The payments market in the U.S. couldn’t be be more
competitive, and now yet another player is entering the mix. Stockholm-based Klarna
is set to announce its U.S. team ahead of expansion plans into North America,
which will begin in earnest at the beginning of 2015.
Klarna, a European giant, which has raised $282.1 million
over six rounds of financing, according to CrunchBase, has set the groundwork
for its move into the U.S. by lining up a who’s who of U.S. firepower to guide
its expansion on North American shores. Investors in the company include
Sequoia Capital, General Atlantic, DST and Atomico.
The company recruited Brian Billingsley from Alliance Data
as chief executive of North America; former Bill Me Later and PayPal director
Carol Hargrave as chief marketing officer; and former Apple payments counsel,
Jin Han, as chief legal counsel for North America. Earlier U.S. recruits included
chief credit officer Matthew Risley from Treliant Risk Advisors and chief
financial officer John Keatley from Green Dot Corporation.
“Can you imagine if 70 to 90 people walked away from the
checkout because it’s too cumbersome? That’s exactly what happens online
today,” says Billingsley. “Companies spend hundreds of millions, if not
billions of dollars, per-year to get people onto their site, and then they’re
losing them.”
Klarna, like U.S. incumbent Stripe, or PayPal, is looking to
change that.
Already a powerhouse in Europe through organic growth in the
Nordic region (and the acquisition of Germany’s payment service Sofort), Klarna
has long been rumored to be eyeing the U.S. market — and now the company is
making its move.
Akin to its strategy for growth in the Europe, the company
does has its eye on acquisitions here in the U.S., according to Billingsley.
“It’s definitely not off the table,” he says. “We have very supportive
investors in all of our markets.”
Using Klarna online shoppers enter only have to enter
information like an email address and zip code to buy an item. After that,
Klarna assumes all the risk from the purchase transaction, pays the retailer,
and collects the amount due from the customer within 14 days. In Europe, Klarna
has 25 million users and 45,000 retailers. The company is estimating revenues
of more than $300 million in 2013 and is used for 200,000 transactions per-day
globally.
Behind Klarna’s network is a complicated set of anti-fraud
technologies that can help the company assume the credit and financial risks
that an individual merchant might have to otherwise carry. This means that when
a customer buys a product online, Klarna assumes the risks even before a
customer has potentially paid for the product. They have a one-click purchase
option that they say allows merchants to see on average a 10-30 percent uptick
in sales.
The company says that its technology works particularly well
online. The average checkout conversion is between 1% and 10% for typical
checkouts on mobile devices, but using Klarna, the company claims conversion
rates of roughly 50%.
Billingsley says the service slots into a different segment
of the shopping experience than payment solutions like the new Apple Pay
feature. “We’re focused on buying. And the customer can pay however they want
to pay later,” says Billingsley. “Apple Pay will be a way to pay our settlement
invoice.”
Source: techcrunch.com
Source: techcrunch.com







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