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New Baskin-Robbins store formally opens near Horseheads
HORSEHEADS — Baskin-Robbins, which says it’s the world’s largest chain of specialty ice-cream shops, on July 12 unveiled a “Moments” concept store near Horseheads. The new restaurant, located at 3317 Chambers Road in the town of Big Flats, is the first of its kind in New York state. Baskin-Robbins says the “Moments” store concept is […]
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HORSEHEADS — Baskin-Robbins, which says it’s the world’s largest chain of specialty ice-cream shops, on July 12 unveiled a “Moments” concept store near Horseheads.
The new restaurant, located at 3317 Chambers Road in the town of Big Flats, is the first of its kind in New York state. Baskin-Robbins says the “Moments” store concept is designed to deliver on its commitment to giving customers “great flavors and memorable moments.”
The 2,700-square-foot Horseheads location showcases the brand’s U.S. “store of the future, with an atmosphere purposefully designed to make it easier than ever to connect with people over ice cream,” according to Baskin-Robbins news release.
Manish Patel, CEO of Bapa Ice Cream, LLC, is the franchisee for this new Baskin-Robbins restaurant. Krunal Patel is the franchisee and operator. The Patel family has been a franchisee of Dunkin’ locations in four states including the Dunkin’ store near Horseheads for more than 25 years. This marks the first Baskin-Robbins store for the Patel family, which has plans to open several others in the future, according to Baskin-Robbins, which is a unit of Dunkin’ Brands Group, Inc. (Nasdaq: DNKN).
The new Baskin-Robbins restaurant’s key elements include a modern design with bright colors; new ice cream dipping cabinets; a modernized menu including new items like chocolate-dipped bananas, individual Polar Pizza slices, ice cream bars, smoothie bars and hand-dipped waffle cones; and a custom wall mural featuring artwork to celebrate the key attributes of each local community. The restaurant also has more flexible and comfortable seating and upgraded digital menu boards, the release stated.
Open from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Sunday, the new Baskin-Robbins restaurant will employ about 12 people. It is located close to the Elmira/Corning Regional Airport.

RE/MAX Masters settles into new DeWitt office
DeWITT — RE/MAX Masters, a local franchise of the international real-estate company RE/MAX, has a new home. After 27 years, the local brokerage in June moved to a new office at 5788 Widewaters Pkwy in DeWitt from its long-time location at 108 Buchmans Close Circle in the town of Manlius. RE/MAX Masters says it now
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DeWITT — RE/MAX Masters, a local franchise of the international real-estate company RE/MAX, has a new home.
After 27 years, the local brokerage in June moved to a new office at 5788 Widewaters Pkwy in DeWitt from its long-time location at 108 Buchmans Close Circle in the town of Manlius.
RE/MAX Masters says it now occupies a newly renovated, modern office space on the first floor in the Widewaters Office Park.
“We want to continue to serve the community and continue to grow,” Martin Carpenter, broker and owner of RE/MAX Masters, said in a release. “We thought this would be a good spot to do it.”
The firm’s new office is about 4,500 square feet, while its previous location was just under 5,000 square feet, Carpenter tells CNYBJ in an email.
RE/MAX Masters has 16 real-estate agents and three support staff working from the DeWitt office, he says.
RE/MAX Masters serves the Greater Syracuse area and handles a variety of real-estate transactions, including single-family homes, waterfront and luxury homes, farms, land, investment property, and commercial office space.
The firm also has offices in Clay and Skaneateles. It has a total of more than 30 agents across its three offices, according to Carpenter.

Cazenovia College appoints Dannible’s Gardiner as board of trustees chair
CAZENOVIA — Cazenovia College announced recently that Kenneth C. Gardiner, partner at Dannible & McKee, LLP, has assumed the role of chair of the college’s board of trustees. He joined the board in 2016 and has served on the finance and investment committees. Gardiner, has worked in accounting for more than 35 years. He is
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CAZENOVIA — Cazenovia College announced recently that Kenneth C. Gardiner, partner at Dannible & McKee, LLP, has assumed the role of chair of the college’s board of trustees.
He joined the board in 2016 and has served on the finance and investment committees.
Gardiner, has worked in accounting for more than 35 years. He is the partner-in-charge of assurance services and quality control at Dannible & McKee. His area of expertise is providing audit and accounting services to the construction industry. He also offers services for architects, engineers, and manufacturing companies and has extensive experience with audits of employee-benefit plans, according to a Cazenovia College news release.
