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Small Business Financing – Loans, Grants, and Crowdfunding

Definition and Core Concept

This article defines Small Business Financing as methods used by entrepreneurs to raise capital for startup, operations, or expansion. Core sources: (1) debt financing (loans – banks, SBA, online lenders), (2) equity financing (selling ownership – angel investors, venture capital), (3) grants (non-repayable funds, competitive), (4) crowdfunding (many small contributions from public). The article addresses: objectives of business financing; key concepts including collateral, personal guarantee, and dilution; core mechanisms such as SBA loan guarantees, term vs line of credit, and rewards vs equity crowdfunding; international comparisons and debated issues (interest rates, repayment terms, investor rights); summary and emerging trends (revenue-based financing, microloans, online lending platforms); and a Q&A section.

1. Specific Aims of This Article

This article describes small business financing without endorsing specific lenders. Objectives commonly cited: funding startup costs, managing cash flow, and scaling operations.

2. Foundational Conceptual Explanations

Key terminology:

  • SBA loan (US): Bank loan partially guaranteed by Small Business Administration (7(a), 504, microloan). Lower down payment, longer terms.
  • Personal guarantee: Borrower agrees to repay business debt personally if business defaults.
  • Collateral: Assets pledged to secure loan (real estate, equipment, inventory).
  • Dilution: Reduction in ownership percentage when issuing new equity.

Financing options overview:


TypeTypical amountTermInterest/returnCollateral neededCredit required
Term loan (bank)$50k-5M3-10 years6-12%YesGood (680+)
SBA 7(a)$50k-5M7-25 years8-14%YesFair (650+)
Online term loan$5k-500k1-5 years10-30%SometimesFair/Poor
Line of credit$10k-500kRevolvingVariable (8-20%)OftenGood
Angel investor$25k-500kEquity20-30% IRR targetNoN/A
Venture capital$500k-100M+Equity30-50% IRR targetNoN/A

3. Core Mechanisms and In-Depth Elaboration

SBA 7(a) loan program (most common):

  • Maximum 5million.Guarantyupto855million.Guarantyupto85150k; 75% >$150k.
  • Use: working capital, equipment, real estate, refinance debt.

Crowdfunding types:

  • Rewards-based (Kickstarter, Indiegogo): Backers receive product or perk.
  • Equity crowdfunding (Wefunder, StartEngine): Backers receive ownership shares (Reg CF, Reg A+).
  • Debt crowdfunding (peer-to-business lending): Backers receive interest payments.

Microloans: $500-50,000, from non-profit lenders (Kiva, Accion). Higher rates (10-18%), but flexible credit requirements.

4. International Comparisons and Debated Issues

Government-backed small business lending (international examples):

  • UK: British Business Bank (Start Up Loans, Enterprise Finance Guarantee).
  • Canada: Canada Small Business Financing Program (CSBFP).
  • Australia: Export Finance Australia, state-based grants.

Debated issues:

  1. SBA loan approval time: Historically 60-90 days; recent improvements to 30-45 days.
  2. Personal guarantee requirement: Almost all small business loans require personal guarantee, even LLCs.
  3. Angel vs VC: Angel (earlier, smaller, less control). VC (larger, board seats, growth pressure).

5. Summary and Future Trajectories

Summary: Small business loans (bank, SBA, online) require personal guarantee, often collateral. Grants are rare, competitive. Crowdfunding offers alternative path (rewards or equity). Angel/VC for high-growth startups.

Emerging trends:

  • Revenue-based financing (repay fixed % of monthly revenue, no fixed term).
  • Online lending platforms (OnDeck, Kabbage) – faster, higher rates.
  • Small business credit scoring using operational data (bank account, POS).

6. Question-and-Answer Session

Q1: What credit score is needed for an SBA loan?
A: Typically 650-680 personal credit. Some lenders accept lower (620) with stronger business financials.

Q2: Can I get a business loan with no revenue?
A: Difficult. Startups may use personal loans, credit cards, friends/family, or crowdfunding. SBA microloans and community lenders may consider business plan.

Q3: Do I have to repay a business grant?
A: No, grants are non-repayable. However, they are competitive, often require matching funds, and have strict reporting requirements.

https://www.sba.gov/funding-programs/loans
https://www.sec.gov/smallbusiness
https://www.kickstarter.com/