BitPay has revealed that its volume has skyrocketed 1800% between 2015 and 2016 as Bitcoin makes inroads with third world businesses and the financially oppressed.
‘An Exciting Alternative’
The unbanked and underbanked around the globe are quickly embracing Bitcoin, according to Sonny Singh, CCO at BitPay, an Atlanta-based Bitcoin payment processor.
Bitcoin has been associated with various use-cases such as remittances, store-of-value, means of exchange etc. — often touted as its ‘killer app.’ But one exciting new application has been in the area of affiliate networks, Singh explains in a blogpost.
Simply put, affiliate networks enable content distributors to share in the advertising revenue if they help attract customers. But an affiliate may not be able to take part in this lucrative industry —which is expected to reach $6.8 billion by 2020—if they’re located in the many underbanked regions of the globe.
“They are likely receiving a paper check by snail mail,” he continues. “In an age of digital commerce, this is a silly and frustrating limitation.”
Bitcoin, on the other hand, solves this problem by removing fee-siphoning middle men. This not only makes transactions faster, more reliable and cheaper, but also eliminates the concept of political borders.
Singh notes:
For fast-growing ecommerce affiliate markets like Brazil, Argentina, India, and China, bitcoin presents an exciting alternative.
Bitcoin Boosts Global Economic Inclusion
Bitcoin processors like BitPay can offer merchants services fees of on average between 1% – 2% compared to credit cards, which range from 2% – 6%, Singh continues. The company can also batch mass payouts. So clients only have to fund once, pay a 1% fee, and be done without having to wait for days as with traditional payment methods.
This can help small businesses provide customers with better service and more flexibility, particularly in regions where the monetary system is not inclusive or under severe stress. The CCO cites Turkey as an example, which in the summer blocked its citizens from using PayPal.
“This led to a dramatic increase in advertisers and affiliates paying and receiving bitcoin, which has now become one of the most effective ways to pay online in Turkey,” he notes.
Volume Processed Up 1800%
BiPay, which is currently the largest bitcoin payment processor in the world, notes that it experienced 1800% growth in volume processed between 2015 and 2016. Though this may not come as a surprise since bitcoin transactions have been sharply increasing in recent years.
The company has been seeing Bitcoin payments gaining traction especially among marketplaces, international payroll, mass-pay, app store payouts, and now, affiliate networks.
Will Bitcoin transaction volume continue increasing year over year? Let us know in the comments below!
Images courtesy of Bitpay.com, shutterstock
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