Reap Rewards Automatically When
You Use Credit or Debit Cards
to Pay Recurring Bills
by C.J. Prince
ENTREPRENEURS HAIL FROM HUNDREDS of disparate cities, industries and backgrounds, but one
thing they have in common is an appreciation for plastic. Paying by credit card is
convenient, it allows business owners to maximize their cash flow, and it offers the
accumulation of rewards or points that can add up to thousands in free services each year.
For regularly recurring bills, however, nothing beats the convenience of automatic bill
payment, the kind typically offered online through consumer and business checking
accounts.
Now, paying recurring bills automatically by credit card,
which offers the best of both worlds, is catching on big with small businesses. Over the
past two years, New York City-based American Express has seen its charge volume for
automatic bill pay for small-business customers grow by 30 percent per year, says Karen
Rosenberg, vice president of OPEN from American Express, the company's small-business
trait. She sees it as a way to replace check-writing, with added benefits. "It helps
[business owners] consolidate spending on the card and lets them better track and manage
cash flow," she says.
American Express, MasterCard and Visa
American Express and its rivals, MasterCard and Visa, have
all developed sophisticated online reporting tools to enable users to keep track of
expenses and slice and dice them for budget purposes. Looking at a monthly or quarterly
statement, business owners can see how much they're spending on utilities or
subscriptions, or on overnight deliveries, says Doreen Amano, vice president of global
product development at MasterCard International in Purchase, New York. "That can
potentially help with negotiation with vendors when it comes to rate reduction," she
notes.
For Ava Seavey, president of Avalanche Creative Services,
an advertising firm based in New York City, convenience and the consolidation of expenses
were key reasons to sign up for automated bill payment with half a dozen recurring
vendors. Seavey's company employs only four full-time people but boasts several
high-profile clients, and she only has part-time financial help from her controller and
bookkeeper. "So anything I can do to save my time is worthwhile," says Seavey,
who uses American Express for most business expenses. "I find that this minimizes the
paperwork. Time is money, and writing checks costs money."
Then again, credit can cost money, too, if balances are
allowed to slide. One finance charge or late penalty can erase a month's benefits of card
use, so it's only worth doing if the balance is paid in full each month. In an effort to
minimize debt, many entrepreneurs are turning to debit or check cards instead, which offer
a lot of the same benefits.
"There's an overall concern about accumulated debt
among small-business owners," says Diana Knox, senior vice president of Visa USA in
San Francisco. She notes that business credit spending is up, but Visa has seen both
business credit and debit growing by double digits over the past few years. Business
owners can sign up for automatic bill pay with Visa and earn points or rewards through the
Visa check card, just as they would with a credit card. And through its online reporting
tool, Visa Information Source Select, launched this past summer, entrepreneurs can view
all their credit and signature-based debit transaction information in one place.
For those who want to pay everything automatically on the
same piece of plastic, the wait will be a little bit longer. The list of merchants set up
to handle automatic bill payment is certainly growing, but it's only a fraction of the
vendors out there that business owners have to pay each month. "I don't think too
many landlords take [American Express]," quips Seavey. But if they suddenly decide to
start, she says she'd be happy to put the rent--and anything else she could--on the card
as well. "Of course," she adds, "they'd have to extend my credit limit a
little."
COPYRIGHT 2005 Entrepreneur Media, Inc. COPYRIGHT 2005 Gale
Group
Entrepreneur, Jan, 2005 by C.J. Prince,
C.J. PRINCE is executive editor of CEO Magazine. She can be reached at cjprince@chiefexecutive.net
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