Sunbelt Indiana Business Resource

"Your experts at selling or buying a business!"

Monday, June 22, 2009

Webinar - Preparing Your Business For Sale: Using an Intermediary to Maximize Value

Sunbelt Indiana Business Resource is hosting a free webinar!

Preparing Your Business For Sale: Using an Intermediary to Maximize Value

If you have ever considered selling your business, you won't want to miss this free webinar. You will hear from two experts that will explain how the process of selling a business works, what you can expect from a professional intermediary, and how to maximize the value of your business. ANONYMITY - you will be able to log in and listen/participate without disclosing any information about yourself or your business.

If you are interested or would like more information, please email webinar@sunbeltindiana.com or call 317-218-8629.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

SBA Lenders Pick Up Steam

SBA Lenders Pick Up Steam
Small Business Lender Sentiment Survey
On Lending and Employment
June 2009

More lenders lending again thanks to secondary market improvements!
The SBA is hiring more lending people than all banks combined.

This months’s survey provides promising news. More banks are lending again and the SBA is reporting significant improvement in the number and dollar volume of loan approvals. Almost all SBA districts are reporting sharp increases in loan activity in April and May. The PLP Approval Office is hiring credit staff as quickly as they can find them. This encouraging sign shows a strong commitment by the SBA to a continued quick turn on PLP approvals.


While more loans are being approved, credit remains as tight as it has been all year. However, the number of small business applications continue to rise. Those interviewed for this survey reported high loan applications. And it appears the customer is more willing than ever to meet the lender’s loan requirements to get approval. This includes additional capital injections and providing more collateral as requested. In addition, there is very little argument over the pricing of the loan.


Many lenders have reported that the biggest issue they are facing is real estate appraisals that continue to come in lower than required. This is particular true in hard hit states like Florida, Nevada and California. And apparently, sellers are more willing than ever to negotiate to make the deal work.


The industry is showing signs of improvement but, it appears that this economic recovery is going to be protracted. With growing delinquencies in commercial real estate loans, credit managers are not likely to loosen up approval parameters in the foreseeable future.
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Monday, June 15, 2009

Using Technology to Increase Business Value Before a Sale or Merger

Using Technology to Increase Business Value Before a Sale or Merger

“My friend Norman Katz contributed this great article” Chris

Improvements in information technology and business processes can make an important difference in not just the perceived value of a business, but the actual value too.

Technology improvements that are visible to potential buyers are the business software applications that run the company. The Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) system is typically the core business software application, encompassing functions such as purchasing, sales order processing, accounting, inventory control, manufacturing, and distribution. Sometimes separate applications for inventory control or fixed asset management can be implemented to gain quick control of chaotic situations. And with chaos controlled and business processes running smoother, a potential buyer will see a well-run – or at least better-run – enterprise. Further, new business software enables better reporting, showing the potential buyer information based more on fact than on fiction.

The use of barcode scanning for fixed asset management, inventory control, picking & packing, and receiving showcase a company that has kept up with available – and quite affordable – technologies and is operating more efficiently than one who still processes such information manually. In fact, such technology implementation may be required in order to provide potential buyers with satisfactory reports in regards to the company’s operations and financial position.

For companies who are required to conduct business with customers via Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) and have taken steps to integrate inbound and outbound data to business software applications (i.e. the ERP system) showcase to potential buyers that they are committed to reducing non-value-added manual processes such as data entry of information, which is also prone to errors.

And while the implementation of such up-to-date technologies does not mean that fraudulent activities have been reduced, there is an argument that the use of such technologies does go along towards the mitigation of fraud versus manual or paper-based transactions.

Advances have made these technologies achievable (affordable and available) for even small business owners to embrace and represent a worthwhile return on investment.

Norman Katz is President of Katzscan Inc., a consulting firm located near Fort Lauderdale, FL specializing in supply chain technologies, business operations, turnaround management help, and fraud & risk detection & reduction. For more information, please contact Norman through the company web site at www.katzscan.com.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Book: Selling Your Business for Dummies

Feel free to check out the book: "Selling Your Business for Dummies" by Barbara Findlay Schenck.

Foreword by John Davies, CEO of Sunbelt Business Brokers.


Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Stimulus Prompts Small Business Loan Scams

Stimulus Prompts Small Business Loan Scams

Though the SBA doesn't give stimulus package loans directly to small businesses, savvy scammers would have you believe otherwise

By Karen E. Klein

Q: My sons own and operate an architectural/engineering firm and a steel fabrication firm. These are Main Street firms, needing operating capital. What department of the stimulus package do they apply to for a loan?

—J.R., posted online

A: The American Recovery & Reinvestment Act (also known as the "stimulus package") signed into law last month provides $730 million to beef up the loan guarantee programs of the U.S. Small Business Administration. Part of that sum is supposed to reduce the fees that borrowers pay for SBA-backed loans and to increase government guarantees on the loans, making them more attractive for bankers. These measures are designed to help thaw the current credit freeze.

