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A Personal Touch For Tech

Payment integration company helps launch software and startups

Jay Worthy and Chris Mills admit what they sell isn’t exciting to most people. But they’re all energy and passion when it comes to helping businesses achieve their goals. Their clients include pet services companies, interior designers, and retail, but many of them are tech start-ups.

Worthy and Mills own Priority Payments of North Atlanta, based in Acworth. They are independent resellers of Priority Payment Systems, which is ranked the 13th largest merchant processor in the United States. Simply put, Worthy and Mills serve clients who accept credit cards. They can provide credit card terminals for brick-and-mortar businesses and more customizable credit card processing for e-commerce businesses.

“I call a spade a spade; credit card processing isn’t the most exciting business,” Worthy said. “But business owners should take time to think about all of the services [they require] …your telecom, your credit card processing, your marketing.”

According to Worthy, many business owners, especially software developers who have a standby processor, don’t even realize the rates they’re paying are too high. But it’s becoming more important than ever, with the growing demand to accept payments online.

In fact, the Census Bureau reports* that e-commerce sales were up nearly 4 percent in the first quarter of 2018, at $123.7 billion, while total retail sales were only up 0.2 percent. Almost all of the growth in retail is in the e-commerce space.

Painting the town with a great credit card processing company

As more people shop online, the demand for businesses to offer online shopping solutions grows. Software developers and tech start-ups are creating more customized solutions for a variety of businesses.

According to Michael Henry, a Michigan-based web developer, using one of the more well known credit card processing companies is one thing if a business sells a straightforward product. But for companies that sell products and services with variations, it’s important to have a highly customizable payment integration system.

Henry works for Cork CRM, which produces software for home and commercial painters. Until about a year ago, he used one of the largest and most well-known credit card processors for all of his clients. But they weren’t always able to work with him on getting small merchants approved or even just getting money in the bank smoothly.

Because painting contractors typically accept high amounts for the combination of paint, labor and materials, the transactions would get flagged as suspicious and the contractors’ money could be in limbo for days.

That’s when one of his Atlanta-based clients recommended Priority Payments of North Atlanta. “Chris and Jay provide relationship,” Henry said. “It’s so nice to call someone with a complicated problem and know someone who knows what they’re talking about. They are always responsive.”

As for integrating Priority Payment Systems into his clients’ websites: Henry says it’s simple. “It is really easy,” he said. “As far as integrating it, it’s very straightforward.”

So now Henry’s software, a program that manages leads, appointments, proposals and jobs, has a payment processor with great customer service that keeps his clients happier. As for his clients that stuck with the old processing company, Henry recently noticed that they just raised their rates again, cutting into those contractors’ bottoms lines.

Maybe it’s time to switch.

Competing on price

According to Mills, Priority Payments of North Atlanta operates on three values: price, customer service, and technology. That first one though — that really hits business owners where it hurts, if it’s wrong. That’s why Mills and Worthy work hard to educate their clients on credit card transaction pricing and what to look for.

“Most people just don’t know,” Worthy said. “When people think about rates, they know mortgage rates, car loan rates. But they don’t know credit card processing rates. Let’s say your company is around 4 percent. Then someone else comes in and says, ‘We’ll give you 3 percent.’ To most businesses, you think, ‘that sounds pretty good.’ But that’s on the high end.”

Additionally, Worthy says the brick-and-mortar companies who need a physical machine at the point of purchase often opt to lease those machines rather than buy them. But he notes that the cost of the machines has come down by thousands in recent years. He wants to help his clients achieve the best bottom line, so he guides them toward affordable equipment.

Customer service: the real deal

Companies spout all day about customer service, but it’s what Priority Payments of North Atlanta was built on. In fact, most of their business comes from referrals. And some clients come from simply meeting Worthy and Mills in person. You can’t help it — you just LIKE these guys.

You may have just read that they compete on price and customer service. But how many businesses can really do that? Usually, there’s a trade-off. But with these gentlemen, customer service is the real deal.

