Payments Orchestration Tracker® Series Report

The Orchestrated Platform: Why Payments Orchestration Is Not Just for Merchants

May 2024

More and more merchants rely on aggregators, marketplaces and other platforms to deliver a broad range of fast and efficient payments for their customers. Platforms themselves, however, may be hard-pressed to fulfill this promise on their own. Payments orchestration can give platforms the tools they need to attract and retain merchants for rapid growth on a global scale.

PYMNTS
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Platforms are responsible for handling the payments of potentially thousands of merchants, each with their own PSPs to accommodate. This can put immense strain on platforms’ IT teams and infrastructure.

02

Marketplaces and other platforms often find themselves in the same situation as merchants, scrambling to offer all the payment options their customers demand. Payments orchestration can be instrumental in relieving this pressure.

03

Payments orchestration is also extremely useful for platforms representing nonprofits, unions, religious organizations and other non-eCommerce entities that need to collect and aggregate dues, donations and other payments.

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    Merchant aggregators, marketplaces, platforms — there are many names for these organizations, but there is no doubt that they have risen to the fore in eCommerce. Whether food delivery aggregators, booking software for salons, or marketplace giants such as Amazon or eBay, platforms are increasingly attractive to merchants as channels for gaining maximum exposure to potential customers. Smaller merchants, in particular, can find value in platforms’ services that might not be available as cost-effectively elsewhere, such as marketing, scheduling and — perhaps most essentially — payments.

    For the platforms themselves, it’s highly important that they onboard as many merchants as possible to achieve growth and profitability. However, because merchants typically already have relationships with payment service providers (PSPs) that they wish to maintain, platforms run into challenges in accommodating multiple merchants’ diverse PSPs — as well as offering a wide variety of payment gateway options to all their merchant customers. Payments orchestration is a key tool for ensuring that all payments are routed effectively while preserving merchant customers’ preexisting payment provider relationships.

    Platforms’ Unique Payment Needs

    Platforms are responsible for handling the payments of potentially thousands of merchants, each with their own PSPs to accommodate. This can put immense strain on platforms’ IT teams and infrastructure.

    eCommerce marketplaces face an enormous — and growing — variety of payment types.

    58%

    of eCommerce transactions will be made using local payment methods by 2028.

    One report estimates that by 2028, local payment methods will represent the greatest share of global eCommerce transaction value, rising to 58% from 47% in 2023. Driving this trend will be growth in account-to-account (A2A) payments, including instant payments and bank transfers such as those offered by systems Pix in Brazil, UPI in India and iDEAL in the Netherlands. As the fastest-growing payment segment, A2A will comprise 18% of all transaction volume by 2028, up from just 8% in 2023. In addition, while card payments will drop from their current value of 31%, they will still make up a strong share at 19%. This very near future, therefore, will require platforms to process an unprecedented variety of payment types through multiple gateways seamlessly if they wish to keep their eCommerce merchant partners happy.

    Consumers are expected to increase their international eCommerce shopping in the near future.

    Another recent study predicts that 54% of online shoppers will purchase more from international eCommerce marketplaces over the next year, significantly increasing the geographic complexity of online payments for platforms as different gateways, methods and currencies come into play. In addition, 77% of customers would abandon their carts if their preferred payment methods are unavailable at checkout, signaling a very low tolerance for payments-related setbacks. This further underscores the need for platforms to provide eCommerce merchants with smooth, seamless payment experiences for their end users.

    Payments Orchestration: The Value Proposition for Platforms

    Marketplaces and other platforms often find themselves in the same situation as merchants, scrambling to offer all the payment options their customers demand. Payments orchestration can be instrumental in relieving this pressure.

    Payments orchestration can help platforms scale quickly.

    Platforms that lack formal relationships with merchant customers’ PSPs face the same payment challenges that individual merchants do — only bigger. Building new relationships with PSPs to match potential merchant customers’ variety of PSP needs becomes unsustainable very quickly for platforms — even after onboarding as few as two or three merchants.

    80%

    of firms say identifying the cause of payment failures is a major challenge.

    Payments orchestration works for platforms in the same way it works for individual merchants. Orchestrators can provide all the necessary payment gateways on the back end for platforms to onboard new merchants rapidly and easily as well as compliantly with multiple regulatory frameworks — thereby relieving platforms of the burden of resolving such issues independently. This enables platforms to scale and enter new markets quickly by providing access, at the flip of a switch, to as many payment gateways and PSPs as merchant customers might want or need.

    Failed payments are a core problem that payments orchestration can resolve.

    A recent PYMNTS Intelligence study found that 11% of transactions processed by the average eCommerce firm failed in the past year, with 80% of firms citing difficulty in pinpointing the causes of failed payments as a major challenge. Nearly 60% of firms reported an increased staff workload due to failed payments, while 56% said these failures are expensive to track and resolve. A staggering $81 billion was lost to false declines in the United States last year.

