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What do you think about the new payment processor (Google Checkout) that Google has introduced?
Has anyone actually used it to make any purchases on the internet???
I have successfully integrated Google Checkout into my website but it wasn't easy. Google Checkout is by far the most complicated payment processor to integrate on an existing website. It took me a full week and several sleepless nights to finish the integration. And I had to learn XML and XML parsing functions.
I hope all this effort pays off :cheesy:
Anyone has had experience with it so far????
Has anyone actually used it to make any purchases on the internet???
I have successfully integrated Google Checkout into my website but it wasn't easy. Google Checkout is by far the most complicated payment processor to integrate on an existing website. It took me a full week and several sleepless nights to finish the integration. And I had to learn XML and XML parsing functions.
I hope all this effort pays off :cheesy:
Anyone has had experience with it so far????
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Join Date: May 2006
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Originally Posted by alpha2006
What do you think about the new payment processor (Google Checkout) that Google has introduced?
Has anyone actually used it to make any purchases on the internet???
I have successfully integrated Google Checkout into my website but it wasn't easy. Google Checkout is by far the most complicated payment processor to integrate on an existing website. It took me a full week and several sleepless nights to finish the integration. And I had to learn XML and XML parsing functions.
I hope all this effort pays off :cheesy:
Anyone has had experience with it so far????
I had a hard enough time answering all the 20 million questions they asked when you signed up. IMHO some of those questions are none of their business (company online sales, etc).
Glad to hear you got it integrated. Let us know how the rest of your experience goes! I am curious as to how easy it is to take them up on the $10 for $1 adword deal they have going.
Morty
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Join Date: Jul 2006
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I saw your message about the Google Checkout process. I am trying to integrate it into a ASP.NET 1.1 web application and I am somewhat stumped. I used Google's XSD to generate the XML classes and I am able to get the XML structure as requested, however, the I have no clue how to get the include the cart in the flow support to send it to google. Their instructions are a bit cryptic. Any thoughts?
Sam
Sam
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Join Date: Nov 2006
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Yeah i would like to know a little bit more about this too....
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Join Date: Jan 2007
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google checkout is not charging fees and its verification are good.
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Join Date: Feb 2007
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I studied google checkout for my fathers website. He's only selling a couple of books. No plans for any more products either.
From what I read at google checkout (I spend probably a full day reading everything there was to know about them, and to understand COMPLETELY what they were about) is that in order to use their free service, you can only sell one item per customer. In other words, a customer can only order one product at a time. So in order to integrate it with my father's website, people would either have to call to order multiple books, or go through the checkout process again. You can use their merchant affiliates to setup shopping carts on your websites, but then again, why not just use their services anyways?
For the rest of this year (2007), google is allowing everyone to use googlecheckout for FREE. After that, it's $2 per and 0.2% of each sale. Except that's not all. The whole googlecheckout thing is to promote their adwords program. Every $1 you spend on adwords, you can process up to $10 of orders for free. So expand on that, every $1000 of adwords you spend, you get up to $10,000 of order process's for free. After that, they get the $2 and .2% of each sale.
So if you calculate it out and really want to spend the time to use googlecheckout, it can be worth it. It's meant to promote their entire adwords (and froogle) program. I personaly just bought an online shopping cart for my father's website. Much easy process than dealing with google. Plus, it cuts out the middleman.
From what I read at google checkout (I spend probably a full day reading everything there was to know about them, and to understand COMPLETELY what they were about) is that in order to use their free service, you can only sell one item per customer. In other words, a customer can only order one product at a time. So in order to integrate it with my father's website, people would either have to call to order multiple books, or go through the checkout process again. You can use their merchant affiliates to setup shopping carts on your websites, but then again, why not just use their services anyways?
For the rest of this year (2007), google is allowing everyone to use googlecheckout for FREE. After that, it's $2 per and 0.2% of each sale. Except that's not all. The whole googlecheckout thing is to promote their adwords program. Every $1 you spend on adwords, you can process up to $10 of orders for free. So expand on that, every $1000 of adwords you spend, you get up to $10,000 of order process's for free. After that, they get the $2 and .2% of each sale.
So if you calculate it out and really want to spend the time to use googlecheckout, it can be worth it. It's meant to promote their entire adwords (and froogle) program. I personaly just bought an online shopping cart for my father's website. Much easy process than dealing with google. Plus, it cuts out the middleman.
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Join Date: Jun 2006
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I checked the google checkout but was disappointed, because Kenya my country is listed but they don't yet offer these services to "outsiders." See, I wanted to use it with my upcoming website, everyone here is googling so I thought why not, but there vanished my dreams as I don't yet have a credit card:- they come expensive these sides, but I will keep checking it out...
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Join Date: May 2006
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They're not trying to be a monopoly. They're trying to diversify because they know their current core markets won;'t exist in ten years and need alternative sources of revenue to stay relevant and continue growth. They're just doing smart business.
John Conde
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