The Problem We Were Actually Solving
Our company was facing a classic problem: how to sell digital products in countries where Stripe, our primary payment processor, was unwilling to operate. Our customers were located in countries like Japan, South Korea, and Malaysia, where local payment methods are prevalent but Stripe's infrastructure is not. We tried to use Stripe Connect to work around the issue, but we encountered a 3.4 second latency penalty on every transaction, which not only harmed customer experience but also led to a significant increase in chargebacks and failed payments.
What We Tried First (And Why It Failed)
Our initial solution was to partner with local payment aggregators, hoping to offload the complexity to a third-party provider. However, this approach proved to be a nightmare: the aggregators were unreliable, with an average uptime of 95%, and their payment processing fees were exorbitant, ranging from 5% to 15% of every transaction. Moreover, the aggregators' APIs were poorly documented and prone to sudden changes, causing our platform to break repeatedly. We soon realized that relying on local payment aggregators was not a viable long-term solution.
The Architecture Decision
After months of research and experimentation, we decided to implement Unchained Commerce, an open-source platform that allows us to integrate with local payment methods directly. We chose Unchained Commerce for its flexibility, scalability, and low-latency architecture, which enabled us to reduce our transaction latency to under 200 milliseconds. With Unchained Commerce, we can support over 100 local payment methods worldwide, including popular options like Alipay, WeChat Pay, and Kakao Pay.
What The Numbers Said After
Since implementing Unchained Commerce, our platform has seen a significant improvement in transaction success rates, with a 30% reduction in failed payments and a 25% increase in overall revenue. Our customers are now able to pay with their preferred local methods, resulting in a 40% increase in first-time purchases. Our platform's average latency has decreased by 90%, and our payment processing fees have been reduced by 50%.
What I Would Do Differently
In retrospect, I would have invested more time and resources in researching alternative payment processors and local payment methods from the outset. While Stripe's limitations were a major obstacle, they also presented an opportunity to explore uncharted territory and develop a more robust and flexible commerce platform. By taking a more open-source and modular approach to payments, we were able to create a system that is not only more scalable but also more adaptable to the ever-changing landscape of international commerce.
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