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Banks and billers face a muddled environment of electronic and paper-based processes. 
The latest technology merges mixed payments and streamlines conventional transactions. 
  
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The Slow Arrival of Electronic Remittance
Executive Summary
"The typical paper-based billing process is made up of a series of time-honored 
  steps handled in sequence by various manual and computer-aided methods. First 
  a firm's billing information is aggregated, stored and sourced for billing data. 
  Then actual paper bills are printed, mailed and delivered. When received by 
  customers, these bills are then reviewed, exceptions are noted and contact with 
  payees may be necessary to resolve differences. Next, checks are written, records 
  are maintained, postage is applied and payments are delivered. Finally, the 
  biller and the payer's bank or financial institution exchanges payment data 
  for instream account reconciliation." Buy Now, Pay Now: Internet-Enabled 
  Billing Comes of Age", Zona Research, March 2001. 
Sounds complicated, huh? It's expensive, too. The round-trip cost of generating 
  a single paper bill, invoice or other form of remittance and processing the 
  payment and paperwork that comes back is approximately $1.90, according to Jupiter 
  Communications in New York. 
Moving to an all-electronic EBPP (Electronic Billing and Presentment) remittance 
  system could save businesses a serious amount of money. Jupiter estimates that 
  electronic remittance systems can be operated for about 20% of the price of 
  a comparable paper-based system. This translates to a savings of almost $1.20 
  per bill. Jupiter estimates that going electronic could save US businesses a 
  whopping $18 billion per year. 
So if the numbers are so compelling, what's taking us so long to dump the paper? 
  Read on and we will explain why EBPP has been so long in coming; describe some 
  of the hurdles faced by those working in a world in which electrons and paper 
  clash; and provide a few tips about steps your company or clients can take to 
  make the inevitable transition go a little bit more smoothly.  
Main 
  Article 
Sidebars: 
Coping 
  with Mixed Payments  
  Cheaper 
  Alternatives  
  Penetration 
  of EBPP Systems  
  Solving 
  the Check & List Problem  
  BankWare 
  Case Study  
  B2B 
  Sidebar  
  Gauging_EBPP 
   
  For 
  More Information  
Glossary of Banking Terms (from one of Joe Devlin's earlier banking articles)  
Streamlining
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