Joining Gardiner on the executive committee are John A. Bartolotti as vice chair, John McCabe as treasurer, and Jeffrey H. Heath as secretary. Recent board chair Richard L. (Dick) Smith has been awarded trustee emeritus status, Cazenovia College said.

Upstate Cord Blood Bank to receive donations via Crouse
SYRACUSE — Crouse Health will give parents who deliver babies at the Syracuse hospital the chance to voluntarily donate the blood from their baby’s umbilical cord to the cord-blood bank at Upstate Medical University. The Upstate Cord Blood Bank operates at Upstate’s Community campus at 4900 Broad Road in Onondaga. The new partnership will “potentially”
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SYRACUSE — Crouse Health will give parents who deliver babies at the Syracuse hospital the chance to voluntarily donate the blood from their baby’s umbilical cord to the cord-blood bank at Upstate Medical University.
The Upstate Cord Blood Bank operates at Upstate’s Community campus at 4900 Broad Road in Onondaga.
The new partnership will “potentially” increase cord-blood donations that will be available for public use, Crouse Health said in a news release.
“We are pleased to welcome Crouse Health parents to participate in donating their child’s umbilical cord blood to the Upstate Cord Blood Center at Upstate Medical University,” Dr. Matthew Elkins, medical director of the Upstate Cord Blood Bank, said in the Crouse release.
Cord-blood donation is “completely safe” for mother and baby; labor and delivery is not affected, Crouse Health said. No blood is taken from a newborn. It is only removed from the umbilical cord after birth. The designation of Upstate Cord Blood Bank as a public blood bank is “important” in that there is no cost to donate and donated cord blood is available to anyone who needs it.
Thousands of critically ill patients with blood diseases such as leukemia and lymphoma are in urgent need of life-saving transplants. Umbilical cord blood, which is typically discarded as medical waste, is “rich” with the blood-forming cells that can give blood-cancer patients hope for a cure, the hospital added.
The process
Once donated, Upstate stores the cord blood in the bank, making it available to transplant centers in the U.S. and throughout the world for patients in need. The cord blood units will be listed on national and international registries in order to be matched to the patients who need them.
Any units collected that are not suitable for transplantation will be made available to researchers, both at Upstate Medical University and around the country, Crouse Health said.
Deciding whether to donate cord blood is “best done” during the early months of pregnancy.
The expectant parents complete various forms and submit them directly to the cord-blood bank no more than 30 days prior to delivery. Once reviewed and approved, the bank notifies Crouse’s labor and delivery unit, which reviews the potential donation with the mother before actual delivery. Once the blood is removed from the umbilical cord, the donation is then packaged and transported to Upstate’s 20,000-square-foot facility that features a processing laboratory and cryogenic storage containers, the release explained.

Growing Watertown firm offers digital ads on its vehicles
WATERTOWN — Runningboards Marketing is a young Watertown–based marketing firm that offers clients the chance to advertise on a digital screen on the sides of its trucks. The message could be an advertisement for a commercial product or service, a political ad, or a Happy Birthday message, the company says. Richard (Calvin) McNeely, III, president
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WATERTOWN — Runningboards Marketing is a young Watertown–based marketing firm that offers clients the chance to advertise on a digital screen on the sides of its trucks.
The message could be an advertisement for a commercial product or service, a political ad, or a Happy Birthday message, the company says.
Richard (Calvin) McNeely, III, president and majority owner of Runningboards Marketing, which was launched in early 2018, says it didn’t take long to figure out that the new company had franchise potential. The firm is now selling franchises and seeking buyers.
Runningboards Marketing is headquartered at 19138 U.S. Route 11 in Watertown, but has its eye on adding a Syracuse location.
“We do plan on having a local address in Syracuse in the near future,” says McNeely, noting that the company already has a truck operating in Syracuse. He spoke with CNYBJ on July 16.
Runningboards Marketing currently has 15 employees. McNeely says he hopes to hire another six people before the end of 2019. He declined to disclose any revenue information for his company.
Company origin
McNeely retired in September 2016 from Hi-Lite Airfield Services, LLC in Adams Center — a company he had founded.
More than a year later, McNeely was surfing the internet in November 2017 working to promote another business in which he was an investor. And he noticed a truck that really caught his eye.
“I had never seen one of these trucks before, and I knew right then and there I had to do it,” he says.
That truck was similar to the type that Runningboards Marketing now uses.
