TurnKey Lender

Five Key Business Models Available for POS Financing

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Valued at $90.69 billion in 2020, the pay later market is projected to reach $3.98 trillion by 2030.

And of course that was before the coronavirus pandemic shredded short- and medium-term financial forecasts for businesses and households alike. We’ve also collected the five key reasons to consider POS financing for retailers in a recent blog post.

“If anything, retailers and other product and service providers are keener now than they were pre-Covid to attract customers and encourage sales by providing quick, low-risk installment loans to fund purchases — and not just on big-ticket items,” says Elena Ionenko, co-founder and business-development head of loan-servicing software maker TurnKey Lender. “That said, businesses considering adding POS-purchasing options should take a strategic approach, one that presupposes some familiarity with the different business models that can support such lending.”

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All the reasons why

Besides the spur of shutdowns this year, the recent rise in POS financing is attributable to several principal factors, according to Ionenko.

But, adds Ionenko, just as would-be lenders should understand the catalysts for the rise of POS financing, they should be conversant with the five main business models that underpin retail and other business approaches to this form of lending. Those are:

  1. Balance-sheet rental. In this model, the POS financier partners with an established lender — usually a bank or a fintech — to originate loans. This is often the cheapest option, but it provides limited access to customers through the life of the loan, making it less user friendly in the most fundamental sense.
  2. Joining an “ecosystem.” In this version, the POS sponsor — whether its a retailer, a car lot, or a medical practice — taps into an online marketplace featuring multiple firms with experience in POS lending, This version tends to yield more control over approval criteria, higher approval rates, and less “integration fatigue” — again though, post-approval touchpoints with customers may be limited.
  3. Credit-card program innovation. Remember the credit-card fatigue we mentioned earlier? Another wrinkle on outsourcing to support POS financing depends on working with a card issuer to carve out lower-interest installment loans for existing card accounts as a way to attract more installment buyers.
  4. Going all-in. This one is far-fetched for most businesses that aren’t already, say, banks. The idea is to become a fintech in one’s own right — an undertaking that calls for considerable technological — and probably tech-marketing — know-how.
  5. Renting the technology. Businesses can subscribe to pre-existing POS-lending platforms, sparing themselves the toil and expense of investing in proprietary lending infrastructure. The rub here is finding the right technology partner.

The case for renting

For Ionenko, renting the tech — that is, going for an in-house POS solution enabled by a specialist lending-platform provider makes the most sense. Among the advantages she cites:

“Retailers remain under acute pressure from the coronavirus pandemic and measures taken to prevent its spread against a darkening economic backdrop,” says TurnKey Lender’s Ionenko. “Giving customers a choice to fund purchases over time through POS installment financing can reduce ticket shock, build loyalty and help close sales.”

TurnKey Lender solution for retailers

TurnKey Lender’s Retail Solution allows anyone to provide instant financing to customers to quickly grow new business. With an intuitive user interface and a proprietary AI-powered Decision Engine, you get the lowest possible credit risks with the biggest potential growth spread.

The cloud-based platform incorporates retailers’ order processing automation, flexible business logic, and customer portal in a single, integrated solution. The entire financing process is 100% automated.

Businesses in over 50 countries use TurnKey Lender to:

In preparing to implement POS financing, however, Ionenko concludes that “businesses should ask themselves if they’re better served by outsourcing the program, or engaging a lending-tech vendor with a view to retaining more control of its customer-centric purchases options.”

If you would like to discuss how to add embedding digital lending into your operation, don’t hesitate to reach out to our team at sales@turnkey-lender.com and our team will be happy to answer any and all of your questions!

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