. Hello, my name is Edmundson and you are listening to the eCommerce Podcast.
Speaker:Yes, you are.
Speaker:Now, I've been an ecommerce since 2002, and these days I partner
Speaker:with ecommerce brands to help them grow scale, and finally exit.
Speaker:And if you'd like to know more about how that works, and if we could work together,
Speaker:head over to our website, eCommerce podcast.net, where you will find.
Speaker:All of that information now today I am joined.
Speaker:By the wonderful Frank Ano, the CEO and founder of Revolv3, a payment
Speaker:optimization platform, which is based in Laguna Beach of all places.
Speaker:'cause if you're gonna base a company, why not base it in Laguna Beach?
Speaker:Uh, we're tackling what I think is a massive, hidden problem
Speaker:for subscription businesses.
Speaker:Involuntary churn.
Speaker:Now we're gonna learn what this phrase means, but it's the thing, you know,
Speaker:that sort of painful situation where your loyal customers aren't actually choosing
Speaker:to leave, but they just can't pay you because of some payment processing glitch.
Speaker:Uh, and you know what?
Speaker:I wonder if we realize just how much money this is costing subscription commerce.
Speaker:Now, most merchants I speak to, we sort of seem to have
Speaker:the hope for the best strategy.
Speaker:You know, when it comes to payment providers, we pick one
Speaker:and we just hope it's gonna work.
Speaker:Uh, but Frank has actually built his own solution after years of frustration.
Speaker:With existing systems that couldn't minimize false declines or even maximize
Speaker:payment approvals before founding Revolve.
Speaker:Three.
Speaker:He spent over 20 years as an executive at Ingram, uh, Ingram
Speaker:Micro and Experian, which probably means he knows your credit score.
Speaker:Uh, and now he's on a mission to reshape the recurring payment market.
Speaker:Frank, welcome to the show.
Speaker:Let's jump into it.
Speaker:What.
Speaker:What was it that kickstarted this?
Speaker:What made you realize that payment processing, uh, was such a critical
Speaker:issue for subscription businesses and why weren't the existing problems, uh,
Speaker:existing solutions fixing it, I guess?
Speaker:Yeah, great question Matt.
Speaker:Thank you so much for having me on the show.
Speaker:So honored to be here.
Speaker:Love everything that you guys have done.
Speaker:Um, so I longtime ecommerce person, right?
Speaker:And I, I consider myself super sort of savvy with respect to payments, um,
Speaker:until I actually got into Experian.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, and just to give you some perspective, I ran business operations
Speaker:there for their consumer business.
Speaker:Um, lots of subscriptions, right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But a lot of churn related to it.
Speaker:Now you could say, well, you know, probably a lot of
Speaker:insufficient funds perhaps.
Speaker:Um, consumers with credit issues or things like that, but as we dove into it, it
Speaker:was a lot more nuanced than that, right?
Speaker:So a couple things to consider.
Speaker:Um, on average 10 to 14% of ecommerce orders decline.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Here's the crazy thing.
Speaker:About two thirds of those declines are what the industry calls false declines.
Speaker:Oh wow.
Speaker:So those are valid transactions that should have been approved.
Speaker:Um, if you wanna put that in perspective, last year, 2024, that was
Speaker:$600 billion worth of transactions.
Speaker:So, and that was just on my website,
Speaker:Frank,
Speaker:probably.
Speaker:Um, um, so it was interesting when I got to Experian and looking through
Speaker:the churn and yeah, we wanted to do.
Speaker:Get better at the voluntary side, right?
Speaker:Do we have the right offers in place?
Speaker:Um, is it, you know, a value to the customers and that sort of thing.
Speaker:But a large majority of those, of that churn issue was related
Speaker:to that involuntary side and the majority of it on the payment side.
Speaker:Um, so hired some management professional payments people in, had them show me
Speaker:all of the data, the decline codes.
Speaker:We did a bunch of analysis.
Speaker:And we weren't effectively managing that, right?
Speaker:We had right, tried to implement a Dunning solution, which is just, you
Speaker:know, maybe brute force trying to retry those transactions that they
Speaker:declined that was not effective.
Speaker:Lots of different things, and ended up ultimately building our own bespoke
Speaker:system to help manage and optimize it.
Speaker:Now here, here's a bit of secret around this stuff, the quality of data.
Speaker:That you pass in, that transaction matters significantly.
Speaker:Payments is a, is uh, built on a game of trust, right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So the issuing bank has to trust that that consumer is buying that product
Speaker:and that region for that price point, um, to approve that transaction.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:And there's a lot of different, um, parts of that.
Speaker:Um, ecosystem, right?
Speaker:You got the merchant, they're using some sort of platform, typically going
Speaker:through a payment gateway, then to the acquirer and processor through
Speaker:the networks, to the issuing bank.
Speaker:Everybody has a different set of fraud rules along the way.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Um, and, and so there's a lots of different steps in
Speaker:where that can go wrong.
Speaker:Um, we found that.
Speaker:Owning all of that transaction throughout, um, and establishing
Speaker:that trust with that issuing bank significantly improved our numbers.
Speaker:And also having raw response code data from those issuers
Speaker:to know how to optimize.
