From the monthly archives:

May 2011

Could Square be the answer?

by Rafi Kronzon on May 25, 2011

For those of you not yet familiar with Square, it’s a somewhat unique credit card processing company. Unlike many technology companies working on revolutionizing payments, which are using Near Field Communication, Square’s stated goal is to replace the cash register.

While this is a worthy goal, we’re more interested in their ability to simplify credit card processing for the small business. If you accept credit cards, and you’ve tried to read a merchant services statement, you know that the fees you are charged make wireless phone bills look completely transparent!

Square has a simple proposition. You plug the free reader into your iPhone, sign up, and start swiping. They charge you a flat 2.75% rate, regardless of the card, and promise to fund your account the next day.

Sounds great. However, if you dig a little deeper, you’ll find that there are some issues for small businesses.

First of all, the 2.75% rate is only if you swipe the card. Good if you’re a retail business, but tough for others. If you key in the transaction, the rate goes up to 3.5% plus the $0.15 per transaction charge that everyone else charges. Second, you need to manually enter any credit card transactions into your accounting program (e.g. Quickbooks). If you use Quickbooks Merchant Services, the resident 800 pound Gorilla in the room, the transactions are automatically entered. Third, the system doesn’t have a bar code scanner or reporting yet, features critical to retail businesses. Finally, you’ll need a mobile device like an iPhone or iPad, not exactly a cheap proposition.

In the end, I think that many retail businesses will pass on Square for now because it has a long way to go before it has the same functionality as a true Point-of-Sales system. I also think most service small businesses (accountants, lawyers, etc.) will pass on the service because they don’t have their customers’ credit cards to swipe.

So – who is this for? It’s for dog walkers, tutors, street merchants, and others with relatively small charges (you avoid the $0.15 transaction fee) that currently can’t take credit cards. That’s a big market, and I believe the Square will be successful, but it’s definitely not for everyone.

 

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Mac Defender is a no-no

by Rafi Kronzon on May 20, 2011

For you Mac users out there, we wanted to follow up on our recent post about Mac antivirus program to warn of a piece of spyware called Mac Defender. Once installed, the program attempts to steal credit card and other personal information. For more about Mac Defender, see this article. Please don’t install this or any other program before very careful evaluation.

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Antivirus for The Mac: The Verdict

by Rafi Kronzon May 17, 2011 Business Technology

The question of whether to put antivirus programs on a Mac is one of considerable debate online. With self-aggrandizing experts taking both sides, it’s impossible to know what to think. Back in 2008, Apple made a recommendation that Mac users should get antivirus software. Strangely (but not surprisingly), the recommendation is no longer on Apple’s [...]

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Google Chromebooks – Are they for Small Business?

by Rafi Kronzon May 12, 2011 Business Technology

Google finally announced a June 1st availability for their much anticipated Chrome OS Laptops. What are they? They’re $400 laptops running Google’s proprietary Operating System – which is mostly just a browser. Here are the features. What’s the target market? The market is actually large businesses and schools. Google is offering a subscription for the [...]

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Review: The Amazon Cloud Player

by Rafi Kronzon May 11, 2011 Business Technology

What is it? It’s an online storage locker and music player. Think of it as your own personal Pandora. Or thinks of it as a Dropbox with a built in music streaming service. Why we love it: Once you upload your music, you can stream your music to any computer, or Android enabled device. It’s [...]

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Stormy Clouds? A Big Misconception

by Rafi Kronzon May 3, 2011 Business Technology

The recent outages of Amazon and Yahoo have me thinking about the slow adoption of cloud services by our customers. We’ve been huge fans of Software as a Service since we first signed on for Salesforce.com eight years ago, shortly after launching our company. A few months later, we started using hosted Microsoft Exchange, and [...]

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