“I treat our clients the way I’d want to be treated if I were to call in for customer service on a product I use personally,” said Mills, who has worked in the industry for 15 years. “It sounds silly to say we answer the phone, but it’s become the standard to have a system where it takes 30 minutes to an hour to get a person on the phone. We pick up the phone live.”

Another point of pride: the company’s call center is based locally, not overseas. This is important to guys who were born here, worked their entire careers here, and serve 90 percent of their clients locally.

As Henry (the web developer) mentioned, most programmers and many businesses have a big-name, go-to payment integration they use. But unfortunately, those larger providers don’t typically provide a phone number where they can be called to handle customer service issues.

“They’re the most expensive in the industry with the worst customer service,” Worthy said. “But they’re vendors, not partners. We are partners. People know their banker; they know their investor. Why don’t they know the phone number of the [payment] processor who handles more money than [either of those other businesses]?”

Customizable Payment Integration

Priority Payment Systems is highly customizable, which is the foundation of the processing software.

“Priority offers highly scalable and remarkably flexible payment technologies built to connect our partners and their merchants with the processing solutions, business tools, and customer support they need to help their businesses grow,” said Afshin Yazdian, president of Priority Payment Systems.

Worthy and Mills were attracted to partnering with the company because of the ease of integration for developers and start-ups. “Being able to integrate and have it be easy was the initial challenge,” Mills said. “At the end of the day, businesses just want to do the thing that’s easy.”

But the ability to use a credit card processor that is customizable was attractive to Henry. “The benefit is that it’s more of a personal touch,” he said. “There’s a lot more nuance to credit card processing than you think. If you were to go with a faceless organization, you’re not going to get anything beyond a standard shopping-cart experience.”

While the software has the power of a team of engineers behind it, it also has great local customer service upon which businesses can count. And, working with Priority Payments of North Atlanta doesn’t break the bank. “Technology, customer service, and price: those are the cornerstones of what we offer,” Mills said.

* “Quarterly Retail E-Commerce Sales 1st Quarter 2018.” Retrieved from United States Census Bureau: https://www.census.gov/retail/mrts/www/data/pdf/ec_current.pdf.

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WORTHY TIPS

Align your credit card processing with your business

Jay Worthy of Priority Payments of North Atlanta wants the best for his clients. Here are his tips to get the most out of your credit card processing service:

  1. Choose a lookout: Merchant services play into your bottom line, just like sales and other business functions. But once it’s selected, it’s often ignored. Designate someone in your company to keep an eye on your merchant services and whether your rates are helping — or hurting — your business.
  2. Contracts: Avoid contracts at all costs. Most merchants want you to sign three-year contracts. They’re only good for the processor; they don’t lock in low rates. Find a company that works for you month-to-month. They’ll work harder to keep your business.
  3. Own, don’t lease: For storefronts with machines at the point of purchase, equipment has become much more affordable. It’s too cheap to justify leasing. Look them up on the Internet. There are even tablet-options now. Ten years ago, it could be $5,000-$20,000. Now you’re looking at $1,000.
  4. Trust: The turnover in this industry is insane. If the rep you’re talking to has been there less than a year, they may not be around to help you when you need it. Use a processor you can trust. Ask your friends who love their processor for a referral.

Discovery Computers and Forensics

Keeping the world safe from digital intrusion and maintaining regulatory compliance for Cobb County businesses

Since 1998, a small Cobb County tech company — working out of an otherwise nondescript office park just off Windy Hill Road, has unearthed key evidence for legal matters and provided IT support and cybersecurity across a variety of business verticals. That company is Discovery Computers and Forensics (DCF); they provide a unique combination of Internet security services, digital forensic examinations, and staff training.

Cybersecurity increasingly is at the forefront of business leaders’ minds. Digital forensics is playing a role at the local, national and even international level, with major hacking stories regularly appearing in news headlines. What is commonly known as, E-discovery (discovery of evidence in legal proceedings where the information is sought in electronic format) is playing a bigger role in legal matters from corporate litigation that can expose corporate espionage, embezzlement, and fraud.

