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Learn A Proven System For Raising Venture Capital

Tele-Seminar:
Raising venture capital

 


When: Wednesday Oct 20 at 7PM EST

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The comfort of your home or office

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We will email you a web link to download the slides, phone number and password the week before the event.

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You Only Get One Chance To Start Your Company.
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Secrets of Raising Angel Financing
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This 2-hour audio and 80 slide book is a complete roadmap to be successful raising money from angels.

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FEATURE ARTICLE:
Using A Financing Mosaic and SBA Guaranteed Loan Programs

There no better feeling than getting a company to profitability and still owning and controlling 100% of your equity. If you have a scalable company then you probably have the ability to generate considerable personal wealth and the freedom to do as you please with the company moving forward. Of course this can also get you into trouble. Taking that company to the next level will require a different set of skills too.  I am not talking as much about a service business where your scaling is limited but one with product leverage.

One way to do this is to bet on yourself by using your own personal resources and bootstrapping, bootstrapping, bootstrapping. See our complete course on this at StartupPlanet.com.

Another way is to develop a mosaic of financing that includes personal resources, friends and family and then loans. These can be had much easier using government guarantee programs that reduce the lenders risk and lower the bar on what banks need to OK that loan thanks to Uncle Sam's desire to create jobs.

This Article is from the Small Business Administration Web site and copied here for your use.

Basic 7(a) Loan Program

7(a) loans are the most basic and most used type loan of SBA's business loan programs. Its name comes from section 7(a) of the Small Business Act, which authorizes the Agency to provide business loans to American small businesses.

All 7(a) loans are provided by lenders who are called participants because they participate with SBA in the 7(a) program. Not all lenders choose to participate, but most American banks do. There are also some non-bank lenders who participate with SBA in the 7(a) program which expands the availability of lenders making loans under SBA guidelines.

7(a) loans are only available on a guaranty basis. This means they are provided by lenders who choose to structure their own loans by SBA's requirements and who apply and receive a guaranty from SBA on a portion of this loan. The SBA does not fully guaranty 7(a) loans. The lender and SBA share the risk that a borrower will not be able to repay the loan in full. The guaranty is a guaranty against payment default. It does not cover imprudent decisions by the lender or misrepresentation by the borrower.

Under the guaranty concept, commercial lenders make and administer the loans. The business applies to a lender for their financing. The lender decides if they will make the loan internally or if the application has some weaknesses which, in their opinion, will require an SBA guaranty if the loan is to be made. The guaranty which SBA provides is only available to the lender. It assures the lender that in the event the borrower does not repay their obligation and a payment default occurs, the Government will reimburse the lender for its loss, up to the percentage of SBA's guaranty. Under this program, the borrower remains obligated for the full amount due.

All 7(a) loans which SBA guaranty must meet 7(a) criteria. The business gets a loan from its lender with a 7(a) structure and the lender gets an SBA guaranty on a portion or percentage of this loan. Hence the primary business loan assistance program available to small business from the SBA is called the 7(a) guaranty loan program.

A key concept of the 7(a) guaranty loan program is that the loan actually comes from a commercial lender, not the Government. If the lender is not willing to provide the loan, even if they may be able to get an SBA guaranty, the Agency can not force the lender to change their mind. Neither can SBA make the loan by itself because the Agency does not have any money to lend. Therefore it is paramount that all applicants positively approach the lender for a loan, and that they know the lenders criteria and requirements as well as those of the SBA. In order to obtain positive consideration for an SBA supported loan, the applicant must be both eligible and creditworthy.

WHAT SBA SEEKS IN A LOAN APPLICATION
In order to get a 7(a) loan, the applicant must first be eligible. Repayment ability from the cash flow of the business is a primary consideration in the SBA loan decision process but good character, management capability, collateral, and owner's equity contribution are also important considerations. All owners of 20 percent or more are required to personally guarantee SBA loans.

ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA

For the rest of this article click here

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