This 1 inch x 1 inch device allows you to swipe a credit card to process sales. What is most impressive is that there is no contract, no minimum transaction fees, even if you have no sales. According to the article, the charge is 2.75% of the total charge and 15 cents per transaction fee. That is it. It doesn't matter if the charge is $1 or $1,000. To sign your name, you scrawl with your finger where it says "sign here."
The article is on his blog: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/30/technology/personaltech/30pogue.html?_r=1&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss
I don't have stock in the company but wish I did. This seems huge for small businesses. They are also positioning the device for individuals who sell on Craig's List, etc. You can also accept credit card payments without the card itself, say over the phone for 3.5% charge. The company's chief exective is Jack Dorsey who co-founded Twitter.
I wanted to make sure all of the exhibitors out there know about this interesting change in the credit card processing world.
Howard Rose
Rose Squared Productions, Inc.
www.rosesquared.com
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So, I have only two shows left and I'm hoping to use my credit card reader and post comments for everyone on it.
I did use the mobile application for cash and found that everyone preferred to have an email sent to them and refused the printed receipt. Square's agreement requires that you still offer and keep printed receipts for all your sales, but if they refuse you aren't required. I still kept a written record so I could reconcile this against what Square has posted for me.
It does this in "real-time", it is user-friendly and alarmingly easy.
It does not let you figure in tax as a separate feature, only the final total. It currently has a feature for adding tips and various % increments. They posted on a forum discussion that they are currently working on adding the tax feature.
Communication with Squareup - the forums are going to be your best source of information. The company itself is not forth coming on details when your order is coming, if you've passed the credit check, what the hold up is, how long it will take to ship it from the warehouse - they are all well documented grips on the forums about this all summer long. Just be aware of it and don't plan on it as a business resource until you actually have it in hand. My understanding is that they are working on the production issues, etc - but I've read these types of updates all summer long and found them to be unhelpful in knowing when I would actually receive my hardware so I could take credit cards.
Taking credit cards - I practiced on my own once, that's the only experience I've had with it. It was simple, easy and fabulous! So, all the waiting, the not-knowing, the lack of communication - it was worth it to have it at this point.
there are no monthly fees....ever. As posted above, the rates are competitive, and the email receipts were welcomed by my client base.
I'll post more as I use it.
"Then again, that’s just for first-timers. The more you use the service without incident, the higher the company will raise that $1,000 threshold. In fact, if you’re willing to share more details about your business with Square upfront, they’ll raise that threshold from the start."
Thanks for the great tip. I have been thinking of reasons why I need an iPad, and this may be a good one. I still use a knucklebuster (it always works and my fees are quite low), but would love to streamline the data-entry aspect of sales.
Anything past $1,000 takes a month to be transferred? That sucks.
Howard
www.rosesquared.com