1. Payout Cycles Explained
Concept
A payout cycle is the schedule that determines when money from processed payments reaches your bank account.
Even after a transaction is approved and settled, funds are not instantly available—they are released according to a defined cycle (e.g., T+1, T+2, weekly).
🔓 PMPro Gate (Recommended Placement)
Framework — Payout Timing Model
Transaction Day → Settlement → Payout Delay → Bank Deposit
Common structures:
- T+1 → next business day
- T+2 / T+3 → delayed payouts
- Rolling basis → continuous flow
- Weekly batch → grouped payouts
Example — SMB Scenario
A business processes £1,000 daily:
- Monday sales → paid Wednesday (T+2)
- Tuesday sales → paid Thursday
Result:
- always 2 days behind real revenue
Impact — Why This Matters
- Cashflow lag creates liquidity pressure
- Faster payouts improve operational flexibility
- Delays compound during growth
- Payout timing affects supplier payments
Action
Check your PSP dashboard:
What is your payout delay (T+x)?
Then map: Sales → Money received timeline
Related Capsules
- Settlement
- Cashflow Visibility
- Payment Fees
Operator Insight
Revenue happens instantly.
Cashflow does not.
2. Reconciliation Basics
Concept
Reconciliation is the process of matching your recorded sales with the actual money received.
🔓 PMPro Gate
Framework — 3-Way Match
Orders (What you sold)
Payments (What was processed)
Payouts (What you received)
Example
- Shopify shows: £10,000
- PSP shows: £9,800
- Bank shows: £9,600
Difference = fees + refunds + timing gaps
Impact
- Prevents revenue leakage
- Reduces accounting errors
- Detects fraud or failures
- Improves financial clarity
Action
Pick one day of sales and manually match:
- orders
- PSP transactions
- bank deposits
Operator Insight
Most financial problems show up first in reconciliation gaps.
3. Fraud Signals
Concept
Fraud signals are indicators used to detect suspicious transactions.
🔓 PMPro Gate
Framework — 4 Core Signals
- Velocity (too many attempts)
- Location mismatch
- Device inconsistency
- Behavioral anomalies
Example
Customer:
- UK billing
- US IP
- 5 rapid attempts
→ flagged as high risk
Impact
- Protects revenue
- Reduces chargebacks
- Can wrongly block good customers
- Impacts approval rates
Action
Review your top declined transactions: → how many were fraud-related?
Operator Insight
Fraud prevention is a balancing act, not a filter.
4. Chargebacks Explained
Concept
A chargeback occurs when a customer disputes a transaction with their bank.
🔓 PMPro Gate
Framework — Chargeback Flow
Customer → Issuer → Network → Acquirer → Merchant
Example
Customer claims: “I didn’t receive my order”
→ bank reverses £80 payment
Impact
- Direct revenue loss
- Additional fees
- Higher risk profile
- Potential account restrictions
Action
Check your:
Chargeback ratio (monthly)
Operator Insight
Chargebacks are not just disputes—they are risk signals.
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