Up and Running Blog

The FUNDamentals – The A-Z of getting business funding

by Tim Berry on March 20, 2013

How to finance your startup? You can buy books on that topic, take courses, and hire consultants. It’s complex and it changes fast for different times, places, and financing options. But for people just looking at this question for the first time, here 10 general rules and guidelines.

pile of cash

Warning: There are exceptions in every case. This is business. There are always exceptions. Also: I’m not an attorney and not a commercial lender. There is no legal advice here. I’m just trying to summarize what I’ve seen. And this is about the U.S. market only. Some of it might apply to other markets, but if you’re not in the U.S., please double-check before assuming it does. 

  1. You have to start with knowing how much you need. It’s not a random number, and it’s not how much you like. You look for the startup sweet spot, as set by the business plan. 
  2. The main sources funding new businesses are personal savings, personal debt, commercial debt, friends and family investment, and outside investment. Debt means you pay it back or lose your collateral, and investment means you don’t pay it back but investors own a share of your business. This doesn’t include alternative ways to get startup financing
  3. Personal savings and personal debt are by far the most common sources. Most startups take a few thousand dollars. The advantages of this include not having to ask anybody else and being able to start quickly. The disadvantage is that this money is at risk. If the business fails, savings are lost. And personal debt must be repaid or you lose credit rating and sometimes the house or the car or whatever. 
  4. Commercial lending requires collateral, like business receivables, inventory, or personal assets like your house. Banks aren’t allowed to lend money to startups without assets to pledge. 
  5. In some cases an SBA-guaranteed loan can lower the personal risk. You get these loans through commercial banks. The SBA (Small Business Administration) requires business plans and additional criteria depending on which of the various programs you use. The executive summary is that with most SBA loans you put up 30% of the startup cost, and get the rest from the loan. 
  6. Investment divides roughly into friends and family, angel investment, and venture capital. Crowd funding may be available in the near future. And be aware of good reasons not to seek outside investors
  7. So-called crowd funding, finding large numbers of investors for small amounts each, is likely to open up soon but hasn’t yet. The current flock of crowd funding sites are really doing advanced sales or donations; it’s still not legal to sell investment through crowd funding. Last year’s Jobs Act opened up the possibility, but regulations to make it happen are still pending.
  8. Friends and family investment is the most common type. Do this carefully, with good legal help, because it’s a mine field. It can work for a few thousand dollars up to a few hundred thousand, depending on your personal resources. It can also go dreadfully sour if not done right. Do your homework well on this option. Start with this article on friends and family financing. Then do this Google search. 
  9. Angel investment is for a select few businesses that offer a reasonable chance of future returns on a few hundred thousand dollars. Occasionally that dips down into the tens of thousands. Real investors usually want scalable, defensible, high-growth businesses that can be sold in 3-5 years, with experienced management teams. The background includes three essential truths on getting investment and here’s what investors want
  10. Venture capital is like angel investment but with professional managers of other people’s money. It’s harder to get and rarer. It takes strong management teams with good track records, very high growth potential, defensible, scalable businesses. 

And that’s my best effort at a quick summary of the A-Z of financing that startup. I hope it’s helpful. 

(Image: istockphoto)

About the author: Tim Berry is founder of Palo Alto Software and Bplans.com. Follow him on twitter @timberry. More »

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  • Elizabeth Shea

    I find it interesting that you didn’t encourage start-ups to apply to accelerators or incubators. Many of them offer financial investment if they succeed in their space. I am an intern at MassChallenge,a start up accelerator that awards $1 Million+ with no strings attached annually to the winning start-ups! Applications for this year close April 3rd!

    • Dave Cannon

      Excellent comment. Startup accelerators have exploded into popularity in the last two years. I’d recommend that you apply to one even if you aren’t 100% sure you’re interested – the application process is a valuable sneak peak at the angel pitch process and it’s a great networking and mentoring opportunity.

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