Friday, March 24, 2017
"We exhibited at SEAA and it was a full house," said Barry Davis, Vice President of Business Development at Womply. "We had a constant stream of people at our booth and found it to be a well-attended show with a diversified agenda."
Davis represented Womply in a breakout session and TestTrack2017, a NASCAR-themed competition for technology startups. Each finalist had 8 minutes to present his or her product innovation. Judges rated the finalists on originality, revenue opportunity, presentation quality and impact to the market.
Womply won the first-place TestTrack2017 Innovation Award, which included a $1,000 cash prize and complimentary exhibit space at Transact 17, the Electronic Transactions Association's annual conference to be held in May 2017 in Las Vegas. "It was an honor to compete with such prestigious and technologically advanced companies as POPcodes, OneSource, ControlScan and Protocol," Davis said.
Following is a list of TestTrack2017 winners:
Keynote speaker Matt Clark, Chief Marketing Officer at Charlotte-based Allegiance Merchant Services, regaled the audience with his experience as a former NASCAR analyst at Fox News. Clark noted similarities between payments industry stakeholders and high-performance pit crew teams. "We stack pennies and operate on small tight margins, and pit crew teams measure their work in seconds," Clark said. "There are five different lug nuts in a tire. Cars must withstand high temperatures, G-loads and stress, and without tight lug nuts, we lose the opportunity for winning."
Continuing his lug nut metaphor, Clark cited the following five lug nuts of success:
The SEAA's focus on education was reflected in seminars, panel discussions and breakout sessions that covered a variety of topics, including chargeback management, portfolio valuation, residual reporting, customer engagement, alternative finance, and value-added products and services.
In a presentation titled Adapting to Change and Capitalizing on the Future of Payments, payment veteran and ETA immediate past president Greg Cohen urged the audience to "get vertical" by specializing in specific industry sectors. "In the evolving payments industry, the ask is different than ever before," he said. "Instead of asking for help accepting payments, merchants are asking for help in growing their businesses."
Cohen recommended working with small to midsize business owners, a category he described as highly fragmented, where people are generally loyal to suppliers and there is still money to be made. He additionally suggested thinking deep, not broad. "Software wins," he added. "Hardware is only as good as the software that runs on it."
Breakout sessions covered numerous aspects of payment technologies, business models and industry initiatives, including the following:
This event was another hit in a long string of dynamic SEAA conferences. Congratulations to all who had a hand in organizing it.
Editor's Note:
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