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intermediaries Tagged Articles
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Characteristics of Today's Thriving Companies
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| While there is a shortage of cash for many firms today, others are making more than enough to survive. What are the characteristics of the companies that thrive? What are they doing that others are not? Most importantly, can you duplicate these characteristics into your business? |
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Venture Capital - Preparing The Plan
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| Make it so that your mother or grandmother can understand it. Entrepreneurs too often fill their business plans with of acronyms, tech terms, and buzz words. Intermediaries can usually tell after the first paragraph how difficult it will be to raise capital for your business. Condense what you do and what you want into a statement that you can make very promptly in seconds or minutes. If you cannot communicate quickly, you will lose the investor’s interest. |
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7.5.2 Social capital, community organisations and NGOs: Institutional design and capacity building
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| Another key issue is that most of the poor do not have access to the wider social networks that are usually needed to sustain new enterprises. Since enterprise creation is fundamentally a social rather than a technical process, appropriate steps must be taken to create and nurture social networks. A closely related concern is the need to develop 'industrial clusters' within the informal sector (see Schmitz, 1997). |
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Microlenders
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| The Microloan Program provides very small loans to start-up, newly established, or growing small business concerns. Under this program, SBA makes funds available to nonprofit community based lenders (intermediaries) which, in turn, make loans to eligible borrowers in amounts up to a maximum of $35,000. The average loan size is about $13,000. Applications are submitted to the local intermediary and all credit decisions are made on the local level.
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Microlenders
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| The Microloan Program provides very small loans to start-up, newly established, or growing small business concerns. Under this program, SBA makes funds available to nonprofit community based lenders (intermediaries) which, in turn, make loans to eligible borrowers in amounts up to a maximum of $35,000. The average loan size is about $13,000. Applications are submitted to the local intermediary and all credit decisions are made on the local level.
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Other intermediaries Related Articles
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Microloans
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| The Microloan Program provides very small loans to start-up, newly established, or growing small business concerns. Under this program, SBA makes funds available to nonprofit community based lenders (intermediaries) which, in turn, make loans to eligible borrowers in amounts up to a maximum of $35,000. The average loan size is about $13,000. Applications are submitted to the local intermediary and all credit decisions are made on the local level. |
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Microlenders
| |
| The Microloan Program provides very small loans to start-up, newly established, or growing small business concerns. Under this program, SBA makes funds available to nonprofit community based lenders (intermediaries) which, in turn, make loans to eligible borrowers in amounts up to a maximum of $35,000. The average loan size is about $13,000. Applications are submitted to the local intermediary and all credit decisions are made on the local level.
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9.4 Recommended actions – access to credit and micro-finance: Support for Growth-oriented Women Entrepreneurs in Tanzania, 2005
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| Recommendations to alleviate some of the challenges encountered by women in
accessing credit to support the growth of their enterprises are presented for each of three
levels of intermediaries – micro-financing operators, financial institutions and
government. |
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What is the role of the financial regulator in supporting the development of microfinance? FAQ
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| Many feel that the most important role of a financial regulator in supporting the development of microfinance is to create an alternative institutional type that allows sound financial NGOs, credit unions, and other community-based intermediaries to obtain a license to offer deposit services to the general public and obtain funds through apex organizations. |
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II. How Can MicroFinance Succeed In Africa?
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| African microfinance is as diverse as the continent itself. An array of approaches have been used, ranging
from traditional group-based systems, to specialised lending by banks and funded by international nongovernmental
organisations (NGO) financial intermediaries. Consequently, examples of African
microfinance offer an array of lessons of what works and doesn’t work. Drawing from these lessons, and
those from non-African examples, OSCAL developed a Microfinance model based on four principles: |
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Venture Capital - Preparing The Plan
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| Make it so that your mother or grandmother can understand it. Entrepreneurs too often fill their business plans with of acronyms, tech terms, and buzz words. Intermediaries can usually tell after the first paragraph how difficult it will be to raise capital for your business. Condense what you do and what you want into a statement that you can make very promptly in seconds or minutes. If you cannot communicate quickly, you will lose the investor’s interest. |
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Improve chances of success when buying or selling a business
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| Business owners and buyers chances of success appear to be about 2% if acting on their own without proper preparation or education. Chances of success improve with level of preparation and understanding buyers and sellers have of the unique environment surrounding private company sales.
§ Business owners and buyers do not understand how to buy or sell a business and we had to show them how
§ Rate of success increased in direct proportion to the preparation and guidance we provided both buyer and seller
§ Successful brokers/intermediaries are educators first and salespeople second
§ Buying a business does not follow the usual buying/selling protocol
§ The process of Buying/selling a business is unique yet straight forward |
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Business Brokers' Fees
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| Business brokers, Business Intermediaries and Mergers & Acquisitions professionals have different fee structures and offer different types of services. The size of the transaction in terms of the business value generally dictates the types of professionals to work with and the nature of fees business sellers need to pay in order to sell their companies. |
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Don’t Hire A Business Advisor / Brokers For Your M&A And Capital Loan Needs In Canada
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| Information on why Canadian firms should consider working with a business advisor in the area of financing, m&a, and loan and working capital needs . Why Intermediaries and brokers provide value if you’re dealing with the right ones! |
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