Speaker:Everybody has different error, uh uh, or decline codes or things like that,
Speaker:and knowing what that actually means and how to process that, that transaction.
Speaker:So does that mean then, Frank, if I'm listening, if I'm getting this right and,
Speaker:and, and help me understand one of the big problems that we have with our payments
Speaker:then, and I mean, these stats are, are horrific in the sense that it's 10 to 14%
Speaker:of our transactions will get declined.
Speaker:Um, it's not because of insufficient funds.
Speaker:I've, I, I must have had two or three declines this week on a
Speaker:card, which I know is fine, right.
Speaker:For whatever reason, uh, my, uh, Monzo card wasn't working.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:So that creates annoyance.
Speaker:Do I keep going or do I do something else?
Speaker:Is, you know, is another question that totally amounts
Speaker:to $600 billion in lost revenue.
Speaker:So two thirds of the declines are because of what you call false declines.
Speaker:Now is this, because there are too many, too many wheels that are trying to turn,
Speaker:there's too many people involved too.
Speaker:There's that phrase, isn't there too many cooks spoil the broth kind of thing.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:Is that what is happening?
Speaker:I mean, you know your system aside, but is, am I hearing that right?
Speaker:This is predominantly what you were having experience.
Speaker:You've got three or four people in that daisy chain all with different
Speaker:thoughts, all with different ideas, all with different codes, all with different
Speaker:fraud mechanisms, and at some 0.1 of those goes wrong and so it gets declined.
Speaker:Yeah, there there's a number of different things that can go wrong, right?
Speaker:So.
Speaker:Um, everybody in the business wants to protect against fraud, right?
Speaker:So there's a lot of sort of pre-auth sort of stuff that
Speaker:mm-hmm.
Speaker:We utilize to make sure that we're, we're protecting the consumer.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, that stuff is great.
Speaker:Um, um, sometimes too much of that data.
Speaker:Can, can cause a little bit of concern, right?
Speaker:So we wanna be careful around that.
Speaker:Um, but everything, uh, in that transaction matters.
Speaker:So how the transaction is coded, um, what token are you using?
Speaker:Um, what MCC code is the merchant configured for?
Speaker:I. All of that informs us on what data is required, who the issuing bank is
Speaker:on, what data is required in order to get that transaction approved.
Speaker:I wish it was as simple as every issuing bank thinks about it in the
Speaker:same way and has the same fraud rules.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:That's not the case.
Speaker:It's an imperfect science.
Speaker:So knowing what.
Speaker:Matt's buying a subscription, um, streaming service, and he wants to pay
Speaker:monthly and he's using a Chase card.
Speaker:How does, what does Chase need to know about Matt and this
Speaker:product and this service to feel comfortable in improving that?
Speaker:You can spend years analyzing data and trying to figure that out.
Speaker:And you can get incremental lift for sure.
Speaker:But that's expensive, right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, and what we've done is sort of built that platform in place.
Speaker:That uses AI and lots of data and fraud rule input and decline code
Speaker:input from the issuing banks to figure out what the best, um, data
Speaker:package to send to get that approval.
Speaker:So it sounds it, and this is why I, I, I, I think it's what we said right
Speaker:at the start, the sort of the, the hope for the best strategy, right?
Speaker:Because all of a sudden you've opened Pandora's Box.
Speaker:It's got really complicated in many ways.
Speaker:Um, at least for people like me that maybe don't know about your service or, or
Speaker:I'm using a different service, I'm like, actually, I've got enough trouble thinking
Speaker:about the changes to the meta algorithm.
Speaker:And now actually what I'm hearing you say is actually, you should really
Speaker:focus on this as well because this is affecting 10, 15% of your sales.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:So, um.
Speaker:It, it, it, it feels like it's kind of getting complicated quick.
Speaker:Um, if that makes sense.
Speaker:Um, I dunno if it is, I dunno if I'm maybe a little bit too
Speaker:afraid of, of, of the problem.
Speaker:Um, but I, I, I, am I the only one that sort of feels that way or is this the, a
Speaker:common thing that most people feel like when they're faced with this problem?
Speaker:Yeah, I would say, and, and I talked to lots of companies out there, I would
Speaker:say that there's a significant amount that don't un don't have enough insight
Speaker:to know that there's a problem, right?
Speaker:Or, or, um, and once they identify the problem, like how to fix
Speaker:it or solve it sort of thing.
Speaker:And, and I did not, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Um, you know, running a very large sort of enterprise, I had no idea this
Speaker:hidden sort of issue that was going on and, and, um, you know, hired some.
Speaker:Um, people that can help me sort of understand what that
Speaker:is, but more importantly, how do I sort of solve this issue?
Speaker:And it was fairly significant.
Speaker:Um, uh, one company I was at, um, our, well, we used to use a metric
Speaker:called effective collection rate.
Speaker:Okay?
Speaker:So this is exclusive of the, um, voluntary return side of things, right?
Speaker:Customers that are on our platform.
Speaker:That are still active and signed up, how much of those dollars are we collecting
Speaker:versus what they're, what was owed?
Speaker:And we call that effective collection rate.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:We were kind of low, mid sixties.
Speaker:Oh, wow.
