Along with the good fortune of positioning itself as the “anti-PayPal,” Dwolla already has many things going for it that would be hard for PayPal to get ahead on. The first and most glaring is the simplicity of Dwolla’s pricing structure. The startup charges merchants just $0.25 per transaction over $10, no matter how large the sum of money exchanged is. PayPal has a more complex structure, charging merchants a monthly subscription fee, plus a percentage of the total sale, plus a per transaction charge. Milne has expressed that he does not want to compete with PayPal. Instead Dwolla is building a completely different payment infrastructure and creating a new network architecture that takes into account current web technologies. PayPal would never be able to catch up thanks to its massive infrastructure, because the nimble Dwolla is building something completely different. Dwolla’s API is also easy to work with. Developers and customers of apps who use the Dwolla API are both impressed with the ease of configuration. “Ambassador payouts are a piece of cake with Dwolla,” notes the team at Transswipe. “As you can imagine with well-known brands, the payouts can become large very quickly. Not having to live with the restrictions of percentage-based fee models opens up an opportunity to make a lot more money for ambassadors. They use Dwolla to make getting paid easier and cost a lot less for their users. This couldn’t make us any happier.” While Dwolla has a long way to go before it becomes the de facto online payment system of the web like PayPal currently is, the company announced that it raised a $5 million round in early February to make a go at the payment processing giant. Currently, Dwolla has over 80,000 users and 7,500 merchants using the payment platform. The company is going to use the $5 million that it raised in its Series B round to scale the company and focus on strengthening its API.
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