McNeely, who is 58, also knew that he wanted Zachariah (Zach) Yelle, who is 23, to serve as his partner in the business venture and be the firm’s VP.
McNeely knew Yelle from church, where the young man was responsible for sound and lights. Yelle had also handled some video work for McNeely along the St. Lawrence River.
He described Yelle as a “whiz” at technology who has a background in marketing, social media, videography, and graphic design.
“He’s got the skill set I lacked to make this a perfect business,” McNeely notes.
In early 2018, as the pair decided to move forward with their business idea, they had a company in the Midwest custom build a truck for Runningboards Marketing.
The firm now refers to the truck as a digital advertising vehicle, or DAV (pronounced Dave) for short.
The DAV was built on a Ford Transit chassis with three independent high-resolution LED screens, per the firm’s website. McNeely and Yelle picked up the truck in late April 2018. They drove it back to Watertown and eventually started showing it to local businesses.
“And when we showed the truck, we put an image up on the truck of the people we’re visiting before we visit them,” says McNeely.
They’d pull a logo, a picture, or another visual off a company’s website and put it on the truck. Their effort started attracting clients for subscription advertising, including a car dealership, a bank, an insurance company, and a realtor. The company’s website lists clients that include Jefferson Community College and Watertown Savings Bank.
“It was probably about two months into it [June 2018] when we realized we had something special,” McNeely noted. “We might have something to franchise here.”
Franchising
McNeely then spoke to a friend in North Carolina, who retired to become an independent franchise consultant. After some research, McNeely’s contact told him he couldn’t find any similar company operating among 4,000 franchises operating in the U.S.
“So, he introduced me to the franchise world … consultants, attorneys, brokers,” McNeely recalls.
McNeely and Yelle then started researching how they would build their own trucks. They also knew they’d need computer software and pursued those options as well.
As of this past April, Runningboards Marketing is approved to sell franchises in 35 states and Washington, D.C.
The firm has DAVs in Watertown, Syracuse, and Nashville, Tennessee, but has yet to sell any franchises, according to McNeely, but the company is in conversations with about 20 prospects.
Runningboards’ website includes its requirements for purchasing a franchise, including startup costs between $70,500 and $255,000; net-worth requirements of $50,000 in liquid capital and a net worth of $150,000; and a royalty of the greater of 6 percent of gross revenue per month or $500 per month.
Knowing that they may have to host potential franchisees at some point, the business partners then pursued a place to operate and were able to secure a 10,000-square-foot facility in Watertown that had once functioned as a car dealership. They moved in last December.
Jamestown Community College connected Runningboards Marketing with Keyes Information Technology in Watertown for software development, which the company calls RBM Velocity. It keeps track of client times and schedules, when the ads play, and generates reports for the clients as well.

Utica Zoo, Utica Coffee Roasting Co. partner on lion conservation
UTICA — The Utica Zoo is working with Utica Coffee Roasting Co. to support conservation efforts for African lions. The Utica Zoo used its annual member-appreciation night and annual meeting to announce the collaboration on Lion’s Roast coffee. Lion’s Roast, described as a “limited edition” coffee, is a single-source coffee from Tanzania, which boasts the
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UTICA — The Utica Zoo is working with Utica Coffee Roasting Co. to support conservation efforts for African lions.
The Utica Zoo used its annual member-appreciation night and annual meeting to announce the collaboration on Lion’s Roast coffee.
Lion’s Roast, described as a “limited edition” coffee, is a single-source coffee from Tanzania, which boasts the largest concentration of wild lions in Africa.
The Tanzania Iyula coffee “offers notes of nectarine and citrus, with a bright and sweet flavor and aroma,” the Utica Zoo said in a release.
The zoo said it will donate proceeds from the sale of the coffee to the Lion Recovery Fund. The coffee is available at the Utica Zoo gift shop, Utica Coffee cafés in Utica and Clinton, and Chanatry’s Hometown Market, per the release.
The Lion Recovery Fund supports organizations across Africa to double the number of African lions in the wild by 2050. By supporting these various organizations, Lion Recovery Fund helps to protect wildlife, habitats, and local African communities. The Utica Zoo said it has chosen to support the Lion Recovery Fund to “ensure a future for Africa’s lions.”