Speaker:Which is
Speaker:not very good.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:Um, fast forward, having gone through this sort of payment analysis,
Speaker:resolving the issue, um, that was like 98, 90 9% once we've identified
Speaker:it and solved it sort of thing.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:That is a significant gain.
Speaker:On a current customer base, right?
Speaker:No new marketing.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Um, no new offers presented, just solving a payment problem, um, on the backend.
Speaker:So it, it can be super effective.
Speaker:Um, on average, our revolve customers improve their, uh,
Speaker:uh, approval rates by about 14%.
Speaker:Some, some businesses are higher, particularly those that are.
Speaker:Sort of in the digital goods or high risks, um, sort of spaces.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, lower for large enterprises that already have sort of
Speaker:robust systems in place.
Speaker:Um, but we've got one customer doing multi-billion dollars and they're
Speaker:getting 5.8% lift on their approvals.
Speaker:That's a lot of money.
Speaker:$10
Speaker:million a month of net new revenue by solving this type of problem.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So it, it is impactful.
Speaker:Um, and I definitely encourage all of your ecommerce, um, folks to, you know,
Speaker:at least check it out and get informed.
Speaker:Well, I guess that this leads nicely to my next question, uh, Frank.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:Before I, before I ask that question, lemme just take a little
Speaker:minute to mention about cohort.
Speaker:Now, if you dunno what cohort is this is, it's the new version of cohort.
Speaker:Actually, you may have, if you're a long time listener.
Speaker:There was an old version.
Speaker:Now there's a new version of cohort.
Speaker:Uh, cohort is where we have monthly, I. Get togethers on Zoom.
Speaker:So we just get together, shoot the breeze, talk about ecommerce,
Speaker:what's working, what's not working.
Speaker:Uh, we've got a cohort in the a NZ region or a NZ region, as I would
Speaker:like to say, uh, we've got a brand new UK cohort starting as well.
Speaker:So if you'd like to come join that.
Speaker:Um, like I say, it's free, it's pretty easy.
Speaker:We just go on Zoom.
Speaker:We'll just chat.
Speaker:Great to meet you.
Speaker:Great to talk about ecommerce.
Speaker:So if you wanna know more about that, head over to eCommerce podcast.net.
Speaker:Now, Frank, my, uh, question for you.
Speaker:Is how, is there a difference between what I would call straight
Speaker:ecommerce, right, and subscription recurring revenue with churn?
Speaker:Or is it it, it doesn't really matter actually whether you are
Speaker:straight ecommerce or whether you are doing subscription commerce.
Speaker:You've got the same problem.
Speaker:Yeah, anything that, what we call credential on file, right?
Speaker:Where you're having to store, um, a payment type or payment method.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, significant value there.
Speaker:Whether they're one-time payments or recurring payments, it doesn't matter.
Speaker:We all know there's a difference between retail approvals, right?
Speaker:You got your card, you're physically there, you're swiping it or tapping it.
Speaker:Those approval rates are significantly higher, although
Speaker:there is sort of declines there.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, it's much different than online, right?
Speaker:So anytime there's an online order is where we can effectively help, um, you
Speaker:know, manage that integrity and, you know, create the highest approval rate possible.
Speaker:Tell you.
Speaker:So it's pretty similar then whether you are straight ecommerce or
Speaker:whether you are membership recurring.
Speaker:Where does things like, um, apple Pay and Google Pay, where do they impact this?
Speaker:Do they make it better?
Speaker:Do they make it worse?
Speaker:Do they not really have any difference?
Speaker:Like if I've got, you know, a, a Shopify site and it's got, you know,
Speaker:pay by Apple, um, rather than putting your credit card details, which is
Speaker:obviously becoming more and more popular.
Speaker:Um, certainly for me 'cause I'm lazy, right?
Speaker:And so, um.
Speaker:Does that make a difference?
Speaker:It's the same results.
Speaker:I mean, if think about what a di a digital wallet is, right?
Speaker:You're just storing those credentials in that wallet.
Speaker:Um, and, and the digital wallets are, are significantly rising, right?
Speaker:Hmm.
Speaker:I, I saw a world pays a global payment report, uh, which came out
Speaker:this week, talked about the rise and the use of digital wallets.
Speaker:Um, but that's just effectively just a card that's stored
Speaker:there that's being used.
Speaker:So whether you put your Chase card there.
Speaker:Um, you use your Apple Wallet or Apple Pay to sort of tap, um, I'm still
Speaker:taking that Chase issuing card mm-hmm.
Speaker:Running that, um, account through, you know, a processor and such.
Speaker:So the rules don't change that or help that in any way.
Speaker:So they, I, which, that surprised me a little bit because
Speaker:obviously with um, uh, apple Pay.
Speaker:There's the whole biometric thing isn't there?
Speaker:You've gotta do your face ID or scan your thumbprint for Apple to go,
Speaker:yes, this can actually be taken.
Speaker:There's sort of, I mean, going back to your original comment about trust,
Speaker:there's that where I would've thought there was more trust in the system
Speaker:by doing that versus just putting in a random credit card number.
Speaker:Yeah, the fraudsters know that they can get the cred, the credit
Speaker:card number and the expiration date and even the CVV in some cases.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Mm.
