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November 10, 2021
At last – though with restrictions – international travel is starting up again. Whether for business, vacations, or long-awaited reunions with family and friends, people are beginning to cross borders and visit locations outside their home country. This of course means these travelers will spend money on transport, lodging, food, entertainment, and other shopping.
Local pandemic restrictions, their own precautions, or habit might force reliance on online services. Travelers may need to use meal or shopping delivery services such as DoorDash, Grubhub, Instacart, or UberEats, make online purchases from local stores, purchase a ticket for public transport, or simply order clothing gifts in the right size for the grandkids they haven’t been able to see for two years.
It's easy, right? So many businesses and organizations accelerated their move to digital during the pandemic: touchless payments, curbside pickup, delivery services for everything you can order online. It’s all the norm. If you take public transit – trains and buses – you can pay with apps on your phone, often linked to your online wallet or PayPal account. You and your neighbors have been buying like this for over 18 months. What could go wrong this late in the game?
Sadly, we cannot assume that if a digital process works smoothly for the local consumer, it will be fine for everyone as borders open. Regardless of language barriers, digital purchases and online processes may turn into a problematic and frustrating struggle for the international traveler (“Can’t Read, Won’t Buy – B2C”). Any digital experiences that have not been exposed to visitors with foreign bank accounts and phones may have bugs, unless developers tested the entire customer journey with scenarios that include visitors from outside their borders.
Anyone who has visited another country is likely to have experienced the joy of their bank blocking their credit or debit card. The bank’s algorithms monitor spending patterns and automatically flag deviations as possibly fraudulent, even when you have communicated your travel plans. Authorizing payments should be the only challenge for the traveler: it’s a good thing that the bank is diligent in crime prevention. It’s even better if the block can be removed by a simple text message rather than a phone call or time-consuming online chat across time zones.
But the experience for travelers is more complex than a bank blocking a single out-of-the-norm activity. A digital purchase relies on many interacting components: an app, or sometimes two or more interconnected applications; their phone’s app store; the payment method plus bank account and/or online wallet or other fintech software account; and either a digital delivery process such as for travel or entertainment tickets, or a physical shipping address. Addresses are also important for validation of the payment – software validates the customer’s payment method with their billing address. If any one of these components does not work with the traveler’s data and equipment, the purchase process breaks down – leaving a potential customer without their desired outcome and denying the enterprise a sale.
It is important to recognize that international travelers have billing addresses that do not match the purchase location. It is also vital to understand that app stores differ from country to country, but visitors oftentimes only have access to the apps available in their home store. Even if they switch their phone’s SIM card for the visit – or add a second, local SIM – the app store is still bound to their home country. It’s tied to their Google or Apple account, and it’s a nightmare to switch – don’t even suggest it. Instead, make sure your app is available in all app stores – not simply restricted to the local one.
These are some errors experienced recently by international travelers:
If your organization has thoroughly tested your end-to-end experience with cross-border activity, kudos! If not, or if there is any doubt, here are some recommendations to help your international visitors have as smooth a journey as your local customers.
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SubscribeAlison speaks English as a first language (both UK and USA variants), is fluent if a little rusty in French, understands Dutch better than she can speak it, and enjoys Polish grammar puzzles just for fun. She has published several fiction books, and is also a concert and festival photographer and blogger: music communicates across all languages!
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