly, and 58% want a one-click checkout – otherwise they will abandon their cart. Credit cards, digital wallets, account-to-account transfers and pay-as-you-go purchases are all vying for attention, with another study reporting that 75% of consumers say that having their preferred payment method turns a “wanting” customer into a paying customer. Therefore, payment acceptance is not a differentiator but the foundation on which the business experience is built.

Embedded payments may have solved the problem of acceptance, but the next challenge soon became clear – customers can pay but that doesn’t always mean they can make a purchase, especially for big-ticket items.

Credit integration or buy now, pay later options are shown directly in the purchase flow to increase conversion rates and increase average order values. Many reports note that offering embedded financing at the point of sale leads to higher basket sizes and lower cart abandonment. A product that may have felt out of reach as a single payment can be managed when broken down into smaller installments but what is important is to do it responsibly.

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