Freelancers and SMBs Find Flexible Funding

The year is drawing to a close and signaling forward-thinking Freelancers and small business owners that it’s time to consider goals and strategies that have the potential to advance your entity in 2025 and beyond. Your business goals will be shaped by the plans implemented earlier this year, and previously, but topics that may capture your attention could include workflow automation tools to optimize operational efficiency and a Customer Relations Management platform, to upgrade the performance of your inbound marketing funnel and also improve the customer experience and relationship-building activities your company presents.

Face2Face networking may also become a renewed priority in 2025, prompting you to pay attention to notices of local business association meetings and industry conferences. Creating and nurturing relationships, obtaining actionable information and continually honing your skill set make all the difference for B2B professionals.

It won’t take long to realize that the business building actions you’d like to take come with a price tag; the prospect of financing your SMART goals may be worrisome. If your budget estimate indicates that you could come up short of cash, you’re certain to feel discouraged. You may feel too uncomfortable to ask family or friends to lend money that will allow you to proceed with plans you are so excited to carry out. You may likewise feel uncomfortable, maybe even frightened, by the prospect of using credit cards to finance your business upgrades. Applying for a business loan is an obvious possible solution to a cash-crunch, but you’ve read depressing articles in business publications during the year and the message was clear—banks have pulled back on business lending and tightened eligibility requirements. It takes money to make money and being stuck in financial quicksand is not a condition you care to accept. So, what can you do to move forward?

It takes money to make money

Freelance professionals, SMB owners and start-up entrepreneurs are susceptible to challenges when in need of business capital; unfortunately, many lack the credit rating and other requirements that lending institutions demand, or they cannot rely on family, friends, or personal savings to become their funding source. More than half of SMBs in the US do not have a readily available source of funding to survive a cash flow crisis. A shortage of cash, whether the problem is an unexpected cash-flow glitch or an insufficient financial reserve fund, is a serious impediment to building and sustaining a successful business venture. In fact, almost 62% of businesses with annual revenues below $150,000 lack ready access to financing; a UK study found that 31% of SMBs have had to stop or pause an area of their business due to lack of financing.

Banks, the traditional source of loans for several centuries, continue their control of business funding decisions, when ever they approve or decline a loan application. In 2023, Forbes Magazine Advisor confirmed that banks remain a go-to source of funding, with 27 % of entrepreneurs surveyed citing that business loans are their primary source of financing. Still, it will come as no surprise to even casual observers of the start-up world that financial privilege—affluence—is another enabler of funding access. The 2023 Forbes Magazine Advisor survey also found that 20% of new businesses are funded by borrowing from family and/or friends and 17% are backed by the founder’s personal savings.

So how can modestly funded aspiring entrepreneurs pull themselves up by their bootstraps, as is so often recommended in America, and finance their entrepreneurial plan? As it turns out, exciting new options have arrived by way of fintech start-ups whose mission is to provide business funding solutions. These fintech entities are called neobanks and they proclaim to have greater lending capacities than traditional banks; several have been set up specifically with SMB loans in mind.

Rise of the neobank

A disruptive new presence in the banking and financial services sector is the neobank, a fintech company that provides financial services through a mobile app or website, including checking and savings accounts, budgeting tools and cash advances. Because neobanks don’t carry the costs associated with maintaining branch offices, they can offer lower fees and higher interest rates on savings accounts.

Those looking to do business with neobanks must realize is that fintech lenders are not actually banks and they are not chartered by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. In order to provide certain of their products and services, perhaps most importantly guaranteeing that customer deposits are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), the neobanks must partner with chartered banks.

Found, a U.S neobank launched in 2019, partners with Piermont Bank to offer FDIC-insured business checking accounts that provide services that are attractive to Freelancers, including automatic expense categorization, built-in invoicing and tax calculation, plus the ability to auto-save and set aside money to pay taxes. When Freelancers hire subcontractors, Found enables you to manage their tax forms and pay them with no fees. Chime is the leading fintech neobank and partners with The Bancorp Bank and Stride Bank to provide bank and credit accounts. Chime markets itself as a (mostly) no-fee option for customers—no minimum balance requirement or monthly maintenance fees, no overdraft fees and there’s free ATM access – customers can access over 60,000 in-network ATMs for no fee, which you can locate through the Chime app.

