How to Avoid Chargeback Hell – Fraud in Your Site

It’s a fact. On-line merchants are being scammed everyday out of their hard earned money. Surprisingly, the internet is full of advice for customers to avoid being scammed by on-line retailers and action sites. Precious little is found for the other side of the transaction. But it’s no secret. Here’s how it usually works.

You have a customer who buys a product or service on your website. The sale passes all your fraud filters: the address matches the AVS (Address Verification System) and the CVV security code also matches. The card transaction is successful. Are you home free?

Not by a long shot. I have been scammed several times and I’ve learned a little more each time. During this period, I’ve asked questions of credit card fraud personnel, retail and wholesale merchants and police. I’ve learned some valuable lessons the hard way. While you can’t cut all risk from these “blind” transactions, you can reduce your vulnerabilities. And in the end, it’s up to you as a merchant to safeguard your income from these scam artists.

To be fair, certain circumstances do warrant a credit card chargeback. There are dishonest merchants who mislead in their advertisements and some are downright frauds who “take the money and run.” And misunderstandings do occur between buyer and seller that cannot be reconciled. Perhaps the buyer claims he or she did not receive the item even though you have proof of delivery. What then? We’ll write more on this later.

Briefly, here are some common red flags that may indicate fraud or at least the possibility of an eventual chargeback.

1. A shipping address that’s different from a billing address. Some are legitimate so you can’t cross these off your list entirely. But these transactions warrant further investigation.

2. A large order well outside your usual order. And if the buyer waits a week or two and orders big again, you may have two very big problems. When the stolen card holder discovers the fraud and charges back, you’ll lose very big. Remember, credit card processors will take their money back from you first and ask questions later.

3. A buyer who needs that large order quickly, usually overnight. That’s quite expensive, you say? The buyer won’t care about cost if he has no intention of paying anyway.

4. A customer who asks about your return policy. Sound strange? It’s not. This customer has “returns” on the mind even before receiving the merchandise. The odds are this transaction will come back to haunt you. If you question the customer, bam! CHARGEBACK!

What to do? There is no way to make your business absolutely scam proof. Identity theft artists have become quite sophisticated in their evil ways. Here are the extra steps I’ve taken. Perhaps you can incorporate some in your own anti-scamming procedure.

If you don’t require a signature, the customer can claim that they simply never received the package. Implied is that a thief could steal the package from a doorway or porch. It may be enough reason for you to lose the chargeback case, especially in a high dollar transaction.

It’s an unfortunate fact that honest merchants sometimes must pay for the crimes of others. At present no party has the where-with-all to investigate every illegitimate credit card transaction. So it’s up to you to protect yourself every way you can.

Merchants deserve a “bill of rights” because they have very few rights at present. It should comprise the following:

Merchant card processors have a vested interest in deciding against you. They take money from your account to cover the shortage, add on chargeback fee, end of story. There is nothing you can do.

  1. In a new bill of rights, money shall not be debited from the merchant’s business checking account until a fair hearing from both sides. The deciders shall not be composed of any employee or executive of the credit card processor in question nor by any person connected with the merchant.
  2. Buyers have up to 90 days from purchase to file a chargeback claim. That is plenty of time to file a claim. During this period, the merchant’s finances remain in limbo.
  3. From the time of a claim, the buyer and seller have 30 days in which to submit the pertinent information. If either side does not submit information in that time, he or she forfeits the case. The case must be decided within 15 days after the document deadline.
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