Would-be entrepreneurs often ask us: Where can I get find grants to
start a business? And, sadly, some of these individuals pay big money
to attend business financing seminars that travel from city to city
talking enticingly about “free” government money for your business. All
you have to do is pay these folks up front and they will fill out some
paperwork for you to apply for these “grants.”
Trouble is, the rare few that are available are so highly specialized
in research fields that the odds of getting them are astronomical. In
practical terms, it is a dead end. Forget about government grants to
start a new business. It won’t happen.
The U.S.
Small Business Administration (SBA) gets the same question daily at
their small business Answer Desk. And their response is always the
same: “The SBA does not offer grants to start or expand small
businesses.”
But here’s the good news, and one of the
best-kept secrets in the cutthroat world of venture financing. It’s
called the Small Business Investment Company (SBIC) program, and it has
provided nearly $30 billion in financing (both loans and equity
investments) to 90,000 small businesses since 1958.
This program is for real. And while it is still going strong, it
maintains a low profile by design, so the folks who manage the funds
that invest in small companies don’t get totally devoured by
cash-hungry entrepreneurs.
SBICs - some 450 of
them nationwide - represent a uniquely successful partnership between
Uncle Sam and private investors. Each SBIC - while licensed and
regulated by the SBA - is actually a privately owned and managed
investment firm that provides venture capital and startup financing to
small businesses.
Seed money for some of America’s
most beloved businesses originally came from SBICs, including America
Online, Apple Computer, Callaway Golf, Federal Express, Gymboree,
Outback Steakhouse, Staples, Sports Authority and many more.
SBICs also are funding up-and-coming small firms like NetSpend, an
Austin, TX-based business that offers debit card processing and
marketing services. Two brothers, Roy and Bertrand Sosa who moved their
family to Austin from Mexico in 1986, founded NetSpend. They launched
the business from their one-bedroom apartment in 1998 with $750. In
2000, several SBICs invested in the fledgling firm, helping fuel a
period of rapid growth that landed the company as the National
Association of SBICs’ Portfolio Company of the Year in 2003.
Catapult to the big time
SBICs have been a marvelous mechanism for catapulting promising small
companies into the big time. The government itself does not make direct
investments, nor does it select the firms that will be backed. That’s
all left to the qualified private fund managers. The funds set their
own policies and make their own investment decisions.
What the SBA does
do is match funds. For every dollar the private funds put up, they are
eligible to receive another two dollars from the SBA - a huge boost.
Here, the SBA invests alongside private risk-taking investors. And
while hardly anyone knows it, this program has made Uncle Sam the
largest single investor in U.S. private equity funds.
Each SBIC is free to define its own area of interest. Some specialize
in specific industries, geographic areas or personal interests of the
fund managers. And while all SBICs will consider applications from
socially and economically disadvantaged entrepreneurs, Specialized Small Business Investment Companies (SSBICs) make all of their investments in that area.
Where to find them
Locate SBICs under the member listings of the National Association of Small Business Investment Companies (NASBIC). NASBIC claims to be the world’s oldest, continuously operating venture capital organization.
Yet another organization, the National Association of Investment Companies (NAIC), is geared toward financing for minority-owned business.
Our Bottom Line
Small Business Investment Companies (SBICs) are a marvelous financing
opportunity for promising early stage ventures investigating grants to
start a business and alternative forms of small business start up
capital. Unlike many venture capital
(VC) outlets that demand quick returns, SBICs have developed a
reputation as providers of “patient capital” that small companies need
to develop products and foster growth over time. If that sounds like
what you need, by all means check them out.
© 2005 BizBest Media Corp.