tekservePOS

tekREVIEW Newsletter

 Updates and Analysis for Retail IT Teams

#14  Monday 30 November 2009

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Can your PC Breath?

Overheating can cause a lot of damage to your PC. To avoid this damage, there are several ways to ensure proper ventilation most of which are free. The easist thing to do is to make sure your PC or POS has a enough breathing room on all sides that have vents. The standard is 3 to 4 inches. This can be challenging in tight cash wraps - so place as much room as you can allow.

 

Secondly, ensure that the vents of the PC or POS is clear of papers, supplies or dust bunnies - all of which can hinder the fans effectiveness.

 

Click here for more tips on how to keep your PC cool.

 

 

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GAO Report on Credit Card 'Swipe Fees' Shows Interchange Fees Have Risen

November 24, 2009

The National Retail Federation welcomed a report issued today by the General Accountability Office on the $48 billion in “swipe” fees that credit card companies collect from merchants and their customers each year.

 

“This report shines a spotlight on credit card fees and their cost to consumers,” NRF Senior Vice President and General Counsel Mallory Duncan said. “In the past two weeks we’ve seen the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City hold a major conference on credit cards, a study from the Hispanic Institute on how card companies take from the poor and give to the rich, and now this document. Clearly, there is a growing focus on this issue and it’s time for action. With this information in hand, we hope Congress will move quickly to pass legislation to bring these fees and practices under control.”

 

“This report confirms what we have been saying about swipe fees for years – that they drive up costs for consumers and are a cash cow for banks,” Duncan said.

 

The GAO today issued a 64-page report on credit card interchange fees that resulted from a study ordered by Congress as part of the Credit Card Accountability, Responsibility and Disclosure Act reform bill signed into law in May. The study addressed issues such as disclosure of interchange fees to consumers, the extent to which the fees drive up prices for consumers, the card industry’s refusal to negotiate over the fees, how much money generated by the fees goes to marketing programs such as travel miles, and ways in which card company contracts block merchants from giving discounts to customers who pay by cash.

 

Among other conclusions, the GAO found that interchange rates have risen despite Visa and MasterCard claims that they have remained “fairly” constant, that interchange fees drive up prices for consumers, and that consumers could see lower prices if the fees were reduced.

 

Interchange is a fee averaging 2 percent that Visa and MasterCard banks charge merchants each time one of their credit cards is swiped to pay for a purchase. The credit card industry’s interchange or “swipe fee” revenue has tripled from the $16 billion collected when NRF began tracking the fees in 2001 to $48 billion last year. Visa and MasterCard rules effectively force merchants to pass the fees on to consumers by requiring them to be included in the advertised price of merchandise and making cash discounts difficult. As a result, the average household paid an estimated $427 in higher prices last year, up from $159 in 2001.

 

NRF testified before the House Financial Services Committee last month that credit card companies are in an “arms race” to increase interchange revenue by switching many customers from ordinary cards that carry fees as low as about 1.5 percent to “gold” and “platinum” cards that offer rewards like travel miles or concierge services but charge 3 percent or more. The industry has also introduced cards into traditionally all-cash areas such as taxi cabs and fast-food restaurants.

 

Three major bills that would address interchange are pending in Congress. H.R. 2382, the Credit Card Interchange Act of 2009, sponsored by Representative Peter Welch, D-Vt., would require card companies to disclose interchange rates, terms and conditions, and would give the Federal Trade Commission authority to review interchange and prohibit any practices that violate consumer protection or anti-competition laws. Merchants would be allowed to give cash discounts and set minimum card purchase amounts, and could choose which cards to accept. The Credit Card Fair Fee Act, sponsored in the House as H.R. 2695 by Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers, D-Mich., and in the Senate as S. 1212 by Majority Whip Richard Durbin, D-Ill., would require Visa and MasterCard banks to negotiate over interchange fees rather than continue to impose them on merchants on a take-it-or-leave-it basis. If an agreement could not be reached, the Durbin bill would require both sides to submit their final offers to binding arbitration by a three-judge panel appointed by the Department of Justice and FTC. Under the Conyers bill, negotiations would be overseen by the Justice Department rather than a three-judge panel.

 

The National Retail Federation is the world's largest retail trade association, with membership that comprises all retail formats and channels of distribution including department, specialty, discount, catalog, Internet, independent stores, chain restaurants, drug stores and grocery stores as well as the industry's key trading partners of retail goods and services. NRF represents an industry with more than 1.6 million U.S. retail establishments, more than 24 million employees - about one in five American workers - and 2008 sales of $4.6 trillion. As the industry umbrella group, NRF also represents more than 100 state, national and international retail associations. To find out more, visit NRF's website.

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Jason Ryan Dorsey, known as “The Gen Y Guy,” shared strategies with tekSESSIONS 2009 attendees on how to make their multigenerational workforce a competitive advantage during his presentation titled, “Crossing The Generational Divide.”

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From the president's MacBook

Our PED/ PIN Pad Encryption facility is up and running! Only "street legal" for about 30 days and to date, about 10,000 units in the queue to be encrypted.... We are quickly learning - there is still much to be learned here! As we go through the process, we thought we might be able to provide some additional "value" in this area to our customers by sharing some of what we are learning.

 

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tekservePOS News

 

tekservePOS kicked offtekSESSIONS 2009, its annual Retail Technology Conference, with its own version of a popular television show, The Amazing Retail Race. The competition consisted of 12 teams made up of retailers, vendors and tekservePOS employees who’s goal was to race through Woodfield mall, purchase specific items on a list and race to the finish.


tekservePOS announced today the appointment of Robert Pring to COO of tekservePOS. In his new position, Pring will be responsible for formulating business strategies and operational plans to ensure the competitive position and profitability of the tekservePOS.

 

tekservePOS is excited to offer free Expo Passes to retailers for NRF, January 10 - 13 at the Jacob K. Javits Center, New York City. Click here to download.