Small Business Lending

IN THE NEWS: SourceFunding.org Founder W. Michael Short Featured on WCBS 880 Small Business Spotlight with Joe Connolly

NEW YORK CITY (June 5, 2018) - SourceFunding.org founder W. Michael Short was featured by News Radio WCBS 880 Small Business Spotlight in an interview about the platform’s national growth, surpassing first-year projections with over 50,000 businesses, startups, and nonprofits served to date, and a mission to combat predatory online lenders and brokers.

Small Business Spotlight: SourceFunding.org Serves As Matchmaker For Entrepreneurs And Lenders

Via News Radio WCBS 880 New York (June 5, 2018) - SourceFunding.org makes economics and finance interesting, fun, and understandable as it offers entrepreneurs an array of funding options so they can avoid online predatory lenders.

As founder W. Michael Short explained to WCBS 880’s Joe Connolly in this week’s Small Business Spotlight, SourceFunding.org took the framework from a dating app and repurposed it for small business funding. Connolly described the company as “a dating service for entrepreneurs looking for funding.”

Short and his team launched the national platform in order to provide a low-cost alternative to predatory lenders, which Short said “have just been growing and growing across the country in the last few years.”

He said the best lenders to work with across the country are low-cost community banks, which can lend at low rates and have the best interests of businesses in mind in a way that larger banks might not.

“There are about 14,000 of these community banks – the low-cost CDFIs; the credit unions, and what we’re able to do is for the first time, an entrepreneur can use our system. They’re able to log in and create their free profile; get organized; be able to see what information they need to have ready and prepared to be able to competitively pursue financing,” Short said.

The technology that SourceFunding.org has been developing allows it to be a matchmaking service between entrepreneurs and small banks.

“Inherent in this entire situation is a relationship – a relationship between the lender and the small business – and there’s really been a breakdown,” Short said. “And what we’ve been able to do is to integrate this really innovative technology to look at the needs and capacity and interests; the particular details of each business, and to be able to look at the lenders across the country, and to be able to find that match – which would be the great match – and sometimes it’s multiple matches.”

Short shared one example of a contractor who was looking for funding for a project and ended up getting taken advantage of. The contractor was a flooring company that has a multimillion-dollar contract for the flooring in an airport expansion and renovation project.

“She took on this loan from a predatory online lender. She thought to herself: ‘Great, wow, I can get this funding from this online lender. I’ll get the money the next day. It’ll go right into my account. Perfect – what could go wrong?’” he said. “Well what went wrong is that the interest rates are sky high, and it’s something between 60 and 70 percent. She didn’t expect that. The fees just were not transparent at all.”

Short said SourceFunding.org can rectify such a situation by refinancing the high-interest debt – finding lenders so she can get the debt off the books and bring the interest rate down to a reasonable level of more like 9 or 10 percent. And the bank matchmaking service can match entrepreneurs or contractors with banks located anywhere in the country – often in places one might not expect.

“How are you going to know that the small community bank in southern Kansas is, you know, rip-roaring and ready to go to expand; they want to do a project in New York and what have you – you’d never know to go talk to that bank, or that credit union, or what have you – all throughout the country,” Short said.

Short said very intelligent people often fall into toxic relationships with predatory lenders offering high-interest loans – even if they do all their due diligence and study up.

"I mean, you go on Google, you go online, and you’re searching for your loans or what have you. Most of these businesses, they go to one bank, they talk to them, they apply. It takes 33 hours for one application. On average, they go to three. That’s almost 100 hours wasted on this paperwork – and a lot of times, it’s the same paperwork over and over,” he said.

SourceFunding.org streamlines the process – offering a list of matches with details on each one to connect clients to the right lender.

“There’s more manual consulting process. But with the technology, the real long-term goal is to have this completely automated. So in the next week, we’re rolling out some new features whereby all that information that we’re talking about that would be helpful for the business to have, they are now going to be able to get it right within their profile – here are top lenders, here’s the information, here are the forms; auto-populating the forms – boom, ready to go,” he said.

Much of SourceFunding.org’s customer base so far is word-of-mouth, but the company also has a network of university and community college partners, Short said.

The company has multiple charging models to make money.

“One model would be if they’d like the complete service; if they need somebody to be helping them along the way or what have you, that’s 7 percent,” Short said. “Now, 7 percent sounds like a lot. But if you factor that in, an equivalent in interest rate – so say, you know, 60 to 70 percent in terms of this predatory online lender. Say we’re able to connect you with a community bank – it’s 8 percent. Well, an equivalent rate – it raises your rate to like 11 percent. Eleven percent – a lot better.”

