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Get startedIf you crack open most entrepreneurship textbooks, you’ll find that they talk a lot about how entrepreneurs finance their businesses. Because these books are targeted at students in courses that focus on the creation of high potential businesses, they spend a lot of time discussing venture capital, angel investing, and other sources of external equity capital. As a result, they don’t describe how most entrepreneurs finance their businesses.
Most entrepreneurs don’t need much capital to get started. The Entrepreneurship in the United States Assessment, a survey of a nationally representative sample of people starting businesses in the United States in 2004 found that the typical American start-up only needs $15,000 in initial capital.
The most common source of that capital is the founder’s own savings, with the majority of businesses only obtaining money from this source. As a result, more people finance their start-ups with their own money than get money from banks and friends and family members combined.
When companies get external capital, it mostly takes the form of debt. A study of young firms in Minnesota, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin found that less than ten percent of the firms had received an external equity investment, but half had borrowed money from an external source.
4. Much of the External Borrowing is Personally Guaranteed
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PAUL ROSENFELD 2 years 1 months and 18 days ago
Hi Scott, good piece that debunks alot of myths. A really big source of how founders finance their business out here in silicon valley is when the founder(s) works part-time consulting. Seems to be a time-honored tradition that floats just below the radar screen (due to stigma?) but is everywhere is you know how to ask.