'I'LL GET YOUR BUSINESS THE LOWEST CREDIT CARD RATES.' . . .
For many years, as a nationally recognized authority on credit cards, Art Lieberman has been helping businesses save money by slashing their credit card fees. He can help you too!
We handle more than $7 million a month in credit and debit card transactions. More than a year ago, we opened a retail store to demonstrate and sell equipment necessary to meet the requirements of new changes in the credit card industry. Every merchant in the United States accepting credit charges will need new point-of-sale equipment at their cash registers to handle these revolutionary changes, whether they want to, or not. ` For years the credit card industry has been seeking a way to make credit card transactions more secure. For some time, the industry has been experimenting in Europe with a method that has reduced credit card identity-theft there by 70 percent, and it will now be instituted across America. Walmart, Dollar General and other nationwide retailers already have new terminals at their checkout counters that are able to read credit and debit cards embedded with tiny computer chips. The old-fashioned and less secure method of swipe-and-signature will be replaced by chip and PIN, requiring each customer purchasing anything with a credit or debit card to complete the transaction on their own. They will insert the new cards into the front of the terminal, put in their PIN number, and then withdraw the card. That will require every business that accepts credit cards to buy new point-of-sale terminals. The issuers of credit cards are sending out new cards that have embedded computer chips. Some consumers have already received updated credit cards with the computer chip, though banks have actually been slow sending out the new cards. The device that gave us the idea for a retail store was the development of a unique, small, fully functional, point-of-sale system including a touch-screen tablet, a cash drawer, a built-in printer, a PIN-number identification pad, and connection to a computerized program. It's called the Merchant Foundry, which is the back-office software controlling the merchant’s point-of-sale system. It covers inventory, sales, receipts (and menus in the case of restaurants). We sell the Foundry point-of-sale system for a price that is half the price of similar systems, and it has much more functionality."
We handle more than $7 million a month in credit and debit card transactions. More than a year ago, we opened a retail store to demonstrate and sell equipment necessary to meet the requirements of new changes in the credit card industry.
ReplyDeleteEvery merchant in the United States accepting credit charges will need new point-of-sale equipment at their cash registers to handle these revolutionary changes, whether they want to, or not.
` For years the credit card industry has been seeking a way to make credit card transactions more secure. For some time, the industry has been experimenting in Europe with a method that has reduced credit card identity-theft there by 70 percent, and it will now be instituted across America.
Walmart, Dollar General and other nationwide retailers already have new terminals at their checkout counters that are able to read credit and debit cards embedded with tiny computer chips. The old-fashioned and less secure method of swipe-and-signature will be replaced by chip and PIN, requiring each customer purchasing anything with a credit or debit card to complete the transaction on their own. They will insert the new cards into the front of the terminal, put in their PIN number, and then withdraw the card.
That will require every business that accepts credit cards to buy new point-of-sale terminals. The issuers of credit cards are sending out new cards that have embedded computer chips. Some consumers have already received updated credit cards with the computer chip, though banks have actually been slow sending out the new cards.
The device that gave us the idea for a retail store was the development of a unique, small, fully functional, point-of-sale system including a touch-screen tablet, a cash drawer, a built-in printer, a PIN-number identification pad, and connection to a computerized program.
It's called the Merchant Foundry, which is the back-office software controlling the merchant’s point-of-sale system. It covers inventory, sales, receipts (and menus in the case of restaurants). We sell the Foundry point-of-sale system for a price that is half the price of similar systems, and it has much more functionality."
(570) 966-0080