“Supporting a cause such as the Lion Recovery Fund was an easy decision to make,” said Mark Simon, marketing coordinator for the Utica Zoo, said in the release. “The world has lost half of the population of lions in Africa over the last 25 years, so supporting an effort to double that population over the next 30 years was something we all felt passionately about. Working with the team at Utica Coffee has been a great experience; their expertise and knowledge of coffee has also allowed us to collaboratively bring a product to market that we think the community will truly enjoy. Pairing a high quality product with a high quality cause is a recipe for success.”
The San Francisco, California–based Wildlife Conservation Network and the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation are the founding partners of the Lion Recovery Fund, according to its website.
Business-Owner Transition and Charitable Planning
For many business owners, a business sale is more than a transaction; it’s a major life transition. Their business is often the largest asset that they own, as well as the key part of their financial and estate plans. What’s more — their business has likely played an important role in shaping their daily life and
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For many business owners, a business sale is more than a transaction; it’s a major life transition. Their business is often the largest asset that they own, as well as the key part of their financial and estate plans. What’s more — their business has likely played an important role in shaping their daily life and identity. A failure to fully align the sale of a company with their personal plans could potentially undermine the long-term wealth preservation and family engagement opportunities afforded by the business deal. This is especially true for owners with charitable components to their plans.
At a recent forum I attended on the subject of business ownership, the main themes were collaboration and transitions. Preparing for a business sale involves assembling a team of advisors, reviewing financial and estate plans, assessing the transition, and creating a plan of action. This work really needs to begin early in the business formation, because you never know when a transition will occur. Whether it is unexpected happenings like the “5 Ds” (death, disability, disaster, divorce, and disagreements) or the planned changes such as retirement and incorporating the next generation into a family business, the earlier the planning begins with a collaborative team that works with the business owner’s values as its guide, the better chance of success.
The forum also highlighted the advantages of having people-focused skills and how retaining an advisor with that specialty can be of value. That may mean a psychologist to help coach the business owner on how to have difficult conversations with key employees or a life coach to help plan a purposeful transition into retirement; both areas play a big role in overall success of a business transition if planned and executed well.
Also, by incorporating effective charitable discernment and planning, business owners can reduce estate tax, avoid capital-gains tax, create a charitable income-tax deduction, reduce tax to heirs and generate charitable resources to help the now former business owners and their family achieve their desired impact.
How does it work?
In the simplest case, a cash gift to charity can be made either before or after the sale of the business. As long as this is done in the same year as the sale, a tax deduction will help offset the income received. The needed tax deduction is often much greater than the client’s annual charitable giving. Using a donor-advised fund, the gift can be made in the year needed and grants may be distributed from the fund to support charities of the client’s choice for many years into the future.
The cash gift, while simple, does not maximize the tax advantages of gifting. A preferred approach would be to gift stock or ownership shares to a donor-advised fund prior to the business sale. When the sale occurs, the fund receives the proceeds from the sale for its portion. This creates a charitable deduction similar to gifting cash, and also avoids taxation on any capital gains embedded in the ownership because the fund is administered by a tax-exempt public charity.
Using a donor-advised fund at a local foundation also provides ongoing charitable-planning support. Whether it is legacy planning or engaging future generations in giving, there are often extensive resources to deploy.
There are also more complex planning tools that can be incorporated into a business sale. For example, charitable remainder trusts can be used to create income streams for heirs while ultimately creating a charitable resource. This type of trust planning can be useful for wealth distribution and addressing spendthrift or creditor concerns with heirs. Another tool is the charitable lead trust, which creates an initial charitable resource but allows for tax-efficient transfer of the trust corpus to heirs in the future.
Regardless of your charitable client’s needs, proper planning can result in a more tax-efficient and comprehensive result for their financial and estate plans as well as the inclusion of a steward to their charitable plan.
Tom Griffith is VP of development at the Central New York Community Foundation. Contact him at tgriffith@cnycf.org or (315) 883-5544.

Startups begin work in AFRL Commercialization Academy
ROME — Four teams from the Syracuse area and two from Utica are among eight startup companies competing in the AFRL Commercialization Academy. AFRL is short for Air Force Research Laboratory in Rome, which is more commonly known as Rome Lab. The group of companies started their work July 15, says Dan Fayette, program manager
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ROME — Four teams from the Syracuse area and two from Utica are among eight startup companies competing in the AFRL Commercialization Academy.
AFRL is short for Air Force Research Laboratory in Rome, which is more commonly known as Rome Lab.
The group of companies started their work July 15, says Dan Fayette, program manager for the AFRL Commercialization Academy who also works with the Griffiss Institute.
