When you consider fraud, you might think of someone stealing your identity and buying things with your credit card. Nonprofits aren’t usually selling valuable goods, so no one is making purchases with a stolen identity. So are you susceptible to fraud and deception? Yes, but you can protect yourself.
The consequences of fraud can be damage to your brand, declining support, and loss of fundraising income. This article will explain why nonprofits can be victimized and offer some warning signs. We will give you a real-life example of what nonprofit e-commerce fraud looks like, and we’ll give you some tips on how you can protect your organization.
Nonprofits become victims of fraud for a few reasons:
The risk is real, so how can you know if your nonprofit is the victim of fraud? Some warning signs might alert you.
We checked in with the Nonprofit Risk Management Center to see some of the most common red flags for nonprofits. Nonprofit fraud can run the gamut of illegal behavior, from embezzlement to expense to e-commerce fraud. Here are some general guidelines of warning signs nonprofits should watch for at all times:
What about e-commerce fraud, in which extensive, organized criminal enterprises steal credit card numbers and test them using your nonprofit? Called carding or a carding attack, this is a fairly common occurrence and the one we at CharityEngine see the most.
The Digital Defense Fund offers some indicators you might be a victim of a carding attack:
While it might seem you need to be on guard 24/7 to recognize an attack, the good news is that technology can help you with fraud protection. But before we get to that, let’s look at a real-life case study.
Here’s a real example from about ten years ago. Unbeknownst to our nonprofit client, they were targeted by a sophisticated international organization. The criminals had deployed a network of bots methodically processing fake donations using stolen credit cards. The donations appeared to be coming from different locations and even different countries.
The nonprofit was large, and the decline ratio of this activity was low relative to the organization’s overall donation volume. It took the payment processor about two months to flag this activity as fraudulent.
What’s the first thing the payment processor did? They shut down the nonprofit’s account and insisted the issue be resolved before the organization could accept and process credit cards online.
Abruptly, the nonprofit was told they were a victim of fraud, had their accounts shut down, and started losing money with every minute that passed.
This nonprofit came to us frantic to get answers and develop a plan to proceed.
The first thing we did was look at their payment gateway. The client used one of the largest at the time and had anti-fraud services enabled. So why didn’t the system flag the fraud sooner?
There were three reasons this attack was successful:
CharityEngine worked with the client to implement some short-term solutions, and then we used our CRM to roll out some longer-term changes that leveraged big data. We could effectively eliminate the risk without affecting the nonprofit’s conversion rates.
Leverage technology. We pound this point into the pavement because we know firsthand how much good technology can make your nonprofit safer and more successful.
If you have access to advanced fraud protection, you might not have to protect yourself at all manually; the software likely does it for you. But here are some steps you can take to ensure you are doing what you can to keep your nonprofit safe:
These next mitigation steps are best-practice methods to block automated attackers, but they can potentially harm your donor experience and reduce conversion rates. Keeping your donor experience easy is always advised, but protecting against fraudulent attacks is critical. You probably experience the following with many, if not most, of your personal online purchases:
It’s worth noting that ACH payments, or checks and bank transactions, are traditionally less often attacked. But due to new Nacha guidelines, all merchants must implement technology that validates bank accounts if they are being used for e-commerce transactions.
This is positive news for nonprofits. If your processor uses a robust ACH account verification service, it will prevent fraud, reduce your ACH return rate, and reduce associated fees.
At CharityEngine, we’ve learned from years of helping the client we discussed and others who faced similar attacks. We have built patent-pending technology that leverages massive data networks and sophisticated intelligence to help our clients.
There are some key benefits and differentiators to our fraud protection:
We are enthusiastic about our advanced fraud protection because we know it’s the best on the market! If you want to talk to us about your specific situation, see our solution in action, or learn about how it looks to work with us, we’re always just a phone call or email away.