Two major trends stand out in today’s payments acceptance ecosystem: globalization and digitalization. We’re all transacting, operating and trading on an increasingly global stage, while new payment types and form factors are delivering better, more seamless services to consumers. For payments stakeholders however, navigating budgetary restraints and technical and compliance challenges is making innovation complex.
Global payment standards, and their widespread adoption, offer an empowering platform to help the industry keep pace. Yet, despite the existence of global payment standards such as ISO 8583, differing interpretations across markets has stood in the way of true interoperability across borders, creating a complex and pertinent issue.
It is this problem that nexo standards exists to address, creating true global standardization for the card payment acceptance world.
Introducing nexo
The card payments domain of ISO 20022 has defined "a single standardization approach, including methodology, process and repository". Success of the standard, however, relies upon a universal interpretation and consistent mode of implementation and testing, all agreed upon by actors in the payment ecosystem. This has been the goal of nexo standards since its inception.
Today, nexo standards’ messaging protocols and specifications deliver just that: fast, interoperable and borderless payment acceptance by standardizing the exchange of payment acceptance data between merchants, acquirers, payment service providers and other payment stakeholders.
"Success of the standard, however, relies upon a universal interpretation and consistent mode of implementation and testing, all agreed upon by actors in the payment ecosystem. This has been the goal of nexo standards since its inception."
Arnaud Crouzet
The building blocks for all stakeholders
nexo’s work directly tackles the incompatibility of existing proprietary and domestic interpretations of past ISO standards – such as ISO 8583 – to create a single, streamlined cross-border payment acceptance infrastructure.
These specification and protocols are developed, maintained and advanced by an open forum comprised of stakeholders from the entire card payments acceptance ecosystem. From payment schemes and banks, right through to retailers, terminal vendors and processors.
Bringing together key players from across the payment sector is no mean feat. Nevertheless, this fruitful sharing of experiences is also part of the richness of nexo standards. Moreover, it illustrates the true goal of this standardization effort to level the playing field and deliver rewards to all. As each stakeholder re-evaluates its strategy and approach to digital transformation, we can consider the use of ISO 20022 as providing the “building blocks” for each stakeholder to build better services, unrestrained by technical dependency on their partners or domestic integration costs and complexities.
Simplicity, efficiency, agility
As all nexo-compliant systems interoperate seamlessly, players can adopt a genuinely ‘plug and play’ approach, simplifying expansion into new markets and enabling truly universal offerings that can be tweaked and deployed cost-effectively, and on a global scale.
Becoming nexo-compliant enables seamless integration with other nexo-compliant stakeholders and the consolidation of global payment requests. Not only does this realize huge efficiencies and reduce the domestic costs of implementation, it also opens up the market, eradicating the age-old challenge of vendor lock-in. By harmonizing multi-country solutions, merchants are empowered to strike better, volume-based deals with banks across borders.
Already gathering momentum across Europe and beyond, nexo standards is well on the way to realizing its vision. For all stakeholders, the time to get ahead is now; championing migration to nexo standards will fast-track innovation and help realize greater efficiencies sooner rather than later.
To learn more about nexo standards, our dedicated training and how to ensure a smooth migration project, download our eBook or visit the Fime website, or simply contact us.