Obviously it's best to go as your grow. In early stage startups - what have you found as the best workflow for creating content for help centers etc?
So far, we've been predicting common questions and have taken from various email exchanges we've had with customers during acquisition.
Edit: I've read some comments and you're not reading the question fully.
What were your experiences paying the fines?
If there was any fees/fine involved, was it reasonable and what city?
Was it a simple process?
Were there outside fees associated with paying the fines?
Did you go to a website or pay at the court house?
Thanks.
How many of us have our own website or do we simply rely on our works at various URLs as our online presence?
We're trying to get a better grasp on the diverse workflow nonprofits use when making decisions that rely on tech. I.E. Building a Website, Making Changes, Adding Code for Google Analytics, PayPal etc.
What have been your experiences and what would you change?
The problem is while this optic based data extraction is low-cost and democratizes card data gathering amongst other things, I don't believe it will grow in popularity because people generally don't trust the technology with private data. The concept of you putting your banking card up in a specific frame and a snapshot taken (even though it's not saved) will not resonate with a society already plagued with various privacy concerns. It will also be hard to process the numbers on older, heavily use cards with recessed numbers etc.
I'm curious to know what you all think about this growing movement of data extraction at the cross section of mobile payment processing.
Thank you.
I'm caught between working on hardware to read banking cards via the audio jack and via optics (i.e. Card IO). Also as a heads up, I'm keenly aware of Apple phasing out the audio jack in favor of their lightning interface and the pros and cons of both implementations.
The problem is while this optic based data extraction is low-cost and democratizes card data gathering amongst other things, I don't believe it will grow in popularity because people generally don't trust the technology with private data. The concept of you putting your banking card up in a specific frame and a snapshot taken (even though it's not saved) will not resonate with a society already plagued with various privacy concerns. It will also be hard to process the numbers on older, heavily use cards with recessed numbers etc.
I'm curious to know what you all think about this growing movement of data extraction at the cross section of mobile payment processing.
Thank you.