Today, nearly everything we do online is traceable, from network threats at work to our personal phones. Users often think that they simply can delete their browser history or files and the data is erased, but that’s not the case; there are methods for retreiving this information. The electronic documents and the devices themselves are more dynamic and contain metadata that captures time/date stamps, author and recipient information, and file properties. A forensics examination preserves the original metadata to eliminate claims of tampering with evidence later in the litigation. As our business environment continues to increase regulations for data protection requirements (such as the General Data Protection Regulation [GDPR] that has been making headlines this year) DCF helps its clients manage day-to-day business operations. Dr. David Woodsfellow, a clinical psychologist, specializing in couple’s therapy, has been a customer for 10 years. Woodsfellow says DCF checks in once a month and is there whenever he needs them.

“They keep all of our computers and networks up and running, plus any other related technology we’ve got going,” Woodsfellow says. “We haven’t had any data breaches, in large part because DCF has helped us design an encryption and security system that keeps us safe.”

According to official Google statements, more than 50 percent of search queries globally now come from mobile devices, so the need to secure both personal and business use is more important than ever before. “The mobile device we all carry in our pocket tells a history of where we go, not only through cell towers but also GPS locations,” says Rod Mac Kenzie DCF president. “Phones can be used to prove negative or positive character flaws. I can’t think of anything I don’t do on my phone now. It has my Uber Eats patterns, how many times I’ve worked out, et cetera. Businesses have client data on personal phones, and medical practitioners often have patient information on theirs. Data is everywhere, and the things you saw on investigative TV shows five or ten years ago, is real, and we can do it.”

“Cybersecurity management is replacing traditional IT support,” Mac Kenzie continues. “Even companies with ten or fewer employees are now required to maintain security protocols, which some might have thought was only for mid-sized or large corporations.” The game is rapidly changing.

For example, even single-person businesses, such as self-employed hair stylists, now must become PCI DSS compliant (The Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard) if they intend to accept credit cards. There are some serious penalties for non-compliance under this federal regulation. However, these consequences should not be the only factor to make business owners comply. Your first concern should be the protection of your customers’ sensitive data. It is important here to notice that you can be penalized as a merchant, even if you are fully in compliance with PCI DSS requirements. Since your compliance is supposed to protect cardholder data, if a breach still occurs, you still could be held financially liable. The penalties can start from $50 to $90 for each customer whose data has been stolen or manipulated. You also could be penalized in the form of suspension of credit card acceptance services. For these reasons alone, companies that accept credit cards should contact a company like DCF to certify they are compliant with PCI DSS requirements.

Corporate Digital Forensics

One recent case DCF handled began when a company in Arizona reached out with concerns that a former, high-level employee had raided company secrets, potentially with plans to start a competing firm. Once engaged, DCF was given the person’s company-issued laptop upon which it performed a forensics scan to find the history of which files had been moved over from the company server. Sure enough, several files — including customers’ lists and product catalogs — had been transferred over time to a USB drive, confirming the company’s suspicions.

“We achieved the goal of finding out whether or not there had been an internal breach of data,” said Mac Kenzie. “From there, the process evolved into looking at how the company could have prevented the situation.” Consulting is a large aspect of DCF’s business model, and with its help, the Arizona firm implemented new cybersecurity protocols.

One of the largest threats to any company’s data is simply the employees. Most data breeches are caused by staff errors — by clicking a phishing scam email, for example — or as a result of disputes with disgruntled workers. Because of the on-site and web-based training DCF offers, the company says its customers’ employees have become much more productive and are realizing significant time savings for completing important tasks — simply by learning the “rules of the road” and preventing catastrophic data breaches.

For better or worse, cybersecurity is only likely to take on a bigger profile in the future, and Mac Kenzie warns that all businesses should be mindful of the implications. When businesses choose to partner with firms like DCF, which offer a combination of cybersecurity, staff training, digital forensic investigations and litigation support, they are insulating themselves from the potentially devastating consequences of a data breach.