But SourceFunding.org is transitioning away from percentage fees, and is moving toward an annual fee. Customers set up a profile for free and enter their information, and once they begin using the service and looking for the right bank among their matches, they pay an annual fee of less than $100, Short said.

SourceFunding.org can afford the low price because it is all about volume.

“There are a lot of small businesses in this country. They are the backbone of this country. Eight thousand small businesses are declined for credit every single day,” Short said. “About 3,000 of those businesses are credit-worthy, meaning they simply apply to the wrong place. They wasted their 100 hours to apply and fill out all these forms, and they’ve taken away from their business and they’re wasting all this time – no. No more.”

Short explained that he licensed the technology of a well-known dating company to create his matchmaking service for entrepreneurs and banks.

“We have an exclusive global license on the baseline technology, with a well-known dating company,” he said. “You know, we might not want to reveal it.” Short said the relationship benefits both SourceFunding.org and the dating company, which earns revenue and tests the use of its technology in different sectors.

The smaller community banks that SourceFunding.org matches up with entrepreneurs in need of funding also benefit tremendously. He noted that the small banks are often nonprofits without a huge marketing budget, while predatory lenders have large marketing budgets and advertise everywhere.

“(The community banks) love us. That’s how we’ve been able to develop this network,” Short said. “They’re not having to pay for this qualified, vetted pipeline of applicants. They love it. They’re high quality. They’re not having to waste time, and what have you, in terms of identifying, and they can do what they do best.”

Short explained that SourceFunding.org itself is not a nonprofit, but a “social enterprise.”

“Social enterprise is simply saying that we’re taking the ethos of philanthropy and the market-based approach of capitalism and merging those, so we’re able to have this market-based approach to solving this huge problem in this country,” he said.

IN THE NEWS: SourceFunding.org Selected Forbes Editors' Pick - “Funding Platform Aims To 'Level The Playing Field' For Small Business”

NEW YORK CITY (March 31, 2018)SourceFunding.org was highlighted by Forbes in the feature “A New Funding Platform Aims To 'Level The Playing Field' For Small Business.”

Excerpt via Forbes:: “Michael Short was only a few years out of college when he learned first hand about the problems small-business owners, especially those serving low-income neighborhoods, have finding capital to help them grow. After graduating from Syracuse University, he was selected to serve in the university's Engagement Scholars program. Funded in part by the Kauffman Foundation, engagement fellows are charged with tackling thorny development problems from new perspectives. Short ended up working in one of Syracuse's bleakest neighborhoods, supporting the growth of small business owners.”

"All of them were long-standing businesses," Short told me when I met him on the campus of Medgar Evers College in Brooklyn one day earlier in March, "but they were isolated." Meanwhile, he said, community groups offered businesses "a multitude of loan programs, whether it's to buy abandoned buildings, or to do manufacturing," or for a variety of other specific purposes. But these organizations were isolated, too. "The way they're funded, on grants, makes them competitors, not collaborators — they don't refer to each other," Short continued. If you're a business owner, "you're really on your own. It's impossible to get the full picture."

"In 2014, research by Karen Mills, former administrator of the Small Business Administration under President Obama, confirmed what Short found on the ground [as a Syracuse University Community Engagement Scholar, and later as a social entrepreneur, helping underserved small businesses in a community with the highest levels of poverty concentration among African- & Latino- Americans].”

"There's a disconnect," Short said, "between lenders who say they can't find qualified applicants, and the credit-worthy businesses going from lender to lender and can't find a loan." That year he decided to launch SourceFunding.org as a nationwide resource for small businesses. “If you're a business owner, you're really on your own,” Short explained. “It's impossible to get the full picture of [every funding opportunity & what's the best match]."

"In January, Short, who is 31, launched a national platform intended to provide that big picture — especially for underserved businesses, like those owned by women and minorities, who find it disproportionately harder to borrow money. Over the last four years, his company SourceFunding.org has painstakingly collected data on loan programs and application requirements from some 14,000 institutions nationwide, including small community banks, credit unions, local economic aid groups known as community development financial institutions, and other nonprofit lenders."


About SourceFunding.org

SourceFunding.org provides an easy, safe and secure online system for entrepreneurs, businesses and organizations in the U.S. to apply for low-cost financing from high-quality community lenders using the nation’s first universal small business loan application process.

