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Traditional corporate payment methods like check, Automated Clearing House (ACH) and wire transfer aren’t necessarily going away any time soon. However, to avoid falling behind, treasury managers are wise to consider replacing them with up-and-coming digital payment channels where those new channels can add value to targeted types of disbursements.
Compared to other developed countries, the U.S. has been slower to shift away from paper payments and embrace new electronic channels. However, in recent years, a combination of the growing acceptance of more real-time digital payments by consumers and Covid-19, which made check payments more problematic than ever, has accelerated corporate interest in digital payments.
In addition to automation efficiency, the new digital payment options offer real-time settlement and guaranteed funds to improve visibility and create payment certainty. Furthermore, one of the most intriguing new payment channels, the RTP® network, provides more extensive remittance information than any previous U.S. electronic payment alternative.
Still, no one expects U.S. companies to quickly pivot entirely away from the traditional payment methods. Many companies have legacy systems that can’t be easily integrated with new payment methods, and businesses often don’t have the resources to invest in long-term projects to produce the needed integration. Also, some of the traditional payment methods offer advantages — such as market ubiquity and the ability to transact large-dollar payments — that most of the new digital channels don’t yet offer.
Companies are seeing the wisdom of moving toward an advantageous mix of traditional and new payment channels. Indeed, the smart strategy is to adopt new payment channels for targeted use cases, ones where a new channel can add major benefits to a specific category of disbursements without overly taxing company resources.
“The easiest place to start is by focusing on replacing checks,” says Joe Flaherty, a U.S. Bank working capital consultant based in Portland, Maine. “Companies understand their check processes are extremely expensive and labor intensive, so that’s an area where they want to focus right out of the gate.”
Here's a look at some of the new payment channels that U.S. companies are adding to the mix and the use cases making it worthwhile:
Virtual card: An increasingly common strategy is replacing checks with single-use virtual card payments, where possible. Migrating payments to virtual card can reduce check payment costs and, in many cases, provide payers with revenue share. The virtual card channel is easy to set up and doesn’t require any IT resources. Banks can take the payment instructions file the payer was sending them for check issuance and try to migrate to virtual card those vendors in the file known to accept card payments.
Zelle: The Zelle® digital payment network allows individuals and businesses to send and receive money in near real time using a mobile phone number or email address. Making business-to-consumer (B2C) payments with Zelle allows companies to eliminate the costs of printing and mailing checks, as well as avoid the risks associated with collecting and storing payee bank account information when making ACH payments. Zelle B2C uses include refunds, such as utility refunds to homeowners; rebates; insurance claim payments; incentive payouts; employee payouts; and gig worker payments.
Zelle is gaining traction as a payment alternative in higher education, Flaherty notes. “Zelle is a great option for issuing students convenient refunds when they drop classes, for instance,” he says. “In addition, Zelle serves as a great way to support payments to students after they graduate, when checks often can’t be delivered and cashed due to outdated addresses.”
Push to card (aka “push to debit”): This is another new option for making payments to consumers without requiring them to provide bank account information. The push-to-card channel takes advantage of the fact that most consumers carry a debit card. Companies can use the debit card payment rails to initiate real-time B2C payments — essentially reverse debit card payments — that can support a variety of use cases.
For instance, Flaherty says push to card is ideal for insurers paying consumer claims following a natural disaster. Push to card can provide the immediate funds insureds need to recover and overcomes the obstacle of delivering those funds to people who may have left their homes. “Where it may be impossible to deliver a check or prepaid card by mail to an insured, push to card affords digital, near real-time delivery,” Flaherty says.
RTP: Perhaps the most exciting development in the payment space, the RTP® network is a 24/7/365 payment rail that provides instant settlement of funds, enabling companies to send, receive and request payments for many use cases, including e-invoicing and e-billing. It provides payment certainty — every payment is final, irrevocable and confirmed in near real-time — and rich flexible messaging. RTP can be used for business-to-business payments such as merchant funding and settlement, loan/lease funding and payment on delivery; B2C transactions such as payroll, title and escrow payments, and insurance claim payments; and a wide range of consumer-to-business (C2B) payments.
One emerging B2C use for RTP is making payroll corrections. In the event there is an issue with an employee’s pay, RTP allows a business to make a real-time correction. “Today, with such an acute focus on employee satisfaction, that’s a huge win,” Flaherty says.
On the C2B front, RTP allows a biller to send a request for payment (RfP) message to a recipient, who can evaluate the request along with related invoice details to approve or deny payment. RfPs provide consumers flexibility and convenience in paying their bills and certainty that the payment has cleared instantly. RfP use cases include online bill pay transactions, loan/lease payoffs and traditional debt payments.
As new payment channels like the ones above continue to emerge and evolve, treasury professionals will be faced with determining which payment channel will make the most sense for each type of disbursement within their organization. Treasury management banks can help in a couple important ways:
“Digital transformation is requiring corporate treasurers to revise their payment strategies,” Flaherty says. “Companies should look for a bank that can support them in using both traditional and new payment rails to their best advantage.”
RTP is just one part of a comprehensive payment strategy. If you need help building that strategy, we have the resources to get you started.
As the payments landscape continues to evolve, U.S. Bank has the expertise and resources to help you build a comprehensive payments strategy both for today and the future. Contact us for more information.