Speaker:Load that into an Apple wallet.
Speaker:That doesn't mean it's an auto approval.
Speaker:Right, right.
Speaker:I still, Matt's credentials.
Speaker:I take a photo of your card without you looking.
Speaker:I save that in my Apple wallet, um, and then I, you know, fly somewhere
Speaker:else and try to buy a product.
Speaker:I mean, that's still, you know, a fraudulent order
Speaker:that the bank wants to, um,
Speaker:to find out.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I didn't even think of that as a, as I didn't, wouldn't have entered my mind.
Speaker:Uh, but now I've got a new hobby for when I go on holiday.
Speaker:Let photograph as many cards as we'd like.
Speaker:So, uh, what you are talking about then, Frank, obviously you, you've got your
Speaker:own technology, um, which I, you know, is, is, is, is I'm sure is wonderful.
Speaker:I don't personally use it.
Speaker:I, but I not out of.
Speaker:Choice is just 'cause I've, I've really just found out about it recently, but, so,
Speaker:um, you've got your technology out there.
Speaker:What other options do we have for our e-com businesses?
Speaker:What, let's take, um, let's do this in chunks.
Speaker:Let's talk about SMEs.
Speaker:Let's talk about a guy who's running e-com business turning over half
Speaker:a million a year, maybe a million.
Speaker:Um, what can they do?
Speaker:Because obviously they've not got the budgets to go and employ the, uh, the,
Speaker:uh, you know, very clever people, which you employed when you're Experian.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:So what?
Speaker:What's good for them?
Speaker:Do they go to companies like yours do?
Speaker:Are there other things that they should think about first?
Speaker:Yeah, and that's effectively what we've built with Revolve is if you think about
Speaker:us, we're sort of this payments platform that does orchestration optimization.
Speaker:We're connected to all of the major payment processors out there.
Speaker:Um, but we also bring a, a wealth of industry knowledge that's kind
Speaker:of built in that platform, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:So the, the whole goal with Revolve was to kind of replace those deep payment
Speaker:experts that you had to hire, um, and, you know, build it within a platform.
Speaker:Um, so that, um, certainly large enterprises benefit, right?
Speaker:We, we have a lot of those types of customers, um, but really make
Speaker:it available for those SMBs and those mid-market type of companies,
Speaker:which is why we built a lot of.
Speaker:Plugins to like Salesforce, commerce Cloud, a lot of those ecommerce platforms
Speaker:that are out out there, our Shopify plugin is and worked on, gonna be launched soon.
Speaker:Um, but that allows you to sort of utilize, revolve with just a
Speaker:selection in your configuration.
Speaker:Mm. And then start processing and, uh, the level of sort of analytics
Speaker:we ha we have behind all the metrics that we're talking about.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:To see how effective.
Speaker:Um, your businesses and managing those, uh, those sort of
Speaker:declines and that sort of thing.
Speaker:Um, but also get a lot of insight to what others may be doing in
Speaker:other industries like you as well.
Speaker:Yeah, no, that's fair.
Speaker:So you, you, uh, you actually cater to all markets, don't you?
Speaker:Then it's, it doesn't matter how big or small you are, it's just gonna,
Speaker:it's gonna be helpful to get, to get somebody like you involved to help with.
Speaker:The declines or is it a case of, I mean, I, I'm, I'm actually
Speaker:thinking out loud here, Frank.
Speaker:I, what I can't tell you may be embarrassingly slow actually.
Speaker:Um, I'm sure I could figure it out in the next 20 minutes if
Speaker:I was really inclined to do so.
Speaker:I can't tell you off the top of my head on our e-comm sites, what our.
Speaker:Decline rate is for payments.
Speaker:And actually, I think I probably, I'm not the only one, but I
Speaker:probably should not, I mean, you're laughing at me, which is fair play.
Speaker:You know, I think I probably should know this, um, number.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:What's the tipping point?
Speaker:So let's say I have for whatever reason, a, a low decline, right?
Speaker:Uh, like two, 3%.
Speaker:Should I, should I go?
Speaker:Well, okay, I'm okay with that.
Speaker:That's kind of it is what it is.
Speaker:Um, at, at what point on that percentage scale is the tipping point?
Speaker:I think if you are in, um, and it, it all depends on the type
Speaker:of business that it is, right?
Speaker:So it, it'll vary significantly.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Um, super high risk businesses with a 20% decline rate is probably about
Speaker:normal super low risk businesses with a 15 to 10% is probably about normal,
Speaker:but is there still opportunity there?
Speaker:The, the key is to eliminate the, the false declines, right?
Speaker:You want the real declines are okay.
Speaker:Whether that's, you know, uh, a fraud fraudulent order, perhaps,
Speaker:um, an insufficient funds.
Speaker:I mean, there's not much you can do with that, right?
Speaker:If they've maxed out their card or something like that.
Speaker:Um, but there, there's usually always an opportunity, even if your, uh,
Speaker:approval rates are fairly decent.
Speaker:But I, I do encourage you to know what your approval rates are.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So,
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I, I'm gonna find out.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I was laughing.