SourceFunding.org was launched as an inclusive, transparent and low-cost alternative to the rapidly growing number of predatory online lenders and predatory online loan brokers. The financial technology platform’s unprecedented Responsible Finance Network includes over 14,000 trusted community banks, non-profit lenders, credit unions and CDFIs in the U.S.

Highlighted for economic impact at the White House and for socially responsible "FinTech Innovation" in the Business & Management Review, the university, foundation and investor-backed SourceFunding.org is leveling the playing field for ALL entrepreneurs in the U.S. so they can easily find and secure the quality business financing to expand and create jobs. 

SourceFunding.org Builds on Collaboration with Prestigious Maxwell School of Citizenship & Public Affairs, Syracuse University

Photo Credit: Syracuse University

Photo Credit: Syracuse University

SYRACUSE, NEW YORK (March 6, 2018) - Building on long-standing collaborative efforts and initiatives with Syracuse University, providing over 150 graduate & undergraduate students to date with engaged and experiential scholarship opportunities, SourceFunding.org continues to develop its social enterprise business model with the assistance of the Community Benchmarks Program at SU’s prestigious Maxwell School of Citizenship & Public Affairs.

W. Michael Short, SourceFunding.org Founder, and Director of the International Innovators Initiative (IN2NYC) at Medgar Evers College School of Business, City University of New York (VIDEO LINK).

W. Michael Short, SourceFunding.org Founder, and Director of the International Innovators Initiative (IN2NYC) at Medgar Evers College School of Business, City University of New York (VIDEO LINK).

Highlighted in Forbes, at the New York Stock Exchange, at the White House for economic impact, and in the Business & Management Review for socially responsible innovation in financial technologySourceFunding.org is at the forefront of a new era of hybrid social enterprises: organizations that pursue social missions that are fueled by market-based business models, integrating social and economic objectives.

"The development strategies and plans evolving from our previous work with the Community Benchmark Program in 2015 helped build a strong foundation for the successful national expansion of our hybrid social enterprise business model," said SourceFunding.org CEO W. Michael Short (SU '10 & SU Engagement Scholar '11). "We're grateful for the opportunity to build on that successful collaboration."

As noted by Huffington Post, in an article highlighting the involvement of SU in the early development of SourceFunding.org with social entrepreneur W. Michael Short, the number of social enterprises in the U.S. has more than doubled since 2006.

“The social innovators leading the hybrid movement have advanced efforts to increase accountability of both for-profit and nonprofit social enterprises by combining the best attributes of each,” writes Chris Miller, CEO of the Mission Center L3C Incubator, in the Stanford Social Innovation Review. “It seems safe to assume that the vanguards of the millennial generation and hybrid movement, respectively, will continue to seek more authentic, transparent, and accountable mechanisms for changing the world.”

Specifically, university, foundation, and investor-backed SourceFunding.org expanded nationally in the U.S. to provide a trusted, transparent, & low-cost alternative to the growing number of predatory online small business lenders that are increasingly using deceptive tactics, misleading fees, and hidden costs to take advantage of entrepreneurs nationwide. 

As noted by the U.S. Treasury Department, big banks cut down on their small business lending following the 2008 financial crisis & online FinTech firms stepped in to fill the unmet demand for credit. As a result, the industry boomed and is on track to lend $90 billion a year by 2020. However, according to Opportunity Fund, FinTech loans come at a substantial price with annual percentage interest rates (APRs) reaching from 94% to as high as 358%.

Karen Mills is a Fellow at the Harvard and a leading authority on entrepreneurship & online lending. She was a member of President Obama’s Cabinet, serving as the Administrator of the U.S. SBA from 2009 to 2013 (Photo: U.S. SBA).

Karen Mills is a Fellow at the Harvard and a leading authority on entrepreneurship & online lending. She was a member of President Obama’s Cabinet, serving as the Administrator of the U.S. SBA from 2009 to 2013 (Photo: U.S. SBA).

Research published by Karen Mills, distinguished senior fellow at Harvard University who lead the U.S. SBA during the Obama Administration, points to a disconnect between traditional banks, that cite a lack of demand from qualified borrowers, and creditworthy business owners, who describe going from bank to bank unable to get a business loan. As a result, businesses are turning to predatory online lending platforms in record numbers.

