“Juul replaces CEO and stops all advertising as vaping crisis escalates”
September 25, 2019
“The CEO of Juul is out, as a growing number of vaping-related deaths and threats of federal regulation present a monumental challenge for the e-cigarette company.
Juul announced Wednesday that CEO Kevin Burns will be replaced by K.C. Crosthwaite, who had been chief growth officer at tobacco company Altria (MO)…
The company also said Wednesday it has a new marketing strategy: It will suspend all TV, print and digital ads and it will stop some of its lobbying efforts…”
https://www.cnn.com/2019/09/25/business/juul-ceo-resigns/index.html
This looks like a bad time to invest in vaping. The industry is getting rocked.
One comment on ““Juul replaces CEO and stops all advertising as vaping crisis escalates””
admin
November 5, 2020 at 2:34 pmI don’t know which one of these firms will work with you but if you haven’t tried any of these it wouldn’t hurt to get in contact with some of them.
“1. Skrill
Skrill is one of the best-known PayPal alternatives. The major area where Skrill touts its services over PayPal is in terms of transaction costs. PayPal earns 4.5% for a merchant transaction fee while Skrill charges 2.9%.
2. Payoneer
Payoneer is one of the most popular electronic platforms in the world. It started around the same time as PayPal, and like PayPal, operates in more than 200 countries. Payoneer has two types of accounts: one that is free and allows for money withdrawal directly into your bank account. The other account calls for a prepaid card that is only available to individuals and costs $29.95 a month. Payoneer charges a transaction fee of $1.50 for local bank transfers…
3. Google Pay Send
Several big-name competitors could have been listed here, such as Amazon Pay, Apple Pay, or Samsung Pay; however, none of these services have quite the full range of options of PayPal, although they do not lack for resources and are all determined to be serious competitors in the future. Instead, Google Pay Send gets the nod for its ability to attach payments to Gmail messages, and the fact that Google is one of the few companies that dominate the online world…
4. Stripe
Stripe competes against PayPal for online business customers but not much else. This service is only available to U.S. and Canada-based businesses, but payments can come in from any source. Fees are very clear; Stripe charges 2.9% plus 30 cents on every transaction. The checkout process for Stripe is self-hosted; it occurs on the business owner’s site rather than sending customers to an external site such as PayPal, which saves businesses from monthly fees for the trouble…”
https://www.investopedia.com/articles/markets/101415/4-best-alternatives-paypal.asp
Here are some more just in case those didn’t work.
“Google Pay
WePay
2CheckOut
Authorize.Net
Skrill
Intuit
ProPay
Dwolla
Braintree
Stripe
Payoneer
Amazon Pay
TransferWise
Venmo
Square
Payline
Shopify Payments
Worldpay
Wirecard
BlueSnap
Merchant Inc.
Viewpost
FastSpring”
https://blog.hubspot.com/sales/paypal-alternatives