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New & Existing Businesses  Financial Resources 
New & Existing Businesses  

Business Funding Resources

A Comprehensive Reference for Oklahoma Small Businesses

   

Special Note:

Despite the popularity of late-night infomercials and reference guides that promote the availability of grant money for start-up businesses, the Oklahoma Department of Commerce is not aware of such funding for for-profit businesses. Typically, grant money is only available to assist non-profit organizations. If your business is non-profit, you will want to start with the www.grants.gov and Foundation Center websites. However, the availability of grant funds for for-profit businesses is extremely limited and typically highly specialized.  We have found no consistent, reliable source for small businesses either public or private. 

   

Every day, hundreds of Oklahoma small businesses are paying salaries, providing services, creating products, buying and selling -- across the street and around the globe. Small businesses survive based on access to appropriate financing. And, while there are many, many resources for financing available to small businesses in Oklahoma, the environment is complex. That is why the Oklahoma Department of Commerce has created this web-based resource.

The references represented here provide a wide variety of financial resources. Business owners and entrepreneurs are encouraged to use this resource to identify programs that best meet their needs -- taking into account eligibility guidelines -- and to directly contact those involved in managing these programs for more information. 


Funding resources are reviewed in this section as follows:


Capital ReviewDownload This Section
Capital Review is a new downloadable PDF file that contains all of the information in this business financing section in an easy-to-use portable format.  Click on the link below to download your own copy of Capital Review today.

Capital Review (PDF)
(Tip: Internet Explorer users please right click the link and save the document to your computer before opening.)


What Financial Resources Do You Need?
Inadequate financing is frequently cited as a primary reason businesses fail. Other financial reasons for failure or poor performance include miscalculating how much capital is required, underestimating the cost of borrowing, or simply securing the wrong kind of financing. Many of the resources referenced here provide access to capital and the expertise to help manage it.

The U.S. Small Business Administration suggests that managers of a small business consider these questions before pursuing financing:

  • Do you need more capital or can you manage existing cash flow more effectively?
  • How do you define your need? Do you need money to expand or as a cushion against risk?
  • How urgent is your need? 
  • How great are your risks? 
  • In what state of development is the business? Needs are most critical during transitional stages.
  • For what purposes will the capital be used? Any lender will require that capital be requested for very specific needs.
  • What is the state of your industry? Depressed, stable, or growth conditions require different approaches to money needs and sources. Businesses that prosper while others are in decline will often receive better funding terms.
  • Is your business seasonal or cyclical? Seasonal needs for financing generally are short term. Loans advanced for cyclical industries such as construction are designed to support a business through depressed periods.
  • How strong is your management team? 
  • Perhaps most importantly, how does your need for financing mesh with your business plan? If you don't have a business plan, writing one is a priority.


Writing a Business Plan
A business plan precisely defines the business, identifies goals, and serves as the firm's descriptive brief. Components include a current and pro forma balance sheet, an income statement, and a cash flow analysis. The business plan addresses what service or product the business will provide and what needs it will fill; potential customers and how they will be reached. Some of the resources referenced here can help the fledgling small business owner prepare a business plan and begin the search for financing.

For an extremely useful guide on business plans and other issues that small and start-up businesses face, download our new Business Basics guide, produced by the Oklahoma Small Business Development Center and the Oklahoma Department of Commerce.  And be sure to visit the Business Start-Up Frequently Asked Questions page.

Most small or growth-stage businesses use limited equity financing. Equity often comes from non-professional investors such as friends, relatives, employees, customers, or industry colleagues. However, the most common source of professional equity funding comes from venture capitalists. Venture capitalists most often prefer three-to-five-year old companies with the potential to become major concerns and return higher-than-average profits to their shareholders.

There are many sources for debt financing. The most common are banks, savings and loans, commercial finance companies and the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA). Oklahoma also has a number of state-level and local agencies and organizations with programs that provide debt financing and encourage the growth of small businesses.

In Oklahoma, commercial banks have been a traditional source of small business funding. But their principal role has been as a short-term lender offering demand loans, seasonal lines of credit, and loans for machinery and equipment. Banks generally have been reluctant to offer long-term loans to small firms. The SBA guaranteed lending program encourages banks and non-bank lenders to make long-term loans to small firms by reducing their risk and leveraging the funds they have available.

Contact:
Rana Steeds, Economic Development Specialist

Phone: 405-815-5143
800-879-6552


 

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