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Other
People's Money
How
to Use Other People's Money for Your Business
By Matthew
Lesko
“Money
is a terrible master but an excellent servant.”
- P.T. Barnum
John
Ray, the famous 17th century author, was known to have
written the aphorism, “Money begets money.”
In the business world, I'm sure you've also heard
the saying, “You've got to have money to make money.”
There
are countless sources of cash, but by far, the best one to
utilize for your business is … other people's money.
Perhaps
one of the greatest “secrets” of the richest people in
the world is summed up in those 3 words:
Other People's Money – OPM for short. If you took a cross-section of the most affluent business
people, you'll find that the majority of them
launched
their fortunes using OPM. In
the next few minutes, I will
show you how you can obtain other people's money for your
business. What you do with the money, however, is up to you –
but if I
were you, I'd take P.T. Barnum's advice, and make money
your servant so that you, too, you can make your own fortune.
The
use of other people's money has become such an ethical and
acceptable mainstay in business because one can leverage other people's
money to your benefit.
For
example, you can leverage borrowed money into high-yield
investment
programs that could generate a return that would then
pay
back your lender and line your pockets as well.
Or you can leverage
borrowed money into asset-producing or
income-generating
real property. Or you can
simply borrow money to start or grow your business.
The
benefits to using OPM are obvious:
1) When you use other people's
money, especially within the parameters of a
corporation,
your debt is assigned to your business, and your
debtors can
make no claims against your personal finances; and 2)
the infusion of cash allows you to have money to make money
for your business. Of course, even with the proliferation
of lending
institutions and venture capitalists, it is often
difficult
to obtain other people's money, Well, since Wall
Street Journal
has kindly called me a man who “finds answers in
unlikely
places,” I'm going to reveal an unlikely place where
you
can obtain other people's money.
This one is available to all,
and yet very few ever take advantage of it.
It's the federal
government. In fact, I've
even coined a phrase for this source
of money: I call it “other
taxpayers' money” – OTM for short.
The federal government has millions of dollars of
taxpayers'
money allocated to funding businesses like yours and
mine.
Here
are a few great sources of OTM:
1)
If you want to get training and/or money to start your own
business, millions of dollars are available at www.sba.com.
They'll also show you how to find alternative sources
of financing,
how to protect your invention, how to sell your idea,
how
to license your product, how to write legal contracts, how
to sell overseas, and how to buy business equipment.
2)
If you want money to export and sell products to foreign
countries,
you can obtain it from the Export-Import Bank of the
United
States at www.exim.gov. Or
you can go to The Overseas Private Investment Corporation
(OPIC) at www.opic.gov.
3)
If you want to obtain government contracts, then access the
Procurement
Assistance Offices online. Here,
you'll learn how to
draw up a business plan that'll get your business noticed.
They
can match the product or service you're selling with the
appropriate
agency, and then help you market to them more effectively. You can find these programs at www.dla.mil.
4)
If you need venture capital for a new or existing business,
then
you need to go online and access the Small Business
Investment
Company (SBIC). These are
privately-organized and privately-managed
investment firms that are licensed by the
Small Business
Administration (SBA). With
their own capital and with funds borrowed at favorable
rates through the federal government,
SBICs provide venture capital to small independent
businesses,
both new and established. You
can access them at www.sba.gov/INV.
5)
If you need free help or want to learn how to do your own
personal
or business taxes? All you
have to do is access www.irs.ustreas.gov/prod/bus_info-bus_help.html.
You
can also obtain a free 26-page book on the Internet called
The
Credit Process: A Guide for Small Business Owners.
It's written
for small business owners seeking financing for the
first
time. It covers sources and types of financing; funding
resources;
preparation of a business plan; preparation of loan
applications;
and action to take if a loan is denied.
It also contains
an especially useful and comprehensive glossary of finance
terms, agencies, and fair lending regulations.
Matthew Lesko is a New York times syndicated columnist,
and author of 2 New York Times best-sellers. He is regularly featured as the nation's top
expert on
government freebies on TV programs such as Larry King,
Oprah,
David Letterman, Jay Leno, the Today Show and Good
Morning America.
His latest book, “Free Money for Entrepreneurs
on
the Internet” identifies hundreds of little-known sources of
free
government money for “net-repreneurs” and reveals the
secret
formula for easily obtaining the money for your business.
Free
Money for Entrepreneurs on the Internet
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