Wings and Whitewalls Car Show

Photo courtesy The Aviation Wing

The Aviation Wing of Marietta is proud to host the second annual Wings and Whitewalls Car Show. This unique opportunity combines the classic styling of the Aviation Wing’s aircraft with the best of local cars and motorcycles. The event features vendors, food, a classic pin-up contest, and live music.

In between all of the great entertainment, guests will have the opportunity to learn about the aircraft located onsite and the legacy of local aviation. This event is open to everyone, on two wheels or four.

Date:
Saturday August 24, 2019 at 10am

Admission:
Vehicle registration for the show is $15 in advance and $20 at the gate

Address:
555 Perrin Road
Marietta, GA 30060

Parking:
Parking for registered cars will be in an asphalt parking lot.
General admission parking will be in a grassed field.

For more information, please email info@theaviationwing.com

The Bow Wow Club

A Play Written and Directed by Levy lee Simon:

The infamous Bow Wow Club achieved their reputation with girls as teenagers growing up in Harlem in the late seventies and early eighties. It is twenty years later and the five members of the group have not been together in the same place at the same in that long.

Fun loving, gregarious, Kirk Bright and his wife Dee invite the Bow Wow Club to their new home for a Fourth of July reunion. Kirk, who still lives in the past, thinks that the weekend will be filled with reminiscing about the good old days. What he has not contemplated is that, all of the members of the club have changed, including him.

Outspoken, volatile, Sal Anderson is married to Bev and they are still grieving over the death of their son, just eighteen months earlier to a policemen’s bullet. To further the pain only one member of the club, Kirk, attended the funeral.

Alex Earle, the former fat kid, is now a re-invented Afrocentric professor who attends the reunion with his white bohemian pregnant wife, Freida.

The charismatic Lester McMichael is now a super star entertainer and flies in from France with his twenty – year old super-model girlfriend, Loita.

Chuck Hooter has not been seen in years. His secret is unveiled when he comes to the reunion with his white male lover, Perry. Chuck’s lifestyle choice and the fact that only one member of the club attended Julius’ funeral, creates the major tidal waves that test their friendships.

Questions about all their lives are brought to the forefront as more than fireworks explode, before these friends realize how much they still need each other for survival in today’s world.

Date:
7:30 pm, September 21, 2018
2:30 pm, September 22, 2018
7:30 pm, September 23, 2018
7:30 pm, September 27, 2018
7:30 pm, September 28, 2018
7:30 pm, September 29, 2018
2:30 pm, September 30, 2018

Admission:
$25 per person

Address:
Marietta’s New Theatre In The Square
11 Whitlock Ave Marietta GA at the Emil Theatre

Parking:
Parking is free anywhere on the square daily Monday through Friday after 5 pm and all day Saturday and Sunday. If you cannot locate a parking spot on the street you may find parking at Marietta Square East Parking Deck located 1 Haynes St, Marietta, GA 30060.

For more information, please call 7704264800 or visit http://www.theatreinthesquare.net

Reading to Cats

Does your child in grade 1-8 need extra reading practice or would he/she like to spend time helping socialize shelter cats by reading aloud to them? The Reading to Cats program is designed to help students gain more confidence in their reading skills and to provide enrichment for the cats and kittens. The interaction also teaches kids the importance of empathy, animal welfare, and community service.

Each 60-minute reading session can accommodate up to 10 students, and one parent or guardian must accompany up to two students.

Students should bring a book to read and wear comfortable clothing – long pants and closed-toe shoes—as they will be sitting on the floor and interacting with the cats. The reading sessions are offered at no charge, but donations are always welcome.

Session Dates in August 2018 are the following:
Sunday August 12th, 11a-12p; Wednesday August 22nd, 1-2p; Thursday August 30th, 1-2p

Date:
Sunday August 12, 2018 from 11am to noon
Wednesday August 22, 2018 from 1pm to 2pm
Thursday August 30, 2018 from 1pm to 2pm

Admission:
Free. Donations welcome and greatly appreciated!

