Data processing: financial – business practice – management – or co – Automated electrical financial or business practice or... – Accounting
Reexamination Certificate
1999-08-31
2003-06-10
Cuff, Michael (Department: 3627)
Data processing: financial, business practice, management, or co
Automated electrical financial or business practice or...
Accounting
C705S040000, C705S042000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06578015
ABSTRACT:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to the electronic presentment and payment of bills. In particular, the present invention relates to methods, devices and systems that provide a powerful, automated and flexible infrastructure for electronically presenting, processing, viewing and paying bills and other requests for payment over a computer network, such as the Internet.
2. Description of the Related Art
Conventional methods for the receipt, payment and processing of bills derive from the nature of the bills themselves. Paper bills, such as those generated by billers such as utilities, credit card and mortgage companies, for example, must be printed, stuffed into envelopes, stamped or otherwise metered and delivered. Once received, the consumer most often writes a paper check, fills out a paper bill stub, stuffs both in an envelope, affixes postage, and drops off the payment with the post office to be delivered to the biller. The biller, or a designated payment processor contracting with the biller, receives the paper bill payment, records the payment and deposits the check with a financial institution, whereupon the check is sent to a clearinghouse for further processing. Ultimately, the customer's account is debited for the amount of the check and the biller's account is correspondingly credited.
FIG. 1
shows an example of a paper-based bill generation and payment cycle
100
. As shown therein, the cycle
100
may include a biller
110
electronically sending bill data to a bill publisher
120
. The bill data may include the customer's name, address, amount due, due date, together with any other relevant information, such as the current outstanding balance. The bill publisher
120
then prints out the bills using the biller's data and bill forms. The printed bills may then be mailed and physically delivered to the customer's mailbox
140
, most often via the postal service
130
. The customer then retrieves the bill from his or her mailbox and eventually remits (at reference
150
) the amount due (or some fraction thereof), most often by writing a paper check. The remittance is then stuffed into an envelope, mailed and delivered, most often via the postal service
130
, to the biller's lock box
160
. A bank or other payment processor
170
then retrieves the payment, processes same and causes the payment to be debited from a customer account and credited to a biller's account, either by electronic or paper funds transfer.
As may be appreciated, the paper-based bill generation and payment cycle
100
depicted in
FIG. 1
is often both a lengthy and costly process. To quantify the cost of this reliance upon paper bills, it has been estimated that over 18 billion paper bills are generated annually, at about $1.00 to about $1.50 per paper bill. Moreover, it is estimated that the aggregate processing cost for these paper bills reaches about $14 billion annually. Of these paper bills, the majority are generated by credit card companies and the vast majority of these bills are settled by means of paper checks.
Other payment modalities exist. For example, it is now possible to pay some bills by authorizing the biller to issue a telephone check or to electronically transfer funds. Moreover, certain online payment options are emerging, allowing customers to pay bills electronically. Such online payment services often must print out and mail a paper check to those billers not equipped to accept an electronic form of payment. However, a major obstacle to the widespread adoption of electronic bill payments thus far has been the absence of an effective, reliable, convenient and secure bill presentment infrastructure. Such an infrastructure should allow customers to be presented with and view bills as they would normally appear, in the same or a similar format as their familiar paper counterparts. The customers should then have the ability to view a summary and/or a detailed form of the bill and have a number of options available (such as to schedule bills for auto-payment, for example) to pay the bill electronically. Such an infrastructure should also allow the billers to exercise complete control over the appearance of the bills presented to the customers, and allow a simple and flexible means of uploading, storing and presenting their billing data to their customers. What are needed, therefore, are tightly integrated methods, devices and systems for electronically presenting bills to customers while preserving the billers' corporate identity. Such methods, devices and systems should also allow customers to view and pay such bills without the disadvantages associated with conventional electronic payment systems and/or paper bills and checks.
Bill consolidators exist, which allow customers to electronically log onto a single site on the World Wide Web (hereafter Web) and pay bills originating from a number of individual billers. For example, a customer might log onto a consolidator's Web site and pay their electric bill, their telephone and their cable bill. Such consolidators may be generally categorized as thin consolidators or thick consolidators. Thin consolidators typically carry only bill summaries and refer the customer to the biller's own Web site for further detailed bills and/or further customer service, such as to discuss a disputed bill. Thick consolidators typically carry the biller's entire customer data and often act as their own payment processors. In the thick consolidator case, the biller's involvement in the presentment and payment process may be limited to providing the thick consolidator with the necessary customer bill data and collecting the payment after the customer payment has been received and processed. However, no complete solution is believed to exist to allow thick and/or thin consolidators to preserve the “look-and-feel” of their billers' bills while providing the customer with a flexible and integrated bill presentment and payment infrastructure.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of the present invention, therefore, to provide methods, devices and systems for electronically presenting bills to customers while preserving the billers' corporate identity, as embodied in the “look-and-feel” of the bills presented to customers. It is another object of the present invention to provide methods, devices and systems to allow customers to view and pay electronic bills in a flexible manner, without the disadvantages associated with conventional electronic payment systems and/or paper bills and checks.
In accordance with the above-described objects and those that will be mentioned and will become apparent below, a computer-implemented method of presenting an electronic bill from a biller to a customer over a computer network, according to an embodiment of the present invention, comprises the steps of receiving biller-originated bill data and bill format data over the network into a bill presentment and payment database; storing the inputted bill data and bill format data in a first area of the bill presentment and payment database called the loading and staging area; validating at least the stored bill data; swapping the validated bill data and the format data from the first area to a second area of the bill presentment and payment database, the second area, called the active area, being accessible to the customer; and presenting the bill to the customer, the presented bill being formatted according to the format data and incorporating the validated bill data.
According to an embodiment of the present invention, the method may further comprise storing historic information of bills in a third, customer accessible area of the bill presentment and payment database called the active area. The bill format data may include a plurality of bill templates, each of the bill templates defining a distinct appearance for the bill. A plurality of bill template rules may be evaluated based upon the validated bill data and one of the plurality of bill templates may
Agarwal Siddhartha
Arthur Mohan K.
Doshi Mohit
Haseltine Mark E.
Irribarren Roberto
Cuff Michael
Oracle International Corporation
Young Law Firm P.C.
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