Another program in the works, a joint Fed and Treasury program known as the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, or TALF, also aims to get credit flowing again to Main Street borrowers.

However, it is important for your sons and other small business owners to realize the government does not give loans directly to small businesses. The government works through commercial lenders, such as banks, by guaranteeing the small business loans of banks that participate in their loan programs.

The confusion on this point has unfortunately opened the door to fraudulent operators who charge fees purporting to help small business owners and individuals get government money, says Alison Southwick, spokesperson for the Council of Better Business Bureaus in Arlington, Va. "Anytime there's a story dominating the headlines, scammers are going to take advantage of it," she says. "When people hear the word 'stimulus,' they know that's something they heard about in the news, so it must be legitimate."

Hundreds of complaints have poured in to the BBB in the weeks since the stimulus package was passed, she says, most of them from people who responded to Internet ads leading to Web sites featuring "testimonials" from individuals claiming they got government money to start businesses or pay off bills. For a fee, many of the Web site pitches say, they'll send you a CD or a mail-order kit explaining how to have access to government stimulus money.

Lucky Winners?

These Web sites are extremely misleading, Southwick says, including some that incorporate blogs that appear to be written by the lucky winners of all that stimulus cash. However, not only is the government not cutting checks to would-be entrepreneurs, you don't need to pay for information about SBA loans or government grants (most of which are available only to nonprofit organizations or very specialized research companies).

"They're charging you for free information, in the first place. And maybe they send you a CD or maybe they don't. But what happens is that people's credit cards start getting billed and there's no way to stop it," she says. "A woman I talked to today said she started getting billed not only for the stimulus information but also $25 per month for a newsletter she didn't want, either."

Victims often wind up paying $60 to $80 a month, and if they don't realize it, the scam can go on indefinitely. "They keep on billing and hope that a certain percentage of people aren't going over their credit-card statements closely," Southwick says. Even those who catch the unwanted charges often find there's no way to stop the billing unless they cancel their credit cards.

The bottom line: Provisions of the stimulus package and other government programs are aimed at increasing access to government small business loans and getting the banks back in the business of loaning money again. Good information about SBA loan guarantee programs is available here. Other government sites offer free information about grants, student aid, and government benefits.

There is no reason to pay for software or guides to apply for government loans or grants. Companies that offer such information for a fee—when it is already available for free online—are likely to be scams, so stay away from them.

Karen E. Klein is a Los Angeles-based writer who covers entrepreneurship and small-business issues.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

SBA Launches New 100-Percent Guarantee ARC Loan Program to Help Struggling Businesses

News Release

PRESS OFFICE

Release Date: May 18, 2009

Contact: David J. Hall (202) 205-6697
Release Number: 09-30

Internet Address: http://www.sba.gov/news

SBA Launches New 100-Percent Guarantee ARC Loan Program to Help
Struggling Businesses


WASHINGTON – Small businesses suffering financial hardship as a result of the slow economy may be eligible to receive temporary relief to keep their doors open and get their cash flow back on track through to a new loan program announced today by SBA Administrator Karen G. Mills.

Beginning on June 15, SBA will start guaranteeing America’s Recovery Capital (ARC) loans. ARC loans are deferred-payment loans of up to $35,000 available to established, viable, for-profit small businesses that need short-term help to make their principal and interest payments on existing qualifying debt. ARC loans are interest-free to the borrower, 100 percent guaranteed by the SBA, and have no SBA fees associated with them.

“These ARC loans can provide the critical capital and support many small businesses need to make it through these tough economic times,” said Administrator Mills. “Together with other provisions of the Recovery Act, ARC loans will free up capital and put more money in the hands of small business owners when they need it the most. This will help viable small businesses continue to grow and thrive and create new jobs in communities across the country.”

As part of the Recovery Act, the ARC program was created as a no-interest, deferred payment loan to help small businesses that have a history of good performance, but as a result of the tough economy, are struggling to make debt payments.

ARC loans will be disbursed within a period of up to six months and will provide funds to be used for payments of principal and interest for existing, qualifying small business debt including mortgages, term and revolving lines of credit, capital leases, credit card obligations and notes payable to vendors, suppliers and utilities. Repayment will not begin until 12 months after the final disbursement. Borrowers don’t have to pay interest on ARC loans. After the 12-month deferral period, borrowers will pay back the loan principal over a period of five years.

ARC loans will be made by commercial lenders, not SBA directly. For more information on ARC loans, visit http://www.sba.gov/

You can receive all of the SBA’s News Releases via email. To subscribe, visit http://web.sba.gov/list and select “Press Office.

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