Speaker:Not at you, but that is very common.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Um, we, I've gone into large companies, you know, talking to heads of
Speaker:ecommerce, and I'm like, what, what's your effective, um, approval rate?
Speaker:Or how much do you pay for processing?
Speaker:And I get the, I don't know.
Speaker:But I'll look into it, you know, sort of thing.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And those things should matter to you, right?
Speaker:As you have, and
Speaker:it's interesting that they, um, uh, that you say that because.
Speaker:They should.
Speaker:And I, I'm, listen, I'm talking to you now going, I should really know
Speaker:these numbers and, and you know, I coach people for crying out loud.
Speaker:I, I, I partner with other e-comm businesses in some, so I, I should
Speaker:probably know these things and in the back of my head I do.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:But I, I think I'm probably a bit like.
Speaker:We mentioned before we started recording that you went to Sub
Speaker:Sumit last year I was at Sub Submit.
Speaker:You're going this year?
Speaker:I'm going this year.
Speaker:Um, so if you're gonna sub Sumit, by the way, dear listener, come
Speaker:say how's, it's both me and Frank.
Speaker:We'd love to meet you.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:and I'm sort of, I. I'm aware that you've, you've, you've created this,
Speaker:um, this dichotomy between involuntary churn and voluntary churn, right?
Speaker:And so voluntary churn is things that, that I guess I can
Speaker:control on my website, right?
Speaker:So, um, I can look at the value of the offering.
Speaker:I can look at those kind of things.
Speaker:And, and, and, you know, this is where the customer is voluntarily
Speaker:choosing to stop its subscription.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:I can look at the reasons why and the psychology and the offer and the
Speaker:value and all that sort of stuff, and try and work on that, which they
Speaker:cover really well at Subs Summit.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And you mentioned involuntary churn is.
Speaker:Is sort of a less identified problem and a less talked about problem.
Speaker:And I guess I'm thinking that most ecommerce entrepreneurs like me
Speaker:are very aware of the voluntary, the, the voluntary things, right?
Speaker:Why people aren't buying.
Speaker:We focus on that optimization rates and all that sort of stuff.
Speaker:We rarely think about.
Speaker:And maybe everyone listening to the show shows going, Matt, shut up.
Speaker:It's just you mate.
Speaker:Um, but I, I don't think it would be, but we, we rarely look at these involuntary
Speaker:things and I wonder why that is.
Speaker:I think, yeah.
Speaker:I mean, it's great, right?
Speaker:There's a lot of focus on that and, um, you know, uh,
Speaker:like you talked about, right?
Speaker:Is the, is the value there?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:What's the onboarding experience like, is, you know, um.
Speaker:I, I, I was in the same, um, had the same problem for years, right?
Speaker:Where that's where my focus was.
Speaker:Um, I used to think about payment declines or failures is just all
Speaker:insufficient funds and, you know, the, those customers just naturally churn out.
Speaker:You know, it is what it is, was kind of my common theme to dealing with that.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And, but there, there's, there's a significant amount of customer
Speaker:service potential, right?
Speaker:Because if you turn someone out and they get a notification that they
Speaker:can no longer use your product, but yet they want to use their product,
Speaker:that's a very frustrating thing, right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, for them.
Speaker:Um, so we've seen our customers, um, success, success metrics go up.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Um, also, um, in, in dealing with this, right?
Speaker:So there's a lot of other, um, adjacent sort of metrics that can be.
Speaker:Um, enhanced with, you know, solving these sort of payment related,
Speaker:um, issues that are going on.
Speaker:Yeah, that's interesting, isn't it?
Speaker:Because you're, I dunno if you've, um, come across the sub platform, um,
Speaker:great platform there again, they were at, uh, sub Summit, um, last year.
Speaker:Uh, great guys that worked there, you know, and.
Speaker:They have just released a, a, a study, their sub comprehensive 2025 study saying
Speaker:the subscription price has virtually no correlation with churn rates.
Speaker:Um, the correlation coefficient of average order value from churn
Speaker:rate is actually insignificant.
Speaker:What truly drives retention on the involuntary side, according to
Speaker:the research, is perceived value, experience, and product relevance.
Speaker:And I'm guessing when it comes to the involuntary issues like payment issues, I.
Speaker:What you are doing is you are damaging, I suppose, the customer
Speaker:experience out of those three things.
Speaker:That's what you are hitting, isn't it?
Speaker:It's like, it's a really, really negative customer experience and I, I'm sure
Speaker:there's some interest in psychology around this because I, I know that when
Speaker:I go to a website, it declines my card.
Speaker:I'm like, what's wrong with you?
Speaker:I know there's money on the card.
Speaker:I'm not blaming me, I'm not blaming the bank.
Speaker:I'm blaming your website for some bizarre reason, even though I
Speaker:understand the technology behind it.
Speaker:Well, and, and there's a lot, so banks are super concerned about this, right?
Speaker:'cause there, there's a term called top of wallet.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And they know what happens.
Speaker:And I was just in New York, um, uh, in, in January, which I don't encourage
Speaker:everybody to go to New York and.
Speaker:I was there.
Speaker:I stopped to buy a bottle of water at a bodega, swipe my Chase card, tapped it.
Speaker:It got declined.
