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58 Ways to Find Money for Your Business

1 - I can do better 2 - Jury's out 3 - Pretty darn good 4 - Splendiferous 5 - Awesometastic (by 4 people)   Your rating: 1 - I can do better 2 - Jury's out 3 - Pretty darn good 4 - Splendiferous 5 - Awesometastic

Ranked #5514 in Business, #67802 overall

Rated G. (Control what you see)

Every business needs money at some point no matter how small or how big.

 

58 Ways To Find Money For Your Business is crammed with tips, information, and help for entrepreneurs and small business owners who need money for their company. From joint venture partners to bartering to venture capital to SBA loans, you'll find a way to finance your company, whether you need $500 or $500,000.

Need a bit of humor to your day. 

How Much Capital Do You Need?

 

As much as I can get!  This would be the answer readily shouted out by most entrepreneurs.  The fact is though, both over and underestimating the amount of capital needed to fund a business can have serious negative consequences.

 

Underestimating what you need can cause problems ranging from having to go through the whole time consuming fund raising process again, to having to shut down the company because funds have run dry.  Having to go back to the original investors and ask for more money often undermines the entrepreneur's credibility with the investors and can cause a significant dilution in the founder's ownership.

 

Obtaining more than enough capital may seem like a blessing at first, but it can breed a lax attitude toward expense control.  "If you have it, spend it," is not an advisable motto for a new company.  If the investment takes the form of equity, raising too much money means that the founder's share of the business was reduced more than was necessary--and this violates one of the maxims of entrepreneurship:  hold on to those equity points!

 

Typical advice given to entrepreneurs is to do a cash flow projection, or cash budget, and then add 10%, 20% or even 50% to this amount, for "contingencies."  These contingencies are all the things that can go wrong in a start-up venture, all the unfavorable events that can negatively affect results.

 

Contingency planning is a skill that does not come easily to all entrepreneurs--even those with a finance background.  How do you get the cockeyed optimist (what you absolutely must be to even conceive of  the idea of the starting a company), who expects the best, to plan for the worst?

 

To stimulate contingency planning, it helps to look at the reasons why entrepreneurs so consistently run out of money; among these are:

 

Not realizing how expensive it is to introduce a new product, especially consumer products, on a national basis.

 

Not realizing how long it takes to introduce a new product, or for the market to truly accept the product.

 

Delays in regulatory approval, municipal zoning, or patent approval.

 

Assuming that a small start-up company will get the same forbearance on payments and favorable terms that a large one will.

 

An entrepreneur with an early stage company must be prepared for one or more of these situations to occur.  Contingency planning doesn't mean simply adding a percentage or dollar "cushion' to the amount of capital being sought from investor or lenders.  It is a way of thinking--a recognition that the entrepreneurial road is always rocky.  Envisioning what might go wrong does not equate to entrepreneurs losing faith in their product or their company; it means they accept these difficulties as steps on the path to prosperity.       

 58 Ways To Find Money For Your Business is available as an affiliate product.

The authors, Brian Hill and Dee Power, put their combined 30 years of consulting with early stage companies, and working with hundreds of businesses in nearly every industry, into 58 Ways To Find Money For Your Business They are the authors of Inside Secrets to Venture Capital, Attracting Capital From Angels, and BusinessPlan-Basics.



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MyKidsInheritance

This is awesome advice -- 5 stars!
Melissa

Posted August 31, 2007

Hello! I am excited to be the part of this dynamic lens, I rated 5 stars. My kind requests visit my lens about commercial business loans.

Thanks

Posted August 30, 2007

Hello! I am excited to be the part of this dynamic lens to share my lens to you all. Lens is an attempt to get you acquainted of the basics and the process of valuation, before you actually go for commercial business loans.

Posted August 08, 2007

financegirls

hello Dee, funding for a business can really be a great challenge, nice lens! keep posting=)

Posted April 02, 2007

financegirls

hi Dee, helpful tips here!=) How You Can Profit by Outsourcing Some of Your Work , keep posting!,thanks

Posted March 26, 2007

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Over Time by Brian Hill

Over Time by Brian Hill

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DeePower

About DeePower

Dee Power was born on the East Coast and grew up on the West
Coast. 

She holds a Master of
Business Administration.  Dee has
been engaged to do consulting projects for a myriad of different companies, and
realizes now that her management consulting career is over her brain is filled
with data about almost every industry. 



Accomplishments



Brian and Dee founded Profit
Dynamics Inc., a management consulting firm in 1987.  They specialized in writing business plans (which investors often consider works of fiction).



Clients included large well-known companies as
well as entrepreneurial start-ups.  The experience they gained from this work provided the inspiration and material for
two books they co-authored Inside Secrets To Venture Capital,  and Attracting Capital From Angels, both published by John Wiley
& Sons.
 






 


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