CellPoint Digital, a global payments orchestration platform, has partnered with Chargebacks911 to help clients with chargeback prevention, management, and resolution.
Chargebacks911 bills itself as “the world’s first firm devoted to assisting merchants in combating post-transactional fraud.”
It employs over 100 subject matter experts, provides assistance for 27 sectors, and processes over 2.4 billion transactions every month.
According to the announcement, the Chargebacks911 platform provides a single mechanism for consolidating chargebacks and dispute-related data, as well as automating file delivery across numerous providers.
“We’re ecstatic to begin collaborating with Chargebacks911,” CellPoint Digital CEO Kristian Gjerding stated in a statement. “Its worldwide scale and cutting-edge technology make it the ideal option to be our sole partner in offering chargeback control solutions to merchants.”
“Its chargeback solutions and our payment orchestration platform will create a formidable combination for mid-market and enterprise clients across sectors, particularly given the exponential development of e-commerce and cross-border transactions, as well as the expected surge in chargebacks.”
It employs over 100 subject matter experts, provides assistance for 27 sectors, and processes over 2.4 billion transactions every month.
According to the announcement, the Chargebacks911 platform provides a single mechanism for consolidating chargebacks and dispute-related data, as well as automating file delivery across numerous providers.
“We’re ecstatic to begin collaborating with Chargebacks911,” CellPoint Digital CEO Kristian Gjerding stated in a statement. “Its worldwide scale and cutting-edge technology make it the ideal option to be our sole partner in offering chargeback control solutions to merchants.”
“Its chargeback solutions and our payment orchestration platform will create a formidable combination for mid-market and enterprise clients across sectors, particularly given the exponential development of e-commerce and cross-border transactions, as well as the expected surge in chargebacks.”