Speaker:Uh, my wife and I share the same account, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:So she's getting notifications on her phone going, are you purchasing
Speaker:this from some random name?
Speaker:And she's declining it.
Speaker:Like, Nope, not me, not me, sort of thing.
Speaker:So ultimately you declined.
Speaker:What did I do?
Speaker:I put that in the middle of my wallet.
Speaker:I took out my wells card.
Speaker:It approved and that's, that's now still on the top of my wallet.
Speaker:Like it's literally right here.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:It's fascinating.
Speaker:There's a big concern
Speaker:and yes, I was upset that I was being declined 'cause it was me.
Speaker:It's, you know.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Simple bottle of water.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That's fascinating.
Speaker:And I, I, I'm, I'm, I'm, I, I mean, I, I don't carry a wallet anymore,
Speaker:Frank, I have to be honest with you.
Speaker:But you can order the cards in your digital wallet.
Speaker:Yeah, same thing, right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, top of wallet.
Speaker:It's like, uh, the, the cards at the bottom of my list.
Speaker:I don't even know what me, just check.
Speaker:Actually, I'm gonna open up, uh, apple Pay.
Speaker:So my Monzo card is definitely at the top, right at the bottom, is now my
Speaker:American Express, uh, which I rarely use.
Speaker:You know, I use it a 10th of what I used to use it as.
Speaker:Um, for whatever reason.
Speaker:And I, I find this quite, uh, quite fascinating because American
Speaker:Express is making a lot less money out of me these days.
Speaker:I'm surprised they've not called me and gone.
Speaker:Is everything okay?
Speaker:You know, are we, are we still friends?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:It's, it, it's a real issue.
Speaker:I had a, um, I won't name the subscription that I had.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:And I had a card that was stored there with them, you know,
Speaker:loved the service subscription.
Speaker:But I got a note, a nasty note saying your service is being stopped
Speaker:because the card is declined.
Speaker:And it was just the expiration date, right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Which told me as a payments person, that they're not
Speaker:subscribing to the account update.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Which would've updated that.
Speaker:So with their credential on file order, um.
Speaker:I didn't have time, you know, to sort of go and update and stuff like
Speaker:that, so I used another service.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Mm. Sort of thing.
Speaker:Um, and that, that's a real sort of issue for a lot of merchants out there.
Speaker:So, um, there's, there's a lot of different things that you can do.
Speaker:I. As a business, as an ecommerce business to ensure that, um, all of those
Speaker:customers that you have with payment methods, um, you know, are you updating
Speaker:those accounts on a regular basis?
Speaker:Are you using some level of optimization to deal with these
Speaker:sort of decline issues out there?
Speaker:Is it cost effective?
Speaker:You know, there's a lot of front end fraud strategy that you want to do as an
Speaker:ecommerce organization that, you know, compliments sort of what we do, chargeback
Speaker:management, all of that sort of stuff.
Speaker:But that, that whole view around managing those payments needs to be comprehensive.
Speaker:That would be my first advice.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I mean, yes.
Speaker:There's no other way to, to sort of talk about it really.
Speaker:I, I think you're totally right and I, I, it's such a critical part of our business.
Speaker:I mean, fundamentally, I have to take the money off you before I be,
Speaker:you know, for the sale to occur.
Speaker:Um, and so it, it's such an important, I just as a random curiosity, I, I, as you
Speaker:were talking there, I. Um, every credit card I've got, every debit card I've got
Speaker:has got an expiration date on it, right?
Speaker:It expires at, in one year, two years, three years or whatever, which in some
Speaker:respects never really made sense to me.
Speaker:And I, I wonder if do, are we gonna keep them, do you think?
Speaker:Are we gonna get rid of them?
Speaker:Do they serve a purpose other than, you know, I get a new card every three years.
Speaker:I'm, I'm, they seem a little bit pointless to me, but maybe I'm missing something.
Speaker:That's a really good question.
Speaker:I've never really thought about it in that way and we're, we're not an issuer, right?
Speaker:So I can't speak to sort of why Chase is still requiring it.
Speaker:Um, I think the Apple card, right?
Speaker:Doesn't that not have an expiration date now?
Speaker:I think they may be the only card out there.
Speaker:There's, could be others.
Speaker:I, I don't know.
Speaker:And, um.
Speaker:So I agree with you though, there's probably not a tremendous amount of
Speaker:value, particularly since all of the issuers are doing account updates, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Um, yeah.
Speaker:And, and most of the card usage is, um, e-comm related, right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So probably less reason why to keep it going forward, but that,
Speaker:that's a great question for them.
Speaker:Well, it's how you, how do you, if you're, if I'm a credit card issue, I'm like,
Speaker:well, how do I stop somebody putting a new credit card in when this one expires?
Speaker:Or I'll just take the expiry date off.
Speaker:Uh, but then I, like I say, it's just a random thought that occurred into my head.
Speaker:Yeah, good question.
Speaker:Uh, if I'm honest with you, um, Frank, whilst we're here,
Speaker:let me, let me do this thing.
Speaker:Well, whilst I remember I've, I, I like to ask my guests for a question, right.
Speaker:And, uh.
Speaker:This is where you're gonna ask me a question.
Speaker:I'm gonna take that question and I'll answer it on social media.
