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Get your business off the ground with cash from several
startup sources.
What It Is: Startup financing is the initial infusion
of money that advances an idea or an intention into something tangible.
Appropriate for: Any business
Supply: Even though it's everywhere, it's sometimes
difficult to find.
Best Use: Commencing initial operation to the point
where outside investors can see and feel the venture, as well as understand
that you took some risk getting it to that point.
Cost: Startup financing will possess two of the following
three qualities: good, cheap and fast. It will never possess all three
qualities.
Ease of Acquisition: If you have nothing, it's difficult.
If you have personal assets, the hard part is putting them at risk.
But doing so is the rite of passage to both success and failure.
Range of Funds Typically Available: Varies widely.
First Steps
If you're starting a business, it's your baby. This idea may leave
you feeling simultaneously liberated and inspired. But it also has an
edge. Specifically, if it's your baby, it's also your obligation to
finance it beyond the "I've got an idea" stage. How do you
get that first dollop of funds that will either advance your idea to
the point where it can attract outside capital, or perhaps jump-start
you into profitable operations? Here are some options:
- Sell Assets. If you own things, you can sell them.
It's that simple. Jewelry, rugs, pool tables, boats, time-shares,
second properties--the list goes on. Most people's largest assets
are their homes and cars. Homes are covered later. Here's what you
can do with automobiles.
If you drive a nice, late-model car, you can sell it and lease a cheap one without a down payment. This might net you $15,000 to $20,000 and leave you with a small monthly lease payment.
- Borrow Against Your Home. This is the oldest trick
in the book. It's also one of the best because you can exert almost
total control over the process. Here's how it works: Say you need
$50,000, your home is worth $250,000 and you owe the bank $100,000
on your mortgage. You can borrow against the equity, in this case
$150,000.
Of course, once the loan kicks in, you'll have monthly payments. If you're starting a new business, it's a wise idea to set aside some of the proceeds from the home equity loan to help make these payments until the business can pay you a steady salary.
Another way to get money out of your home but maintain a lower monthly payment
is to refinance the mortgage with a new one.
- Borrow Against Insurance Policies. If you want
to know where all your money goes, look at your insurance payments.
Each month you probably pay for health insurance, life insurance,
disability insurance, auto insurance and perhaps homeowner's insurance.
Unfortunately, you can only borrow against whole life policies, but
most have some cash value after three years. Simply write your agent
or insurance company, saying you want a policy loan. Most companies
will lend up to 90 percent of the cash value, and your policy stays
intact as long as you keep paying the premiums as they come due. However,
if you die with a policy loan outstanding, the benefits might be diminished,
although that varies by policy. But the good news is that loans against
your insurance policy are fairly reasonable, since the rates charged
are tied to the key money-market rate.
- Friends and Family. Friends and family present
a formidable source of capital. Your typical friend or family investor
is male, has been successful in his own business and wants to invest
because he wishes someone had done it for him, according to Kirk Neiswander,
senior vice president of Enterprise Development Inc., a nonprofict
subsidiary of Case Western Reserve University's Weatherhead School
of Management in Cleveland. "They are not reckless investors, and
they have shallow pockets," he says. "They will invest once but not
a second or a third time and generally in an industry they know that
is close to home. Typically, friends and family will invest up to
$100,000."
However, investments with friends and family can turn out bad when
things don't go as planned. The situation can be even worse than with
professional investors because friends and family react to bad news
as much with emotion as with logic. Take the following steps to protect
everyone from each other:
- Get an agreement in writing. This will eliminate
all conversations that start with, "You never said that."
- Emphasize debt (loans) rather than equity (ownership).
You don't want friends and family in your company forever. Before
you know it, they start telling you how to run the place, and long-buried
emotions emerge. Make it a loan, and pay it back as fast as you
can.
- Put some cash flow on their investment. If Dad
says, "Here's $50,000--try not to lose it, and pay it back as soon
as you can," that's great. But consider paying some nominal interest
at regular intervals so that you and he have a reality check. And
it's better to pay this quarterly rather than monthly. This way,
when things are teetering, your lender won't immediately know it.
- Borrow Against Your Investments. If you're starting
your business part time while keeping your full-time job, a potentially
stable investment is borrowing against your employer's 401(k) retirement
plan. It's common for such plans to let you borrow a percentage of
your money that doesn't exceed $50,000. The interest rate is usually
about 6 percent, with a specified repayment schedule. The downside
of borrowing from your 401(k) is that if you lose your job, the loan
must be repaid quickly, often within 30 days. To see if this is an
option, consult your plan's documentation.
You may also want to consider using the funds in your IRA. Within the laws governing IRAs, you can actually withdraw money from an IRA as long as you replace it within 60 days. This is not a loan, so you don't pay interest; rather, this is a withdrawal that you're allowed to keep for 60 days. A highly organized person could possibly juggle funds among several IRAs. But if you're one day late--for any reason--you'll be hit with a 10 percent premature withdrawal fee, and the money you haven't returned will become taxable.
- Credit Cards. They're not terribly creative. But
credit cards are quick and easy. In a perverse way, they are also
cheap. That is, a minimum payment of $50 per month can hold down a
whole lot of debt. Of course, if you only make the minimum payment,
your balance continues to grow, and if the business fails, you have
to pay the piper. But if things go well and the business pays off
the balances without missing a beat, then you look back at your early
credit card financing with a nostalgic fondness, and perhaps a twinge
of longing for simpler days.
Excerpted from Financing Your Small Business. Buy
it today.
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