Prime Day, Black Friday and Keeping Shopping Holidays Safe
What should eCommerce platforms be on the lookout for during spikes of activity?
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Coupon and promo codes have been a tried and true method of attracting new business. While customer acquisition is always a good thing, businesses should be on the lookout for users attempting to exploit these efforts for their own fraudulent gains.
In an ideal world, the coupon or promo code entices new users to sign up to try your service for free or at a discount, then become loyal, paying customers. Unfortunately, some users do find loopholes and take advantage of promotions. Without safeguards in place, there is not much stopping users from repetitively violating terms of service and abusing the offers. This results in significant revenue loss and an increase in operational costs to respond to the fraud.
Before prevention can begin, it's important to establish where the abuse starts and the type of abuse involved. Let's use the ticketing industry as an example. TeleSign recently partnered with the ticketing service Atom Tickets. TeleSign was able to reduce Atom's coupon abuse by almost 80%. Click here to read the full case study and learn how TeleSign was able to use digital identity solutions to prevent coupon abuse at onboarding.
To attract new customers, ticketing companies often use promo codes to incentivize people to join their service or download their apps. These incentives are designed to be a one-time-deal. However, it is moderately easy to find loopholes and get more freebies. In fact, there are numerous websites, businesses and blogs dedicated to showing users how to work the system. This results in losses from multiple sources, including:
There are several mechanisms to stop coupon abuse before your business falls victim to scams and misuse. Some recommendations include:
-Create codes that expire quickly
-Create geo-targeted codes by state, region or country, offering different discounts in different areas, then track where they are being used.
Do the terms and conditions for each distribution method address coupon code abuse? For example, does the T&C for affiliates address the way affiliates can promote your brand, the coupon codes that are commissionable, and penalties for affiliates that are out of compliance?
Are there any red flags? For example, if codes are being given to current users for referrals, do certain users have too many friends to be legitimate?
Typically, a bad actor attempting to take advantage of a coupon or promo code will create a new account each time they want to benefit from the discount or freebie offered. They may do this through the use of easy-to-obtain email addresses and/or non-fixed VOIP, pagers, and prepaid mobile phone numbers that are then used to create multiple fake accounts with the same service. With websites that sell online phone numbers and others that offer the ability to receive SMS, it's relatively simple to get around typical registration processes in order to abuse coupons or promos.
Establishing a phone verification process at new account registration (or app download) can prevent the creation of fake accounts. Phone verification requires that a user provide a valid phone number (harder for a fraudster to obtain than an email address), which is then verified and attached to their unique account. Each unique user account has one unique phone number affiliated with it. Anyone trying to create a new account with that same phone number could be blocked. TeleSign offers phone verification through SMS and voice one-time-passcodes and frictionless device signaling.
Asking users to provide a phone number also enables ridesharing services & taxi apps to take even more aggressive preventative measures in order to stop fraud. With the TeleSign Score API, businesses can quickly identify fraudulent users by obtaining real-time security intelligence, data and analytics on the phone numbers provided. Score delivers a reputation score based on phone number data (including phone type, phone registration location, carrier, SIM swap status, call forwarding status, intelligence, velocity, traffic patterns and reported fraud) and from that information recommends whether to block, flag, or allow account creation.
Score gives businesses that offer coupon and promo codes the ability to better identify potential scammers based on the phone number provided. Is it a number that has been linked to fraud in the past? Is the phone type suspicious? Has the same number been used repeatedly in a short period of time? Score, combined with phone verification, can provide the answers that help prevent fraud.
Attracting new customers is the key to the success of your business. Be proactive to avoid coupon code misuse before you're taken for a ride by abusers.
TeleSign has been connecting and protecting online experiences for over 15 years. We support the largest web properties in the world and we're prepared to help you. Contact TeleSign now and for all of your security needs. As the pioneers of phone-based security, we are one stop shop for all of your digital identity and programmable communications needs.