Speaker:So if you're listening to the show and wanna know how I'm gonna answer for
Speaker:Frank's question, or in fact any other question I've been asked from my past
Speaker:guests, uh, come follow me on LinkedIn, uh, connect with me on LinkedIn.
Speaker:Even don't, just follow me, connect, say, how's it, uh, you
Speaker:can find me at Matt Edmundson.
Speaker:So, Frank, what is your question for me?
Speaker:What's your approval rate?
Speaker:You know what?
Speaker:I should have seen that one come in.
Speaker:What's wrong with me?
Speaker:Brilliant.
Speaker:If you wanna know, my approval rate is come find me on LinkedIn and I will tell
Speaker:you exactly what we've talked about.
Speaker:Then the um, false declines.
Speaker:Frank, what are some of the things that we should be thinking
Speaker:about around real declines?
Speaker:Because I know for a lot of merchants, um, chargebacks are an issue.
Speaker:For me, it's always, I remember the first time we sent an order out to somebody
Speaker:and we found out it was a fraud, and I was just, I was just really angry.
Speaker:I, the injustice of it, not the money, but just how dare they, you know,
Speaker:um, what, what sort of things can we do on that side of the equation?
Speaker:Yeah, great.
Speaker:Great question.
Speaker:Um, I I, I, I always encourage our, um, merchants or customers, which
Speaker:are ecommerce businesses to have, uh, multiple payment methods, right?
Speaker:Because the, you, you're gonna have a problem.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:You're gonna max the card or something, but you still want to
Speaker:keep the service in some sort of way.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Or the expiration date issue comes up.
Speaker:To have a secondary form of payment, that's always helpful, right?
Speaker:Um, I encourage them to make that voluntary with their customer base.
Speaker:Um, but that is something that can be super effective, having other
Speaker:forms of payment methods, right?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Debit is a great solution.
Speaker:Um, you know, other options out there, some of the, uh, BNPL
Speaker:stuff, um, as, as an option, right?
Speaker:Because that, that can help, um, you know, keep that customer retention going.
Speaker:So look at many ways like that.
Speaker:Yeah, that makes a lot of sense.
Speaker:Makes a lot of sense.
Speaker:Have multiple methods.
Speaker:'cause I, I, again, I just from experience, I, I can tell you if a
Speaker:credit card doesn't work, I'll just use PayPal, you know, or, um, whatever,
Speaker:you know, it makes sense for us.
Speaker:I appreciate how we do it in the UK is different how you do it in the States.
Speaker:Um, slightly in, in some respects, but, um, I.
Speaker:I'm just thinking on our websites.
Speaker:We definitely have, I, I do know we have multiple payment methods.
Speaker:I'm gonna check.
Speaker:Yeah, and we always include those.
Speaker:It's really interesting actually.
Speaker:I dunno if you've seen this in the States as much as we see it.
Speaker:I've seen it here.
Speaker:Um, but the rise of people or companies like Klarna, where you'll go onto the
Speaker:site and instead of paying a hundred bucks, I can go and sign up to like four
Speaker:payments of 25 bucks, and Klarna charged me a percentage fee to, to offer this.
Speaker:But it, it helps with conversion with clients.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:So obviously then Klarna paid me.
Speaker:This just another form of method.
Speaker:It, I make slightly less money, but it, you know, it, does it
Speaker:increase conversion enough?
Speaker:Um, I, I do you have those in the states?
Speaker:I mean, I'm assuming you do, I'm assuming we rob the idea from, from our American
Speaker:cousins, which is normally what we do.
Speaker:Um, how do they, how have they impacted, I guess, what you guys do?
Speaker:Uh, I mean, they still, um, utilize sort of credit rails
Speaker:for, um, some of their products.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So it doesn't really sort of affect us anyway.
Speaker:And, and I'm a big proponent of having multiple payment
Speaker:methods out there, even mm-hmm.
Speaker:It something that doesn't sort of run through our rails.
Speaker:I think it's an effective customer strategy and, um,
Speaker:I use them as a consumer.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Signed up for, um, uh, my son's in club basketball.
Speaker:Which is very expensive, right.
Speaker:And I'm like, oh, I can spread this stuff out for four months
Speaker:instead of it sort of a lump sum.
Speaker:So it was fantastic.
Speaker:I loved it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And in some respects, from the consumer's point of view, it's a no brainer.
Speaker:I've just got an interest free line for four months, even though if I've
Speaker:got the money, I'm just, you know, um, not that you know you Well, I say
Speaker:you're not gonna wear an interest.
Speaker:Of course you are, but it's gonna be negligible.
Speaker:But, you know, I was, I was, um.
Speaker:A, a good friend of mine who, who passed away a few years ago, uh,
Speaker:and he passed away at a good old age, and he made, he made millions.
Speaker:Frank and I, when I say millions, I mean millions.
Speaker:Um, on the basis of, of this sort of, these minute numbers
Speaker:of savings over four months.
Speaker:Do you know what I mean?
Speaker:He would, he realized he owned supermarkets.
Speaker:He thought, well, if I leave the, the beans on the pallet and I don't
Speaker:take them off, then I've saved myself a penny a. Tinner beans.
