Blog

Overcoming key payments hurdles for e-commerce success

Worldwide growth in various payment methods and processors has led retailers to build increasingly complex payment infrastructure. While offering payment optionality to meet customer demand and streamline the checkout experience for customers is crucial, it’s not without pain points.

Hurdles exist like technical debt, adding and negotiating new payment methods, keeping customer data secure and more. Retailers across the world are already battling with challenges around supply chain, sustainability, talent retention, the rising cost of living and its impact on consumer spending, and wider digitization. As merchants work to overcome these broader challenges, payment orchestration can help overcome payment-related woes so merchants can continue to scale.

Implementing payment methods easily

Depending on the geographical footprint of a merchant’s customer base, there could be more than 200 payment methods and just as many payment processors and currencies worldwide of consideration. Of course, the majority of merchants are focused on a handful of markets, but even implementing one new payment connection in a single market can be difficult and costly.

Data from Barclaycard, a UK-based credit card provider, has shown that two in five (37%) of online businesses have not introduced any new payments technology on their website over the past two years. There are also many internal projects competing for prioritization over a payments expansion strategy, negatively impacting user growth and revenue for merchants as they seek to further digitize across their operations.

In addition to competing priorities, internal development teams face a growing issue of global talent shortage, with software engineers and developers in increasing demand. For merchants adding payment methods with internal teams, this can mean increasing resources and hiring large software teams, with implementation taking anywhere from months to years to complete.

Payment orchestration platforms (POPs) offer retailers the option to add new payment methods and providers in just a few clicks with little to no code required. A cloud-native provider is essential for merchants focused on flexibility and scale as they digitize.

Cloud-native POPs can offer merchants their own dedicated instances in the cloud, meaning they won’t share server loads with other merchants. These instances become their own individualized payments infrastructure, with the ability to deploy in any region or country with a local edge, helping them comply with local regulations and solving latency issues when trying to pass transaction data across large distances.

Tokenize across multiple processors with one provider

Tokenization protects sensitive payment data by replacing it with unique identification data. Many merchants operating online will use the tokenization service provided by their selected payment gateway provider. However, for those that would like to add more payment providers to their stack, each gateway provider has its own unique token schema, locking the merchant in and forcing the merchant to undertake a costly and time-consuming process of de-tokenizing data and moving that data to a new processing gateway if they want to switch providers.

For greater provider flexibility, POPs can offer a provider-agnostic vault, creating a unique individual token that can be used across any payment service provider (PSP) or acquirer in the system, giving a merchant full control over routing and the ability to optimize payment flow.

POPs allow retailers to use payments as a strategic advantage. The platform a retailer chooses should optimize conversion rates at a cart level and at checkout, as well as advise and recommend how to increase sales and decrease costs as a retailer’s business grows and expands. Cloud-native POPs can replace legacy payment infrastructures and systems and streamline and manage payment methods, services and transactions in one place.

Gr4vy’s POP leverages the power of the cloud to give users the capability to streamline and manage payment methods, services, and transactions all in one place. Its orchestration layer upgrades a company’s payment stacks to make infrastructure nimbler. While its intuitive, no-code dashboard centralizes the integration and administration of payment methods, providers, conditions, and transactions. With Gr4vy, you never have to lose a transaction again. For more information, please visit gr4vy.com.

This article first appeared on Retail TouchPoints

Gr4vy

Recent Posts

How one startup coordinates your payments

Payments orchestration is an increasingly critical task as merchants seek cost efficiencies and the ability…

17 hours ago

BNPL and payment orchestration: Best practices for 2025 and beyond

By 2028, the global Buy Now, Pay Later (BNPL) market is expected to exceed $700…

2 days ago

Local payment methods vs. card schemes: Key differences

More than 77% of online transactions in Asia are made using local payment methods—not credit…

1 week ago

Agnostic meaning in payments: What it is, why it matters

More than 80% of consumers now expect businesses to offer their preferred payment method, according…

1 week ago

How credit card interest works—and why it matters to merchants in 2025

Credit card interest directly influences how consumers spend, repay, and prioritize their purchases. Higher interest…

2 weeks ago

What are the 4 PCI DSS levels? A practical breakdown for businesses

The cost of payment data breaches is rising fast. According to IBM’s 2023 Cost of…

2 weeks ago