There are so many ways to send money – FASTER! Payments such as Same Day ACH (SDA), Real-Time Payments (RTP), Push-to-Debit, Wire Transfers, and the pending arrival of FedNow. This 60-minute session will identify the different types and help you recognize the benefits and drawbacks of each one and the basics of how they work (with some examples).
Real-time payments over the RTP network provide consumers and businesses with the ability to conveniently send payments directly from their accounts 24/7, and to receive and access funds sent to them over the RTP network immediately.
Push to Debit is an option out there as well, in near real-time—even on holidays, weekends, and outside of normal business hours—push funds from your business to a user’s bank account through the associated debit card.
Wire transfer is expensive but a means to send a payment fast with immediate settlement. Lastly, the Same Day ACH (SDA) functionality (on banking days) as another means to send money “faster” will be discussed, including the late-night ACH to provide payment details after banking hours.
Donna K Olheiser, AAP, is the vice president of Education Services and founder of Dynamic Mastership, LLC. Donna is an enthusiastic and energetic Certified Master Trainer with over 14 years’ training experience. She has designed and facilitated over 100 training sessions each year with her expertise being the rules for companies and financial institutions when processing specifically ACH electronic payments, then scheduling the training events to facilitate/deliver the material through a variety of venues (webinars, teleseminars, in-person workshops, including regional and national conferences). Donna has over 24 years of experience in the financial services industry which includes 9 years’ experience as the education service director at a Regional Payments Association (RPA), where she managed and facilitated the entire education program for nearly 800 financial institution members. Prior to that, Ms. Olheiser spent 14 years in various departments with the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis and also holds the Accredited ACH Professional (AAP) designation (achieved in 2004).