    Payments orchestration can resolve a root cause of payment declines by automatically retrying and rerouting payments to alternative gateways. Platforms that offer this value-added functionality can help merchants build a better customer experience and thus increase brand affinity by attracting and retaining more loyal end users.

    Hospitality platform Olo is tapping payments orchestration to expand restaurant payment capabilities.

    One recent example of how payments orchestration is helping platforms diversify their payment capabilities comes from the restaurant sector. Olo’s software-as-a-service (SaaS) program recently integrated Spreedly’s open payments platform to enable seamless payment experiences for guests on behalf of its restaurant partners.

    The platform is currently used by more than 700 brands to build digital ordering and payment experiences across 80,000 restaurant locations that process upward of 2 million orders per day. Payments orchestration enables platforms like Olo to build and tailor these guest experiences regardless of the complexity of merchant customers’ different payment processing relationships.

    Orchestration Offers Options — Even Outside eCommerce

    Payments orchestration is also extremely useful for platforms representing nonprofits, unions, religious organizations and other non-eCommerce entities that need to collect and aggregate dues, donations and other payments.

    Andy McHale talks payment orchestration

    Orchestration gives you [as a platform] options for the types of merchants you can onboard, the regions you can operate in and the types of payment methods you can offer. The platform then adds value because it can wrap all those things in a consistent experience, so on the consumer-facing side, the checkout experience between merchant A and merchant B is identical, regardless of who the back-end payment processor is.”

    Andy McHale
    Senior director of product and market strategy

     

    Payments orchestration offers flexibility to a wide range of platforms — including those outside eCommerce.

    Payments orchestration is applicable to platforms in nearly every industry. In a recent PYMNTS Intelligence interview, Spreedly senior director of product and market strategy Andy McHale noted that the options afforded by payments orchestration are useful to platforms across a vast array of sectors and business models. They may be subscription-based or international in scope. They may have submerchants that bring their own processing relationships with them, or, like eBay, they may embed payments from customers and disbursements to merchants directly into their platforms.

    Platforms leveraging payments orchestration may not even be in eCommerce at all. Nonprofits and religious organizations might use platforms to help collect and aggregate donations. For these platforms, payments orchestration routes transactions to the appropriate gateways, with the end consumer’s experience remaining consistent and completely seamless regardless of the payment type or location.

    Payments orchestration can be a boon for nonprofit platforms.

    In fact, mission-driven organizations are actively seeing the benefits of payments orchestration for platforms, according to Brian Lindsey, former senior product manager for Advanced Solutions International (ASI). The company’s iMIS platform, an engagement management system (EMS) purpose-built for nonprofits — including membership associations, unions, regulatory bodies, and faith-based or fraternal organizations and charities — leverages payments orchestration to help its organizations raise revenues from all over the world.

    In the past, Lindsey noted, adding a gateway might take three to six months, but payments orchestration reduced that time to within the space of a month. This ability has been a differentiator for the platform to nonprofits that may lack sufficient IT budgets or expertise to afford these options. Instead, the platform orchestrator handles the heavy payments lift, allowing these organizations to focus on the mission-oriented work they do best.

    The Case for Payments Orchestration of Platforms

    Online platforms of all kinds — whether for eCommerce merchants looking to maximize sales or for nonprofits and charities managing their donations — can reap numerous benefits from embracing payments orchestration. It can enhance platforms’ appeal to merchant customers by setting the stage for speedy onboarding, offering instant access not only to their customary PSPs but also to a multitude of new providers. It also reduces payment failures and false declines, promising to boost platform participants’ conversions and revenues.

    Payments orchestration is also invaluable for platforms seeking to expand globally. It facilitates the provision of international payments in various currencies through their most appropriate regional gateways while ensuring compliance with local regulations. Partnering with PSPs that have a strong presence in target markets can thus ease platforms’ entry into new regions. All these orchestration benefits allow platforms to stay competitive, drive growth and deliver exceptional customer experiences.

    About

    Spreedly’s Payments Orchestration platform enables and optimizes digital transactions with the world’s most complete payment services marketplace. Global enterprises and hyper-growth companies grow their digital business faster by relying on our payments platform. Hundreds of customers worldwide secure card data in our PCI-compliant vault and use tokenized card data to enable and optimize over $45 billion of annual transaction volumes with any payment service.
    www.spreedly.com

    PYMNTS INTELLIGENCE

    PYMNTS Intelligence is a leading global data and analytics platform that uses proprietary data and methods to provide actionable insights on what’s now and what’s next in payments, commerce and the digital economy. Its team of data scientists include leading economists, econometricians, survey experts, financial analysts and marketing scientists with deep experience in the application of data to the issues that define the future of the digital transformation of the global economy. This multilingual team has conducted original data collection and analysis in more than three dozen global markets for some of the world’s leading publicly traded and privately held firms.

    The PYMNTS Intelligence team that produced this Tracker:
    Managing Director: Aitor Ortiz
    Senior Writer: Andrew Rathkopf
    Senior Content Editor/Writer: Alexandra Redmond


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