Address:
Good Mews Animal Foundation
3805 Robinson Road
Marietta, GA 30068

Parking:
FREE in parking lot

For more information, please call 770-499-2287 or visit goodmews.org/ongoing-events

Pop-In for Family Fun: Native American History Month

The Marietta Museum of History will be hosting its monthly Pop-In event on Saturday November 17, 2018 from 10:30am-3:30pm. Pop-In’s provide children and their families the opportunity to interact with the Museum through themed activities and crafts. To follow along with common month-long observances, November’s Pop-In will celebrate Native American History Month! This month creates a platform for Native people to share their traditions, music, crafts, and ways of life. Native Americans left a significant impact on Cobb County as well as the entire USA and the museum hopes to open honest and informative conversations about this important month through crafts, education, and activities. Pop-In’s are $5 per person with a family cap of $20.

Date:
Saturday, November 17, 2018 from 10:30am-3:30pm

Admission:
$5 with a family cap of $20

Address:
Marietta Museum of History
1 Depot Street
Marietta, GA 30060

For more information, please call 770-794-5710.

Pop-In for Family Fun: Achives Month

The Marietta Museum of History will be hosting its monthly Pop-In event on Saturday October 20th from 10:30am-3:30pm. Pop-In’s provide children and their families the opportunity to interact with the Museum through themed activities and crafts. To follow along with common month-long observances, October’s Pop-In will celebrate American Archives Month! Archives Month aims to educate the public about the importance of protecting and caring for documents while also educating the public on the experts who do this! Join them to learn how museum professionals preserve their fragile, documents through hands-on activities and crafts. Pop-In’s are $5 per person with a family cap of $20.

Date:
Saturday, October 20, 2018 from 10:30am-3:30pm

Admission:
$5 with a family cap of $20

Address:
Marietta Museum of History
1 Depot Street
Marietta, GA 30060

For more information, please call 770-794-5710.

Pop-In for Family Fun: World War Two

Pop-In’s provide children and their families the opportunity to interact with the Marietta Museum of History through themed activities and crafts. During the month of August, the Museum will be focusing on the history of World War 2 as well as the Berlin Airlift which came as a response to the end of the war. Join them for crafts and activities while learning about Marietta and Georgia’s wartime contributions! Pop-In’s take place on the third Saturday of each month and cost $5 per person ($20 family cap).

Date:
Saturday, August 18, 2018 from 10:30am-3:30pm

Admission:
$5 with a family cap of $20

Address:
Marietta Museum of History
1 Depot Street
Marietta, GA 30060

For more information, please call 770-794-5710.

Digital Dash 5K and Fun Run

The Digital Dash 5K is an annual event that benefits Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta and Bert’s Big Adventure, two local non-profit organizations that serve thousands of deserving children and their families.

Join OneDigital Health & Benefits as they Dash for a Decade and celebrate their 10th anniversary of the Digital Dash!

Be sure to dress in your best decades attire for a chance to win a prize!

Date:
Saturday, August 25, 2018 from 6:30 am to 11 am

Admission:
You can register online through August 17th at https://digitaldash5k.itsyourrace.com/register/
$25 through August 5
$35 through August 17th
$40 on Race Day

Children 10 and under are free with the registration of a 5K participant

Address:
Marietta Square
205 Lawrence St. NE
Marietta, GA 30060

Parking:
You can park along the street in the square or there is a parking deck located next to the courthouse.

For more information, please call 678-905-2332 or visit www.digitaldash5k.com

Aloha to Aging Inaugural Gala

Aloha to Aging’s Inaugural Gala is celebrating its 10th anniversary this year and will honor retired Kennesaw State University’s former president – Dr. Betty Siegel. Proceeds from the event will fund programs and services to ensure enhanced quality of life for seniors, their care partners, and the community in metro Atlanta. 5pm, reception and silent auction; 6:30pm, dinner and program. Tickets are $125 per person.

Date:
Saturday, August 18, 2018 from 5pm to 9pm

Admission:
$125 per person; sponsorships are available also.

Address:
KSU Center
3333 Busbee Dr.
Kennesaw Ga 30144

For more information, please call 770-722-7641 or info@alohatoaging.org. or visit http://Alohatoaging.org/inaugural-gala