The companies are developing “innovations” in the cybersecurity, big-data analytics, information systems, and the unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) industry, the Griffiss Institute said in its July 12 announcement. The startups were selected from a pool of applicant submissions.
The AFRL Commercialization Academy is a Griffiss Institute entrepreneurial-education program sponsored by the Air Force Research Laboratory Information Directorate. The Commercialization Academy pairs “high-caliber founders with high-potential AFRL technologies with the goals of developing entrepreneurial leaders and launching new technology ventures.”
“We are under contract [with] AFRL to do technology transfer of intellectual property that was developed for a military application and then dual purpose it to a commercial application,” says Fayette, who spoke with CNYBJ on July 15.
How it works
During the cohort, the teams will be incubated while building their startups around Department of Defense intellectual property from the AFRL Information Directorate in Rome.
“The idea is to help provide them the tools through the Commercialization Academy … help them get established, help them grab a go-to-market strategy,” says Fayette. “The only thing we ask them to do is use some of the intellectual property from AFRL as they build their company.”
The startups in mid-July entered the Commercialization Academy and will go through an elimination process in the fall. The remaining selected teams will compete live by pitching their tech businesses to a panel of judges at a Demo Day event for $300,000 in prize seed funding from IDEA NY.
“That was an agreement we had with New York State to help grow businesses in the Mohawk Valley,” says Fayette.
The overall winner will claim a grand prize of $200,000, while the runner-up will win $100,000.
After Demo Day in early November, eligible teams will participate in the IDEA NY accelerator program that will incentivize promising entrepreneurs to create and grow viable commercial businesses in the Mohawk Valley, by requiring that the company’s primary office be located in the region for a 12-month period.
Startup teams
The startup teams include PreVision Corp. of Syracuse, which creates image-processing systems that make “real-time precision imaging of large areas possible” from small unmanned aircraft.
Seven Sundays of Syracuse provides digital options to the vacation rental industry, which it says allows homeowners to “live life as if every day were a Sunday.”
Counter Drone TrEx, also of Syracuse, aims to be the training and knowledge exchange platform for counter-drone courses and related content, community, and, commerce.
Koti of Cicero is a cybersecurity company focused on protecting the smart devices that automate your home, such as your security system, smart appliances, and Wi-Fi.
MyCloset of Utica is an app-based company dedicated in assisting individuals in the personalization of their closet, through styling and suggesting new items to purchase via the app.
On the Curb, Inc., also of Utica, is a data-architecture platform that says it makes data analysis, reporting, and new data products, “extremely easy” to develop and deploy, “and more powerful the more [it is] used.”
Lake of Bays Semiconductor Inc. of Buffalo is using automotive-sensor technology to solve collisions with wildlife, which it says are a $5 billion problem for auto-insurance companies.
United Aircraft Technologies of Albany is creating a new class of clamp for aircraft wiring that is designed to reduce weight, improve safety, and simplify maintenance, through lightweight parts and augmented reality.

Revive yoga and wellness studio opens in Binghamton area
VESTAL — A new yoga and wellness studio, called Revive – Mind Body Spirit, has recently opened in Vestal. Revive — which offers yoga, meditation, and fitness classes, as well as a lounge area — formally opened at 100 Vestal Road on June 29 with a ribbon-cutting event with the Greater Binghamton Chamber of Commerce.
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VESTAL — A new yoga and wellness studio, called Revive – Mind Body Spirit, has recently opened in Vestal.
Revive — which offers yoga, meditation, and fitness classes, as well as a lounge area — formally opened at 100 Vestal Road on June 29 with a ribbon-cutting event with the Greater Binghamton Chamber of Commerce.
Revive says its “mission is to help our students grow personally, spiritually, mentally, and physically through wholistic practices,” according to a chamber news release.
Ryan Shelley is the owner and lead yoga instructor at Revive and Nathan Taber is its manager and certified yin yoga and meditation teacher, per its website.
Revive says its summer schedule of classes started July 1.
4 surprising facts about the SBA 7(a) loan guarantee program
The United States runs on small business. In fact, small companies made up 99.9 percent of the nation’s total businesses last year. If you own or manage one of these 30.2 million small businesses, you already understand that it’s a big task — it takes time, personal investment, hard work, capital, and the right partners.
