Payment solutions can be a headache for colleges and universities–but this doesn’t have to be the case.
More institutions are turning to third-party payment solution providers for processing and PCI compliance, which is a set of guidelines businesses must follow to protect customers and cardholders as credit card transactions are processed.
Third-party solution providers can ease some of the burden on colleges and universities. Watch this eCampus News webinar to learn how these providers can lower PCI scope for schools and provide value-added services that help save time, increase security, and lower processing costs.
- Weak tech could push students, faculty to other institutions - April 13, 2026
- 13 predictions about edtech, innovation, and–yes–AI in 2026 - January 1, 2026
- 5 essential dimensions of AI literacy - December 12, 2025
More from eCampus News
McGraw Hill Transitions from Traditional Textbook Edition Publishing Cycle with New Evergreen™ Delivery Model
COLUMBUS, Ohio (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — McGraw Hill announced the launch of an industry-first delivery model that releases digital product updates directly to existing courses already built by instructors, replacing the…
For schools, cyber resilience starts at the data layer
Cyber resilience in education starts at the data layer. That is because the data layer is where schools’ most important information lives and where recovery begins when something goes wrong.
Belonging by design: Practical ways to support adult learners in hybrid and asynchronous courses
For many adult learners, logging into a hybrid or asynchronous course is not the beginning of their day. It may come after a full shift at work, after helping children with homework, after managing caregiving responsibilities, or after years away from formal schooling.
Data centers, AI, and the next big campus debate
Higher education has spent the last two years debating whether students should be allowed to use artificial intelligence. That debate now looks almost quaint. The more urgent question is whether colleges and universities will help build the physical infrastructure that makes AI possible.
Stop defending and start showing: How colleges can win back trust by looking past the campus walls
If you work in higher education, you already know about the audience problem. Donors. Alumni. Prospective students. Current students. Faculty, staff, elected officials, local employers, community members, journalists, and more.
Why the old enrollment playbook no longer works
Key points: The demographic cliff higher education has been warned about for years isn’t coming; it’s already here. The post-2008 birthrate drop is now hitting institutions directly, arriving alongside affordability…