Bling Nation Ltd. soon will tap in to VeriFone Systems Inc.’s vast reseller network to extend point-of sale acceptance of Bling’s rewards-based contactless BlingTags, the companies announced Sept. 21. The deal also will help extend acceptance of PayPal, traditionally an online payment service, to brick-and-mortar retailers nationally.
PayPal Inc. and Bling Nation have been working together to enable PayPal’s 2,000 employees at its headquarters in Palo Alto, Calif., to access their PayPal accounts using BlingTags and special BlingBox terminals in a beta test (
In January or February, the more than 370 resellers of VeriFone’s PayWare Connect transaction-gateway service will begin to offer the Bling and PayPal service alongside traditional credit and debit card acceptance to merchants nationwide, says Paul Rasori, VeriFone senior vice president of marketing. VeriFone will support the training and help promote the terminals, he says.
“It’s the first implementation that brings [credit and debit cards] and alternative payments together into a single” acceptance offering at the point of sale, Rasori says.
Consumers typically attach the quarter-size BlingTags that contain microchips to their mobile phones, though they could place them on any device. When they tap their tags on a BlingTag reader, Bling sends them a text message immediately notifying them how many loyalty points they have accumulated at that particular merchant, and they may redeem their points immediately as well.
Since its launch some 14 months ago, Bling’s traditional business model has been to sign up community financial institutions that have connections locally both to merchants and to consumers to enable “on-us” direct debit payments using BlingTags at the point of sale. Bling plans to continue with that strategy, even though the pace of rollouts has been relatively slow.
But the company anticipates faster growth in BlingTag acceptance through its deals with VeriFone and PayPal. “We can gain scale much faster with well-known brands like VeriFone and PayPal,” notes Meyer Malka, Bling Nation founder and co-CEO. “We can get into stores we couldn’t get into before.”
Bling also has discussions under way with some college campuses, but Malka says it is too early to reveal specifics.
In any event, merchants will continue to be the primary distributors of the BlingTags because they tie in to their loyalty programs. But they also can use the tags to reduce their cost of accepting electronic payments, Malka contends.
Bling Nation charges merchants a standard rate of 1.5% of the sale to accept BlingTags for purchase, regardless of whether the payment is through PayPal or a direct debit. That rate can be about half the discount rate merchants pay to accept credit cards, Malka says.
The full retail price for the BlingBox, which includes a VeriFone terminal, 100 BlingTags, and point-of-sale marketing materials, is $199, but with introductory rebates the cost drops to less than $100, a Bling spokesperson says. “We are not pricing the terminal separately at this point, since it’s all part of the BlingBox starter kit,” she says.
All merchant customers pay Bling $59 per month to support their BlingTag payment and loyalty programs, Malka says.
Malka envisions Bling eventually supporting Near Field Communication technology, which would enable terminals equipped with NFC chips to communicate loyalty-program information directly and instantly with phones equipped with similar chips, eliminating the need for the SMS text messages. But the Bling system is agnostic to technology, as long as it supports “tap and go,” he says.
“Tapping is the winning gesture, and instant feedback is what’s so cool and convenient about it,” Malka says.
The agreement may bring PayPal acceptance to brick-and-mortar merchants, but PayPal does not view it as part of the company’s internal acceptance growth strategy, says spokesperson Kimberly Conley. “We no longer choose where PayPal will be accepted; it’s where our partners bring us,” she says. “Bling brings PayPal to the brick-and-mortar world for the first time, but it’s not us consciously deciding to go there but the willingness of a partner to use us in creative ways.”
For VeriFone, the Bling Nation deal represents the beginning of more agreements involving companies not traditionally involved in the payments market as the terminal maker looks for new ways to use its network connectivity with merchants, Rasori says.
“This is the first of a series of announcements in the next six to nine months that will have digital-couponing and social-media ties,” he says. The VeriFone network “connects users and provides access so nontraditional companies may play a role at the point of sale. … And we’re providing new services our channels can sell to drive incremental margins for the services they sell to merchants,” Rasori says.
Peter Quadagno, president and CEO of Quadagno & Associates, a West Chester, Pa.-based consultancy, agrees with VeriFone’s strategy to offer more value-added services, and he views the deal as being a positive one for all the parties involved, including PayPal.
“PayPal has been looking for ways to get to the point of dale, and perhaps this it,” Quadagno says. “And every retailer out there wants to increase foot traffic, and loyalty is the way they see to do it.”