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The United States runs on small business. In fact, small companies made up 99.9 percent of the nation’s total businesses last year. If you own or manage one of these 30.2 million small businesses, you already understand that it’s a big task — it takes time, personal investment, hard work, capital, and the right partners.
The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) exists to assist and protect the interests of American small businesses. When small-business owners need financial assistance, they may look to leverage an SBA loan — its 7(a) loan guarantee program is the most popular one.
Curious to know more about it? Here are four facts about the SBA’s 7(a) loan guarantee program that business owners may be surprised (and excited) to learn.
1. SBA gives rejected business-loan applicants another option.
It’s understandable that not everyone will be approved for a traditional business loan. This could be due to any number of factors, including a poor credit profile, lack of business history, or inadequate cash flow. It all comes back to the lender being confident in the borrower’s ability to repay the loan over time.
However, rejection for a traditional loan doesn’t mean your startup dream is over; another option for entrepreneurs in this situation is the SBA’s 7(a) loan guarantee program. This program is designed specifically to help business owners obtain the funding they couldn’t get through any other means.
Among other eligibility requirements, business owners need to exhibit that they cannot obtain the funding they need through other means and that an SBA-backed loan is the only reasonable option left that will work for them. Often, the lender can satisfy this “credit elsewhere” requirement because the borrower has already been declined for traditional financing.
What makes this program possible is that the loans are backed by the government. The SBA puts a 75 percent guarantee on the debt, therefore reducing the risk for the lender. If the borrower ends up not being able to repay the loan, the financial institution isn’t solely responsible for covering the loss; three-quarters will be covered by the SBA. That is, if the lender has followed all rules and regulations set forth in the standard operating procedure, which is detailed and specific. The idea is to help financial institutions get more comfortable with lending to small businesses, particularly those owned by women or minorities, or in underserved areas.
2. SBA loans can have high amounts and long terms.
SBA 7(a) loans can go up to $5 million with terms of up to 25 years. The maximum total loan amount enables small-business owners to accomplish a variety of goals. The longer terms can help ease repayment pressure with lower payments. Funds may be used for just about any business purposes, including the following:
• Real-estate acquisition
• Business startup
• Renovation/expansion
• Equipment/inventory/supplies purchase
• Business acquisition
• Commercial-debt consolidation
• Working capital
The SBA determines the terms of the loan based on the use of proceeds. Blended terms are available when funds are used for multiple purposes. For the most part, the program follows the terms below:
• Working capital and non-equipment and real estate use: up to 10 years
• Equipment purchases: up to 15 years
• Real estate: up to 25 years
Note that the final term is determined by the lender, based on the cash flow of the business. The repayment period may be shorter than what is listed above, but never longer.
Another interesting feature about the SBA 7A(a) loan is that borrowers can often receive 100 percent financing for a large-ticket item. For instance, a traditional loan may only finance up to 80 percent of a piece of equipment, with the borrower on the hook for the rest. An SBA-backed loan can finance 100 percent of the purchase price if the lender feels that significant equity is involved in the transaction.
3. The SBA doesn’t directly lend borrowers money.
In 2018, the SBA approved more than 60,000 government-backed loans totaling more than $25 billion in funding. And while the SBA makes it easier for small-business owners to acquire capital, it doesn’t actually provide any of it.
So, where does the money come from? All the funding for an SBA-backed loan comes directly from your bank or other lending partner of choice, whether the loan is for $5,000 or $5 million. The SBA only places a partial guarantee on the loan, which is contingent upon the lender crossing all its “t” s and dotting its “i” s.
4. You don’t have to get an SBA loan from a traditional bank.
The SBA lending process requires working with an SBA-approved lender to underwrite and provide the funding — but you don’t need to limit yourself to working with a traditional bank. While most of the nation’s thousands of banks may have an SBA program and offer the 7(a) loan, there are only 14 SBA-licensed non-bank lenders in the country.
These alternative non-bank lenders can often offer more flexible credit requirements or a faster process, compared to a traditional bank. In some cases, you may be able to complete the entire process online or over the phone, saving you time from having to go to a bank.
Owning a small business comes with its own challenges and risks, and funding can often be the biggest hurdle. An SBA loan is a great option for entrepreneurs looking to start or grow their dream business, but can’t obtain a traditional business loan.
April Brissette is president & chief credit officer at FundEx Solutions Group (FSG), which is one of only 14 licensed non-bank SBA lenders in the country. FSG is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Bankers Healthcare Group, a provider of financing for health-care practitioners and other licensed professionals.
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