Originally posted by Dave2002
View Post
Cheques: does anybody still use them?
Collapse
X
-
The lady who is Hon Treasurer of our local Choral Soc of which I am Chairman has done a brilliant job for nearly 40 years and if approached (cautiously) on the subject refuses to abandon cheques in favour of any new-fangled method of collecting members' subs. Greatly valuing her contribution and with no one else obviously pushing themselves forward to take the job on, we are happy to go along with her wishes.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by ahinton View PostFair points, but not all cheques are sent to people whom their issuers know personally. Moreover, if we all used them for all financial transactions I shudder to imagine how many trees would be required for their manufacture!
One of my first ebay purchases was from the USA, and the seller really didn't want to send me bank details. We figured a way eventually, and of course trust worked both ways. I did receive the article - exactly what I wanted, but there was the possibility of a default on either side.
I'm just about getting used to bank transfers. It looks as though standards of service are different for different banks.
One possible problem is for small organisations which may receive a number of modest payments from a modest sized (say 100-1000) people e.g. annual subscriptions, and trying to match up people and amounts can present problems. The problems might still exist with cheques, but it's usually obvious that there might be a problem. It's amazing how convoluted this can get - with people paying the wrong amounts, or paying for other people, or paying for multiple items so that it's hard to figure out who has paid for what. Some banks don't provide enough information (for example on statements) to identify each transaction well enough, and the standard BACs data field isn't really big enough for much detail - 18 chars I think.
Msg 242 indicates a difficulty for small organisations - I can identify with that.
Comment
-
-
I've written 3 cheques in the past 6 weeks - one to the gardener, one to my sister and one to the handyman. None of them uses online banking or PayPal so it's the only way. My bank (Lloyds') closed all its branches in Scotland a few years ago and the local Bank of Scotland, which handled some transactions for them has also closed. There's only the Post Office now but I'm not sure how much they do.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostThe lady who is Hon Treasurer of our local Choral Soc of which I am Chairman has done a brilliant job for nearly 40 years and if approached (cautiously) on the subject refuses to abandon cheques in favour of any new-fangled method of collecting members' subs. Greatly valuing her contribution and with no one else obviously pushing themselves forward to take the job on, we are happy to go along with her wishes.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Dave2002 View Post.......One possible problem is for small organisations which may receive a number of modest payments from a modest sized (say 100-1000) people e.g. annual subscriptions, and trying to match up people and amounts can present problems. The problems might still exist with cheques, but it's usually obvious that there might be a problem. It's amazing how convoluted this can get - with people paying the wrong amounts, or paying for other people, or paying for multiple items so that it's hard to figure out who has paid for what......
There were messages (or emails) from them recently referring to a new facility for collating payments for groups. One small group I belong to,, with a yearly sub of abour £22, with international members, finds paypal a practical means of receiving payments. (Who wants to go to corner shops to receive western union transfers?).
Paying by bank transfer for UK transactions is now pretty standard for me - most recently for two vases we bought from an importer with a pretty modest business (a sideline) in that area of selling . (For anything much over, say, £200 I firstly make a £1 transfer and get confirmation it was received).
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Cockney Sparrow View PostI'm no expert user of Paypal. But transactions under £100 don't have the protections given by using credit cards, and there is (I understand) some possibility of redress under their system - so I use it.
There were messages (or emails) from them recently referring to a new facility for collating payments for groups. One small group I belong to,, with a yearly sub of abour £22, with international members, finds paypal a practical means of receiving payments. (Who wants to go to corner shops to receive western union transfers?).
Paying by bank transfer for UK transactions is now pretty standard for me - most recently for two vases we bought from an importer with a pretty modest business (a sideline) in that area of selling . (For anything much over, say, £200 I firstly make a £1 transfer and get confirmation it was received).
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by DracoM View PostSo the banks' assumption seems to be that unless you own and use a mobile phone for everything, you're not really a full human being?
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by DracoM View PostSo the banks' assumption seems to be that unless you own and use a mobile phone for everything, you're not really a full human being?
I do bank transfers etc on-line from a computer at home, and get cash when needed from ATMs. Perhaps my banking needs are less complex than others' here.
.
Comment
-
Comment