Join the Revolution!
Leading ISVs are moving beyond basic payment integrations to own their payment experience. Learn how enterprise platforms build direct acquirer relationships.

Most software platforms start their payments journey with third-party integrations. You connect to established payment providers like Stripe or Square, accept their standard terms, and assume you're done. At first, this works: payments process, customers can buy, and money flows. But here's what happens as you scale: Your growing merchant base starts demanding better payment features, detailed reporting, and custom pricing. That simple integration you implemented becomes a growth bottleneck. Traditional payment models work through ISO (Independent Sales organisation) structures. Essentially, you refer customers to external payment companies. They handle everything, onboarding, risk assessment, money movement, customer service, while you collect referral fees. This creates four major problems:
You Lose Your Brand at Checkout: When merchants have payment issues, they call the processor, not you. Your logo disappears from settlement emails and payment interfaces. You become invisible during the most critical business moment.
Pricing is Set in Stone: Want to offer enterprise customers better rates? Too bad. Need faster payouts for high-value merchants? Not happening. You're stuck with whatever terms the processor offers everyone else.
Merchants Bypass You: Your customers often develop stronger relationships with the payment provider than with your platform. When renewal time comes, guess who they're more loyal to?
Revenue Stays Flat: Referral fees might give you 500 dollars-2,000 per merchant annually. Meanwhile, you're watching payment companies build billion-dollar businesses on the merchants you brought them. For bootstrapped startups, these limitations might seem manageable. But if you're planning to scale or serve enterprise customers, you need a different approach.
Payment facilitation flips the script. Instead of handing customers to someone else, you become the payment provider. You control onboarding, set pricing, handle settlements, and own the entire customer experience. Here's what changes:
Every interaction reinforces your brand. Merchant applications come to you. Support requests land in your queue. Settlement notifications carry your logo. This isn't just about vanity, it's about building defensible customer relationships. Take Toast, the restaurant POS platform. By owning payments, they've become indispensable to restaurant owners. Switching would mean changing both POS and payment systems, a massive hassle that keeps churn low.
Want to offer volume discounts to enterprise customers? Done. Need expedited settlements for cash-flow-sensitive merchants? You decide. This flexibility lets you win deals that competitors using third-party processors simply can't match.
Instead of 1,000 dollars annually per merchant in referral fees, you might earn 3,000 dollars-8,000 from direct processing margins, interchange fees, and value-added services. For a platform with many merchants, that's the difference between 1 dollars million and revenue.
Once you control payments, you can offer working capital, expedited payouts, chargeback protection, and financial analytics. These services often generate higher margins than core processing. Square built a 100 dollars+ billion company largely by understanding this model. They started with simple card readers but now offer loans, payroll, marketing tools, and more, all enabled by owning the payment relationship.
Ready to explore payment facilitation? Here's your step-by-step evaluation process:
Document exactly what's not working with your current payment integration:
Run the numbers on both models:
Traditional Integration Example:
Payment Facilitation Example:
That's 50x more revenue from the same merchant base.
Becoming a payment facilitator requires:
Be honest: Can your team handle this internally, or do you need a partner?
Option 1: Full Payment Facilitator
Register directly with card networks. Highest control and revenue potential, but requires significant compliance investment.
Option 2: Payment Facilitator as a Service
Partner with companies like Stripe Connect or WePay. This path provides most benefits of direct facilitation.
Option 3: Hybrid Approach
Start with a PayFac service provider, then transition to direct registration once you reach scale.
Once you've chosen your path:
Underestimating Compliance Requirements: Payment facilitation means you're responsible for merchant risk. Budget for robust underwriting and monitoring systems.
Rushing the Rollout: Migrate merchants gradually. Payment issues can kill customer relationships fast.
Ignoring Support Training: Your team will field payment questions. Ensure they're prepared.
Forgetting About Reserves: You'll need cash reserves to cover potential merchant defaults. Plan accordingly.
Traditional payment integrations might seem easier, but they're growth limiters in disguise. The most successful software platforms, from Toast to Shopify to Square, understand that owning payments isn't just about revenue. It's about controlling your customer relationships and building a defensible business. The question isn't whether you should consider payment facilitation. It's whether you can afford not to. Start by auditing your current setup, running the revenue numbers, and honestly assessing your implementation capabilities. The platforms that act on this insight will leave their competitors wondering where their merchants went.
Discover how converged commerce transforms payment experiences. Learn why integrated payment solutions drive sustainable business growth through enhanced cus..
Discover how converged commerce transforms customer journeys. Learn why fragmented payment experiences lose customers and how unified platforms drive growth.
Discover how embedded payment facilitation helps ISVs retain customer ownership and capture residual revenue through branded payment solutions.