Speaker:Do you know what I mean?
Speaker:It's simple things like that.
Speaker:Really fascinating how his sort of cost mentality worked.
Speaker:So before we wrap up, if you have found this episode insightful, I'd like to
Speaker:invite you to our weekly newsletter where.
Speaker:We, we are gonna, there'll be the show notes, of course, the standard stuff
Speaker:in there, but we expand on the topic.
Speaker:Uh, we're gonna look at this in a lot more detail.
Speaker:I like the podcast.
Speaker:I love the podcast.
Speaker:I love the format, but it is limited in some respects.
Speaker:Um, it's brilliant for big ideas, but the newsletter is where we can
Speaker:really break things down step by step.
Speaker:And of course, you can sign up for that on the podcast website,
Speaker:eCommerce podcast.net, or the link will be in the show notes.
Speaker:Uh, but Frank, listen.
Speaker:So I, I'm thoroughly embarrassed 'cause I don't dunno, my,
Speaker:my, uh, payment decline rate.
Speaker:Um, I'm, I'm, I'm assuming that I'm not the only one though listening,
Speaker:uh, that, that, that has that problem.
Speaker:So we're gonna go away and find it out.
Speaker:But if people wanna know more about, you, want to dig into the topic a
Speaker:little bit further, maybe got questions for you, maybe they wanna know about
Speaker:Revolve, what's the best way to.
Speaker:To sort of connect and find out more?
Speaker:Yeah, I would say go to our website.
Speaker:We got a lot of sort of helpful information, uh, white
Speaker:papers, that sort of thing.
Speaker:It's revolv3.com, R-E-V-O-L-V-3.com.
Speaker:Um, or shoot me off, uh, an email.
Speaker:Happy to sort of, uh, you know, assess where you are.
Speaker:So frank.arellano@revolv3.com.
Speaker:Fantastic.
Speaker:We will of course link to those, uh, bits of information in the show notes as well.
Speaker:So if you're on a podcast app, just scroll down and click the
Speaker:link and you'll go straight.
Speaker:Are you on LinkedIn, Frank?
Speaker:I am,
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:Excellent.
Speaker:Well, we'll include that as, do you do LinkedIn or you just, I, I have it.
Speaker:'cause you're supposed to have it when you're in business
Speaker:or are you a big fan of it?
Speaker:Yeah, I'm a big fan.
Speaker:I like, I love the messaging in there.
Speaker:I use that quite a bit.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker:I've, I've, I've definitely been more active in the last six months on LinkedIn
Speaker:than I think the rest of my entire life.
Speaker:And I, I'm a, I'm a, I'm a quite a big fan.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:Frank, listen, thank you for joining us.
Speaker:Before you go though, uh, for the listeners that have stayed with us
Speaker:this far, we have a new section here on eCommerce Podcast called Saving the Best
Speaker:Till Last, and this is where I say to my guests, Frank, what's your one tip?
Speaker:Maybe something that we've not talked about, maybe one thing that's gonna
Speaker:change our businesses for the better, either in what we've talked about
Speaker:or something completely different.
Speaker:In your years of ecommerce, if there was like one key tip that you could share.
Speaker:What would that be?
Speaker:I think it's related to what we talked about.
Speaker:I, because to your point, Matt, um, a lot of people just kind of assume
Speaker:payments work and you can leave it alone.
Speaker:So I would say go through your processing statements.
Speaker:I know they're super complicated and all these interchange
Speaker:numbers and things like that.
Speaker:But understand what your approval rates are, understand how much
Speaker:you're, you're paying for it, right?
Speaker:Your effective rate.
Speaker:They may advertise 2.9, but then you realize after all these
Speaker:other fees, you're paying 4%.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Um, so get informed, um, know what that is.
Speaker:Um, because I, I, I, there's likely opportunity there to either save or
Speaker:improve that, um, uh, those decline rates.
Speaker:Fantastic.
Speaker:Fantastic.
Speaker:Frank.
Speaker:Thank you so much, brother.
Speaker:Thanks for coming on.
Speaker:Genuinely, genuinely, uh, loved the conversation.
Speaker:Very envious of Laguna Beach, not very envious of Milton Keynes, uh, which is
Speaker:where you did live for a little while.
Speaker:Um, I, we joked about that before we hit the record.
Speaker:Not that I have any issues with Milton Keynes, obviously.
Speaker:Um, uh, but I, I can see why you would choose Laguna Beach over Milton Keynes.
Speaker:Yeah, for sure.
Speaker:Easy to.
Speaker:But listen, loved it, loved the conversation.
Speaker:Let's definitely stay in touch.
Speaker:Let's meet up at Subs, Sumit.
Speaker:And of course, like I said, if anyone's listening, uh, thus far do come and
Speaker:say how's it to, to us at Sub Summit.
Speaker:But thank Frank.
Speaker:Thank you, man.
Speaker:Appreciate it.
Speaker:Thank you.
Speaker:Awesome.
Speaker:Well, that's it from me.
Speaker:That's it from Frank.
Speaker:Thank you so much for joining us.
Speaker:Have a fantastic week wherever you are in the world.
Speaker:I'll see you next time.
Speaker:Bye for now.