As neo-banks expand their penetration in the under-served and hungry SMB market, their success has encouraged other, much larger, players to enter the fray and now, some of the largest online marketplaces in the world have begun to offer financing to their merchants. Shopify Capital, Shopify’s financing service for its merchants, has lent more than $5 billion to small businesses. Loans have ranged from the low hundreds to $5 million. The Amazon Lending platform for sellers invites US sellers can apply for a loan up to $750,000, while UK merchants can apply for anywhere up to £2 million (around $2.6 million). While Amazon stopped underwriting its own loans in the US and UK earlier this year, it’s outsourced the process to third parties.

Overall, new ways of financing are increasing accessible, with neobanks and other fintech creative financing leading the way to support SMB owners, Freelancers and other small players who need an alternative financing approach to business lending. It is expected that as more Freelancers and other business owners become increasingly comfortable with emerging technologies, spurred on by the need for business capital whose access requirements are less stringent, will be willing to consider and eventually trust start the alternative neobank solutions as their primary business funding source.

Thanks for reading,

Kim

Image: © courtneyk | Credit: Getty Images/iStockphoto

It’s in the Bank

Are you happy with your bank? Do you consider what you pay in fees to be a good value for the services provided? Do you consider your bank to be a source of support for your business? If the answer to any of these question is “no” or “maybe”, read on.

The choice of a bank is a serious decision in our personal and business lives and size matters,  as regards the account,  business or personal,  and the bank as an entity. As with all planning,  the expected needs of the individual and/or the business must be considered when choices are made. Banks have become competitive and expensive over the past couple of decades and as a consumer and a businessperson, you owe it to yourself to get the most for your money and your needs met as you do.

As a private citizen,  you may want to buy or refinance a home,  make home upgrades, or finance your child’s education.  As a business owner or Freelance consultant,  you may have equipment or technology upgrades,  growth and expansion plans that will benefit from outside financing.  Whatever your financial plans,  a helpful banker will be an essential building block toward the realization of  your goals and obligations.

How should Freelancers and business owners choose a bank?  A good way to start is to identify two community banks,  two regional and two large national outfits and pay each a visit.  Walk in and ask to meet the business banker,  who is also usually the commercial loan officer.  If you need an appointment make one,  so that you will have time to talk.  Tell this individual about your business and your plans and perceived needs.  How can the bank augment and support your business?

If business credit is a priority, ask these two questions:

  1.  What is the amount of the credit line that the business banker can personally approve?
  2.  Does the bank offer SBA loans and is it a Preferred SBA Lender and able to approve and underwrite such loans independently.  How much SBA loan business is done and what percentage of applications are approved?

Below is a general guideline as to what type of bank is likely to be appropriate for your business venture.  Remember to ask about merchant credit card processing fees if you accept cards.

Community banks

  • Freelancers, small  and medium businesses
  • Fees can be on the high side
  • Technology can be slow or not comprehensive
  • Service is typically excellent. This is old-fashioned banking.  Customers are taken care of. The tellers and managers know you.
  • Loaning decisions are made locally. They know you and your business. They want to help.  Your character will count.

Regional banks

  • Small – medium size businesses that plan to grow
  • Fees are average
  • Technology will meet expectations, the basics will be available
  • Service is usually good, the regionals are capable of delivering personalized service
  • Loan decisions will be made with an eye to the local economy, along with what your financials indicate about your ability to repay

National banks

  • Medium-large business that do out-of-state and/or international business
  • Fees are usually the lowest available, the result of economies of scale
  • Technology will be the most cutting-edge available. Banking can be almost entirely done online.
  • Service is often impersonal because staff turn-over is often high. No one knows you for long. Decisions are not made locally at the branch level.
  • Loans are issued strictly by the numbers, the manager will not be able to give you the benefit of the doubt.

Thanks for reading,

Kim