How to Use Other People's
Money for Your Business
By Matthew
Lesko
Money is a terrible
master but an excellent servant. -
P.T. Barnum
John Ray, the famous
17th century author, was known to have written the aphorism,
Money begets money. In
the business world, I'm sure you've also heard the saying,
You've got to have money to make money.
There are countless
sources of cash, but by far, the best one to utilize for your
business is
other people's money.
Perhaps one of the
greatest secrets of the richest people in the world
is summed up in those 3 words: Other
People's Money OPM for
short. If you took a cross-section of the most affluent
business people, you'll find that the majority of them
launched their
fortunes using OPM. In the next few
minutes, I
will show you how
you can obtain other people's money for your
business. What you do with the money, however, is up to you
but if I were you,
I'd take P.T. Barnum's advice, and make money your servant so
that you, too, you can make your own fortune.
The use of other people's
money has become such an ethical and
acceptable mainstay in business because one can leverage other
people's money to your benefit.
For example, you can
leverage borrowed money into high-yield
investment programs
that could generate a return that would then
pay back your lender
and line your pockets as well. Or
you can
leverage borrowed
money into asset-producing or
income-generating
real property. Or you can simply borrow
money to start or grow your business.
The benefits to using
OPM are obvious:
1) When you use other
people's money, especially
within the parameters of a
corporation, your
debt is assigned to your business, and your
debtors can make no
claims against your personal finances; and
2) the infusion of cash allows you
to have money to make money for your business. Of course, even
with the proliferation of
lending institutions
and venture capitalists, it is often
difficult to obtain
other people's money, Well, since Wall
Street Journal has
kindly called me a man who finds answers in
unlikely places,
I'm going to reveal an unlikely place where
you can obtain other
people's money. This one is available
to
all, and yet very
few ever take advantage of it. It's
the
federal
government. In fact, I've even coined
a phrase for this
source of
money: I call it other taxpayers'
money OTM for
short.
The federal government has millions of dollars of
taxpayers' money allocated
to funding businesses like yours and mine.
Here are a few great
sources of OTM:
1)
If you want to get training and/or money to start your own
business, millions of dollars are available at www.sba.com.
They'll also show you how to find alternative sources of
financing, how to
protect your invention, how to sell your idea,
how to license your
product, how to write legal contracts, how to sell overseas,
and how to buy business equipment.
2)
If you want money to export and sell products to foreign
countries, you can
obtain it from the Export-Import Bank of the
United States at
www.exim.gov. Or you can go to The
Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) at www.opic.gov.
3)
If you want to obtain government contracts, then access the
Procurement Assistance
Offices online. Here, you'll learn
how
to draw up a business
plan that'll get your business noticed.
They can match the
product or service you're selling with the
appropriate agency,
and then help you market to them more
effectively. You can find these programs at www.dla.mil.
4)
If you need venture capital for a new or existing business,
then
you need to go online and access the Small Business
Investment Company
(SBIC). These are privately-organized
and
privately-managed
investment firms that are licensed by the
Small Business
Administration (SBA). With their own
capital and with funds borrowed at favorable rates through the
federal
government, SBICs
provide venture capital to small independent
businesses, both new
and established. You can access them
at
www.sba.gov/INV.
5)
If you need free help or want to learn how to do your own
personal or business
taxes? All you have to do is access
www.irs.ustreas.gov/prod/bus_info-bus_help.html.
You can also obtain
a free 26-page book on the Internet called
The Credit Process:
A Guide for Small Business Owners.
It's
written for small
business owners seeking financing for the
first
time. It covers sources and types of financing; funding
resources; preparation
of a business plan; preparation of loan
applications; and
action to take if a loan is denied. It
also
contains an especially
useful and comprehensive glossary of finance terms, agencies,
and fair lending regulations.
Matthew Lesko is
a New York times syndicated columnist, and author of 2 New York
Times
best-sellers. He is regularly featured as the nation's top
expert
on government freebies on TV programs such as Larry King,
Oprah,
David Letterman, Jay Leno, the Today Show and Good
Morning
America. His latest book, Free
Money for Entrepreneurs
on the Internet
identifies hundreds of little-known sources of
free government money
for net-repreneurs and reveals the
secret formula for
easily obtaining the money for your business.
Free Money for
Entrepreneurs on the Internet