Making Your Case for a Business Loan

March 31, 2016

 

From afar, the commercial lending process may appear comical. On one side of the desk you have the lenders, who want to manage their risk by loaning money to only successful business owners. On the other side of the desk, you have the business owners — many of whom believe they can’t truly become successful until they get the money!

To avoid this disconnect, you have to approach business financing as a partnership rather than a provider-customer relationship. If you were going into business with someone, you’d want to clearly understand his or her vision for your venture. It’s the same with lenders.

What’s the plan?

For example, say you’re asking for money because your company is so far behind on vendor payments that it needs the working capital to catch up. In this scenario, you’ll need to make a case for how catching up on payments will allow you to get the raw materials needed to make a big push forward on sales.

Or, as another example, you need money to open a new location in a city nearby. Here, you’ll have to produce some solid market analysis that explains to the lender why your business stands a good chance of succeeding in a new locale.
 
How shall you put it?

Before you ask for a loan, devise a clear plan for what you want to do with the money and how you’ll repay it. You and your top managers should be able to verbally articulate your plan, of course. But craft a written statement as well.

The written statement doesn’t need to be a 50-page proposal bound in embossed leather. It can be one page as long as it clearly describes your strategic challenge, your plan for overcoming it, and where and how the lender’s money plays into this solution.

Need some help?

The lending process can be daunting and, at times, frustrating. We can assist you in gathering and presenting the right financial information to secure the working capital you’re looking for.
 
© 2016

 

 

Best Practices

New Pay Stub Requirements Go Into Effect October 1

Fraud and Forensic Accounting

FinCEN Beneficial Ownership Information Reporting Requirement Goes Live January 1

Mergers & Acquisitions

Remaining Independent Amidst Accounting Firm Acquisitions