The Midweek Sun

CONTACTLES­S COMMERCE COMES TO THE FORE THANKS TO COVID-19

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In an era of social-distancing, businesses must be snappy in responding to customers or fall behind, a lesson Jeff Sloan, CEO of Global Payments, learnt quickly. “You’ve got to be more responsive and more flexible than before” or come across as not caring, said Sloan, whose company processes payments for companies in more than 100 countries.

Contactles­s payment transactio­ns grew by 34 percent in 2020, with the seismic shift speeding up as much as five years because of the pandemic, he estimated.

“Consumer habits are hard to change in payment,” said Sloan, whose Atlanta-based company has almost 24,000 employees worldwide. “It took a long time for ATMs and debit cards to take off but once they did, it stuck.”

Sloan talked about the future of contactles­s commerce. Edited excerpts are below.

How has the pandemic changed the focus of your business?

We’re fundamenta­lly a tech company. Over the past seven years, before the pandemic, we already had strategies on tech-focused payments in which, instead of taking your wallet out, sticking your card in a machine or paying in cash, you now just take your phone and tap a terminal with it. It’s safe commerce.

When we saw the shutdown starting in March in the US, we announced partnershi­ps with Amazon and Google to put our businesses in the cloud and allow our customers to move more quickly online.

Prior to the pandemic, it was nice to have a website, but after the pandemic it was a requiremen­t to have a website or not be in business.

What is an example of an area that boomed in the past year?

Healthcare. Pre-pandemic, we had very small numbers in the Teledoc business (which involved patients seeing their doctors virtually).

In 2020, we had 15,000 Teledoc transactio­ns in January and February; by the middle of the year that just exploded. In 2020, we did 1.4-million Teledoc visits. We had to move quickly to provide better networks, better customer service to support those kinds of volumes that we’d never seen before.

Also, we service tens of thousands of quickservi­ce restaurant­s around the world, every Burger King, Popeyes, Taco Bell.

We do business with 26 of the top 40 quickservi­ce restaurant­s in the US. We had to move pretty quickly on additional software and support to make sure that your experience in getting delivery from DoorDash or Uber Eats was seamless.

We facilitate­d $1.5bn sales from quick-service restaurant­s in 2020 (compared to the $271m the company did in 2019). That’s astronomic­al growth.

How has your life changed in the past year?

Pre-pandemic, probably five to 10 days a month, I was on the road. The businesses we have are 70 percent in the US, but we also have a billion in revenue and a third of our staff outside the US.

Seeing customers and partners in the field, where they live and work, that’s really the best way to do it.

During Covid-19, that pendulum [of travel] has swung in the other direction. I spend a lot more time now with my family, which is fantastic, but there really is no substitute for seeing first-hand how someone is doing or what we should be doing differentl­y somewhere.

Have you developed any new work habits?

I’ve always been a big believer in returning e-mails quickly and being available on cellphone, text or Zoom. But in this environmen­t, when we have less face-to-face interactio­n, we’ve got to make sure we really engage with customers, partners and team members, to be even more accessible digitally when you’re separated physically.

When someone sends you something, you’ve got to get on it right away, because that’s the substitute in this environmen­t for a business trip or a face to face.

You’ve got to be more responsive and more flexible than before. If you’re not, people are just going to think you just don’t care.

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