The Problem We Were Actually Solving
I've never been satisfied with how creators in developing countries access global markets. Our product lets people from all over the world sell digital products, but for users in countries like Bangladesh, Pakistan, or Nigeria, this is more of a myth than a reality. They just can't use our platform like creators in the US or UK do. The problem wasn't just the technical complexity of working with international money systems or complying with different payments regulations. It was the underlying infrastructure. In many developing countries, the traditional platforms – PayPal, Stripe, Authorize.net – are either not available or severely crippled due to the lack of local banking infrastructure, which limits our users' ability to receive payments. This meant that we had to rethink how we approached global access for our creators.
What We Tried First (And Why It Failed)
Initially, we tried using cross-border payment services like TransferWise or PayPal's international money transfer option. These solutions worked, but at a steep cost for our users – between 3-7% transaction fees, depending on the country. It was a financial burden on our creators, and we knew we had to find a better solution. Another approach was to rely on local payment gateways in each country. This didn't work either, as we discovered that many local payment providers had limited international market penetration and poor online presence, making it difficult for our users to find and set up local accounts.
The Architecture Decision
We decided to integrate a new payments infrastructure, a non-traditional global commerce platform called Paytm. It offered a comprehensive solution for our creators, allowing them to accept payments from all over the world without incurring the high transaction fees of cross-border payment services. We also integrated 14 other local payment providers to cover a broader range of countries. Our new system enabled instant payouts in local currencies, eliminating the need for currency conversions and making it much easier for our users to access their earnings.
What The Numbers Said After
The new system has improved our global access significantly. Our monthly revenue (MRR) from non-US users increased by 40% in the first 3 months after deploying the new system. Our activation rate also rose by 17%. We noticed a significant improvement in our creator retention, with a churn rate decrease of 25% among users in developing countries. The average transaction size increased by 15% due to lower fees, allowing our creators to sell more products.
What I Would Do Differently
If I had to re-do our integration with Paytm, I would do it a bit differently. I would have started testing our integration with a smaller subset of users before scaling it up to the entire user base. This would have allowed us to catch and fix issues before they affected our production users. However, the actual costs of these errors were relatively low due to our relatively small user base at the time. Another thing I would change is integrating more granular data tracking for our payment provider integrations, to be able to track errors and chargebacks in real-time. This would help us catch issues faster and optimize our payment infrastructure even further.
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