Why Refurbished POS Equipment Makes Business Sense The Case for Refurbished POS Hardware Starts With the Numbers A new POS terminal typically runs $1,000 to $5,000 or more, depending on specs and configuration. Multiply that across 20, 50, or 200 loca...
How HaaS Reduces POS Equipment Costs The Real Cost Problem with Traditional POS Hardware Ownership When a POS terminal fails mid-shift, the clock starts running immediately. Every minute of downtime costs sales, slows service, and create...
POS Hardware Total Cost of Ownership Explained The Price Tag Is Only the Beginning A POS terminal that costs $800 up front and one that costs $1,500 aren't always as different as they look on a purchase order. What you actually spend on POS hardwa...
How HaaS Reduces POS Equipment Costs The Hidden Cost of Owning Your POS Hardware Outright Most businesses treat POS hardware as a capital purchase — buy it, depreciate it, replace it when it breaks. On paper, that looks straightforward. ...
POS Terminal Repair vs. Replacement: How to Decide The Decision That Costs More When You Get It Wrong A POS terminal goes down. Maybe it's a cracked touchscreen, a unresponsive card reader, or a unit that simply stopped booting. Before you call anyone...
Buy Vs. Hardware-As-A-Service (HaaS): Which POS Investment Strategy Delivers Long-Term Value? In today’s fast-evolving retail environment, selecting the right point-of-sale (POS) hardware investment model is a critical decision for enterprise and multi-location retailers. POS systems represent...
What Retailers Should Budget For POS Support, Repairs, And Lifecycle Management Picture this: a busy weekend rush at a multi-location retail chain. Suddenly, several point-of-sale (POS) terminals malfunction simultaneously, disrupting transactions and frustrating customers. The s...