Getting Loans for Your Home
Business
Very few people can afford to start a business
using nothing but the money they’ve got lying around in
their bank accounts. For most of us, we’re going to need
to get a loan before we’d have anywhere near enough money
to invest in starting up.
Your Credit
History
You might not have realised that your credit
history was going to count here, but it does. This is
where all those late credit card payments come back to
bite you. The better your credit history, the more likely
a bank is to lend you money, and the better the rate it
offers will be.
Bank
Loans
Banks usually have someone whose job it
is to go through applications for business loans. These
people have seen a thousand business plans, and they know
what they’re looking for.
Take along all your plans and any other
supporting material you can put together. Make sure you
present yourself at your most professional. Act like the
most sensible and levelheaded person you’ve ever met.
This is, essentially, a job interview: the bank is
interviewing you and your business to try and figure out
whether it would be a safe place to put their money.
Remember that they’re just like every investor, lending
you money with the expectation that they will get it
back, plus interest.
Secured
Loans
Of course, you’ll probably have a much easier
time persuading a bank to lend you money if you put up
something of your own as collateral in case you can’t pay
the debt back. Some dodgy banks would really like you to
secure your business loan on your house, since they know
that the failure rate of start-ups is high and they’d
really like to get their hands on it. Be cautious, in
case you sign your life away. It is almost never worth
starting a business if you can only get secured loans –
you’re tying the business’ fortunes too closely to your
own.
Government
Loans
As part of the push to support small businesses,
there are now many government bodies that will offer
no-interest or low-interest loans to small businesses, a
category which includes home businesses. The government
lot will obviously be even more picky about your business
plan, but it’s still a good option to have available to
you. Even better, these loans will often come with free
help and advice from the agency that issues them, as well
as all sorts of booklets and leaflets telling you the
technical details of getting started.
Credit Cards and
Overdrafts
These forms of debt are a very bad idea.
Whatever you do, do not finance your business with
personal debt. You’ll have to make a massive profit just
to pay back your debts, and it’s unlikely that you’ll
manage to both pay them off and have enough money to
live. If you can’t get a loan, try to find other
investors instead.
Friends and
Family
Friends and family can be a surprisingly
good source of loans to help start businesses, especially
if they’re in the same industry themselves – they’ll be
more than happy to help you get a foot on the ladder. You
might be able to persuade someone to give you the money
at a good rate of interest, or even to act as a ‘sleeping
partner’, financing half of everything while leaving you
to run it all.
Be aware, though, that many friendships
and families have been ruined by failed businesses. I had
a friend who went around raising thousands from everyone
he could think of to start a magazine of his own, only
for it to crash and burn by the second issue. Be
warned.
Keep
Trying
If you get turned down for a loan, keep trying
(preferably at different banks!) You should revise your
business plan each time, and try to get as many people as
possible to read it – the more people who see it, the
more ideas and suggestions you can hear. If your credit
rating is fine, then the problem has to be with the
business plan: fix it, and you’re set. Good
luck.
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