Figures and Tables xi
Preface xiii
Acknowledgments xix
About the Author xxi
Part One: Survey of Funding Small Business 1
Chapter 1: How Small Businesses Are Funded 3
Defining Small Business 3
ABCs of Small Business Funding 8
Usual Suspects Providing Business Capital 10
The Rise of Alternative Financing 12
Chapter 2: Elusive Nature of Bank Funding 15
Risk Appetite Is an Oxymoron 16
Source of Bank Funding Limits Its Use 17
Small Business Credit Is Difficult to Scale 19
Loan and Bank Size Are Inversely Related 20
Chapter 3: Capital Market Disruptions, Post-2008 23
Didn't Anyone See Bubble Coming? 23
This Time Was Different 25
Where Did Main Street Funding Go? 29
SBA—Main Street's Federal Bailout? 30
Supply versus Demand—Did Anyone Ask for a Loan (and What Was the Answer)? 33
Post-Crisis Reflections on Financial Regulation 37
Part Two: A Perfect Storm Rising 43
Chapter 4: A Paradigm Shift Created by Amazon, Google, and Facebook 45
Amazon Creates Digital Trust 46
Who Answered All Those Questions Before? 49
Your Opinion Is (In)valuable 51
How Do These Changes Affect Small Business Lending? 54
Chapter 5: Private Equity In Search of ROI 59
The Fed's Low Interest Policy and the Effects on the Private Investor 60
Wall Street Isn't Main Street 60
First Buy In, Then Invest Up 62
A Cautionary Note about a 72 Percent APR 67
Chapter 6: First Change the Marketplace, Then Change the Market 71
Old Thinking/Technology Can Stifle Credit 72
Morality and Money 78
The Unintended Consequences of Old Law 79
Capital Markets Go Digital 81
Pattern Recognition—Data Is the Game Changer 82
Different Processes and Different Views 84
Crowdfunding versus the Crowd That Got Funding 86
The Rise in Alternative Paths to Source Funding 88
Billions Went Missing and No One Noticed? 89
Part Three: Digital Dynamics in Small Business Funding 93
Chapter 7: Funders and Lenders—Online Capital Providers 95
Innovative Funding Marketplace 95
Online Funders: Purchasing Future Receipts 97
Online Lenders: Money from the Cloud 106
Chapter 8: Crowdfunding with Donors, Innovators, Loaners, and Shareholders 125
Donors—Funding Arts, Solving Problems, and Floating Local Businesses with No Strings Attached 125
Innovators—Buy It, I'll Build It 133
Loaners—Brother Can You Refinance My Visa? 135
Shareholders—Online Market for Equity 140
Crowded Elevator? 147
Chapter 9: Other Innovative Funding Sources on the Rise 151
Factoring in the Digital Age 151
Working Capital Management as a Financing Strategy 156
Investing Retirement Funds in Self, Inc. 157
No Store, No Hours, No Bank, No Problem—Virtual Lenders for Virtual Merchants 160
Taking as Much Time as Needed to Repay 164
Chapter 10: Capital Guides—Online Resources to Find, Coach, and Assist Borrowers and Lenders 167
Loan Brokers 168
Other Online Resources 174
Chapter 11: What Innovation Means for Bank Lending 177
Competition Erodes Banks' Share of Small Business Loans (Again) 178
What Banks Can Fund (but Won't) versus What Banks Cannot Fund (but Will) 180
The Best Defense Is Still a Good Offense 182
Banks Still Have the Most Customers and Cheapest Bucks in Town 184
What's Next? Character Redux, Rise of Alternative Payments, and? 186
About the Companion Website 191
Index 193