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Bira responds to KPMG Retail Sales Monitor report

10 Jun 2024

The British Independent Retailers Association (Bira) has responded to the BRC-KPMG Retail Sales Monitor for May 2024.
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Small independent Harrogate shop does it again at the national level with new awards glory

10 Jun 2024

Independent Harrogate computer shop Phase 4 Computers has been named as a finalist in the Tech Awards 2024.
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Knutsford fashion show highlights town's 'amazing independent shops'

10 Jun 2024

Independent boutiques in Knutsford have teamed up once again to showcase their new designs at the third Flash Fashion.
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Increasing numbers of UK consumers limiting their spending to goods on promotion

10 Jun 2024

Research of over 1,000 UK shoppers by Pricer shows 27% now only buy grocery items which are on offer – a +6 percentage increase compared to 2023. 
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Taunton book shop to host three talks from climate specialists ahead of election

10 Jun 2024

Independent Taunton book shop Brendon Books is to host talks from climate specialists ahead of the general election.
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Bira releases new podcast exploring accessibility on the High Street

3 Jun 2024

The British Independent Retailers Association has released the second episode of its 'High Street Matters' podcast series, this time tackling the important issue of accessibility for independent... Read more…

Independent Retailers Association Survey Shows Challenging Q1 for Traders

29 May 2024

Many independent retailers across the UK faced a difficult start to 2024 according to a new survey by Bira, the British Independent Retailers Association and the Association of Cycle Traders... Read more…

Harrogate record shop marks 30th anniversary with vinyl revival

29 May 2024

P&C Music – Harrogate's oldest independent record shop – is celebrating its 30th anniversary, having become a mecca for vinyl record fans in a wide variety... Read more…

Crickhowell’s Book-ish crowned best independent bookshop in UK and Ireland

28 May 2024

 A Powys bookshop has been named as the best independent in the UK and Ireland.
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Election 2024: what does the indie retail sector want from the next government?

28 May 2024

With a general election just weeks away, Andrew Goodacre, CEO of the British Independent Retailers Association (Bira) has placed “reducing the cost of doing business” high on his... Read more…

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Payment-processing outages at UK retailers raise reliability issues for cashless transactions.

Posted on in Business News

Recent payment disruptions at supermarkets and fast-food outlets have raised questions on the need for improved reliability.

card reader

Payment-processing failures at fast food restaurant McDonalds, supermarkets Tesco and Sainsbury’s, and bakery chain Greggs, highlighted retailers’ increasing reliance on third-party payment systems and the technical issues hampering a global shift from cash to digital payments.

All the affected retailers had problems with order-processing or accepting contactless payments, causing locations to close or to only accept alternative payment methods. While a problem with a software update was cited in some cases, none of the companies have revealed specific details of what occurred, nor have they reported the failure as a cybersecurity incident.

“That could be because even they don’t yet know,” Aaron Press, research director for worldwide payment strategies at IDC told CIO Magazine.

“The layers of technology that go into a payment environment are surprisingly complex,” he said in an interview. “The larger the merchant, the more complex it could be. I suspect the forensics will be done and someone will figure out where responsibility lies.”

Indeed, to fulfil card and other types of cashless payments, retailers must rely on third parties—often a lot of them, noted Narayana Pappu, CEO at Zendata, a provider of data security and privacy compliance solutions.

“There is no way around it,” he said. “Typically, there are 10 intermediaries between a consumer swiping their credit card and a merchant getting paid.”

Most of the retailers reported getting systems back up online within a business day, which is not catastrophic but still longer than usual for software-related updates, IDC’s Press noted. “The surprising thing isn’t that [an update] caused an outage, but for how long,” he said. “Usually, they are resolved very quickly.”

Moreover, the payment issues varied from being categorized as “contactless” to orders being processed online, which suggests that the problem was in one of the pieces of software that carry transactions from customer to vendor, Press said. This might indicate that the problem was with a gateway, which is “the software equivalent of the payment terminal,” though it’s impossible to say for sure, he noted.

The incidents call into question the global retail industry’s increasing reliance on cashless payments, whether they be point-of-sale, device-based, or via some type of online system, and how companies can prepare for the inevitable technology glitch, the occurrence of which is an issue of when, not if, experts said.

“The only guarantee for any computer technology is that it will fail at some point,” observed Tamir Passi, senior product manager at automated software-as-a-service (SaaS) security provider DoControl. “The opportunity here is for payment processors to differentiate themselves on resilience and fast recovery.”

And while cost will always be the primary factor in how a retailer chooses a payment processor, some companies may start factoring in service level agreements or availability metrics as priorities in future contracts, Passi said.

It’s unlikely that the adoption of card, contactless, and other digital retail transactions will slow, but it’s also unlikely that a completely cashless society will become a reality — at least, not for a long time.

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