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NACHA's Council for Electronic Billing and Payment Issues Final Guidelines for Use of Quick Response (QR) Codes in Consumer Bill Payment
[January 24, 2013]

NACHA's Council for Electronic Billing and Payment Issues Final Guidelines for Use of Quick Response (QR) Codes in Consumer Bill Payment


HERNDON, Va., Jan 24, 2013 (PRWeb.com via COMTEX) -- Today, NACHA - The Electronic Payments Association's Council for Electronic Billing and Payment (CEBP) issued final guidelines for the use of Quick Response (QR) codes in consumer bill payment. The guidelines, developed in collaboration with CEBP members and refined through industry input, describe the use of QR codes in a variety of bill payment functions such as viewing bills, making bill payments, enrolling for eBills and setting up payees in online banking.



Specifically, the QR Encoding for Consumer Bill Pay Guidelines identify voluntary standards for using QR codes in both biller direct and consolidator/aggregator billing and payment models. It contains recommendations regarding QR code size, data to be included in the QR code, and layout of the data represented in the QR code, among others. The goal of the guideines is to establish a single QR code format that can be printed on a paper bill and scanned by the consumer's mobile phone using a biller, mobile banking or generic QR code reader. In this way, billers and service providers can enable QR encoding in a standardized format, providing certainty for biller and banking clients, and ensuring a consistent experience for consumers.

"With the help of the industry, the CEBP has been able to develop a clear, implementable standard for the use of QR codes in consumer bill payment," said Chris Huppert, Senior Vice President of Wells Fargo and chair of the CEBP. "It is our hope that these standards will help encourage QR code use for bill pay, and ultimately provide an easy option for check writers to view and pay bills electronically." "We see QR codes as a bridge to help our biller customers move their consumers from paper to electronic adoption," said Rich Langan, Senior Product Manager with DST Output, a customer communications provider and CEBP member that helped spearhead the Guidelines development effort. "With diverse participation from key industry verticals, the CEBP serves as a great venue for these types of standards efforts." The CEBP intends to organize a test for early adopters in 2013 with billers, biller service providers, financial institutions, payment providers and others to help kick start use of the Guidelines. The purpose of the test is to verify the specification and to help develop market participants. Organizations interested in participating in the QR code test should contact Robert Unger, Senior Director, eBilling and Payments, NACHA at (703) 561-3913 or [email protected] by March 1, 2013.


For more information about the QR Encoding for Consumer Bill Pay Guidelines, visit the CEBP's QR code resource page at https://cebp.nacha.org/QRcodes.

About the Council for Electronic Billing and Payment The Council for Electronic Billing and Payment (CEBP) promotes the adoption and use of consumer, business, and government billing and payment programs and services across multiple delivery channels. Through three annual meetings, CEBP provides an open forum for education, resource development, solution innovation, research, and the exchange of information about developments and trends in the electronic billing and electronic payment industries. For more information, please visit http://cebp.nacha.org.

About NACHA -- The Electronic Payments Association NACHA manages the development, administration, and governance of the ACH Network, the backbone for the electronic movement of money and data. The ACH Network provides a safe, secure, and reliable network for direct account-to-account consumer, business, and government payments. Annually, it facilitates billions of Direct Deposit via ACH and Direct Payment via ACH transactions. Used by all types of financial institutions, the ACH Network is governed by the fair and equitable NACHA Operating Rules, which guide risk management and create payment certainty for all participants. As a not-for-profit association, NACHA represents more than 10,000 financial institutions via 17 regional payments associations and direct membership. Through its industry councils and forums, NACHA brings together payments system stakeholders to foster dialogue and innovation to strengthen the ACH Network. To learn more, please visit http://www.nacha.org, http://www.electronicpayments.org, http://www.payitgreen.org, and http://direct.nacha.org.

Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/CEBP/QRCodes/prweb10359357.htm PRWeb.com

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