SourceFunding.org provides the first & only universal small business loan application system accessing every community bank, credit union, non-profit lender, & community development financial institution (CDFI) in the U.S. with the platform's national Responsible Finance Network™ incorporating a network of over 14,000 of the nation's most trusted, transparent, & low-cost lenders.

SourceFunding.org simplifies the capital search process, streamlines the business financing application process, and eliminates over 100 hours of paperwork for entrepreneurs. Using technology to assess the particular circumstances of each entrepreneur, business venture, or organization, along with advanced matchmaking algorithms, SourceFunding.org identifies the small business lending programs that are a good fit out of all the opportunities available.

The platform’s national financial inclusion campaign and social enterprise business model includes multiple independently operated organizations operating toward a shared mission of leveling the playing field for all entrepreneurs in the U.S. in order to stimulate economic impact, community development, and job creation.

SourceFunding.org Partnership with Kiva.org to Provide Alternative to Predatory Lenders

NEW YORK CITY (January 15, 2018) - University and foundation-backed SourceFunding.org recently announced a new partnership with Kiva.org to support small business growth and job creation in the US.

kiva.png

Serving as a Kiva Trustee, SourceFunding.org will be recommending entrepreneurs and small businesses for priority access to 0% interest small business loans.

The new partnership demonstrates growing momentum behind SourceFunding.org’s national campaign for the financial inclusion and empowerment of all entrepreneurs in the US.

The partnership also represents further expansion of SourceFunding.org’s Responsible Finance Network™, which has grown to include several thousand trusted, transparent, and low-cost community lenders within the last year.

“This is yet another exciting step forward in our commitment to level the playing field for all entrepreneurs and small business owners in the US so they can easily find and secure the quality, low-cost, and transparent financing needed to expand & create jobs,” said Sara Brainard, Brooklyn-based entrepreneur and VP of Corporate Operations for SourceFunding.org.

One entrepreneur already benefiting from the new partnership is Ashley Warmington, a student entrepreneur at Medgar Evers College School of Business who is working on her MWBE certification with the support of the College’s nationally recognized Entrepreneurship & Experiential Learning Lab.

Using SourceFunding.org, Ashley’s AirBnB management and concierge company, Cozy Oasis, was matched with Kiva and recommended for funding. The funding will accelerate the company’s growth globally into three new countries, which will create several new jobs in the Brooklyn community.

"Our entrepreneurs and small businesses face significant barriers when seeking financing to grow and create jobs,” said JoAnn Rolle, dean of the Business School at Medgar Evers College. “Entrepreneurship is an an important self directed career pathway for many of our students after they graduate and access to funding is crucial.”

To learn more about the positive impact SourceFunding.org is having, click here.

Our Commitment to Action: Financial Inclusion & Economic Empowerment

Photo: Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed Speaking at Opening Plenary of Clinton Global Initiative.

Photo: Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed Speaking at Opening Plenary of Clinton Global Initiative.

Press Release via Global Social Enterprise Institute:

ATLANTA, GEORGIA (JUNE 2016) — Entrepreneur and economic development specialist W. Michael Short was invited to the Clinton Global Initiative Summit in Atlanta, GA, to announce the expansion of SourceFunding.org and the FundingNavigator℠ as a 2016 Clinton Foundation-sponsored "Commitment to Action."

Pictured: W. Michael Short, founder of  SourceFunding.org , with President Clinton.

Pictured: W. Michael Short, founder of SourceFunding.org , with President Clinton.

Recognized for socially responsible "FinTech Innovation" in the Business & Management Review and highlighted at the Obama White House, SourceFunding.org is a tech-enabled venture focused on bridging the opportunity divide for the 28 million small businesses in the U.S. so they can expand, create jobs, & transform communities.

SourceFunding.org is the nation's first low-cost matchmaking platform connecting small businesses with the 14,000+ responsible community banks, credit unions, CDFIs, & economic development financing opportunities in the U.S.

SourceFunding.org merges unparalleled access to the nation's financing opportunities with the nation's first universal e-application for small business funding. The proprietary system improves loan application outcomes, reduces friction for businesses seeking financing, protects the credit scores of small business applicants, and provides the nation's first viable alternative to the many predatory online lenders.

SourceFunding.org is scaling up the successful SourceFunding.org pilot by GSEI and award-winning Short Enterprises from 2011-2015, which facilitated access to $10 million in capital for high impact ventures and initiatives in a community with the nation’s highest levels of poverty concentration.

The platform's national expansion was planned in collaboration with university partners in the Ashoka U Accelerator and with the support of founding investor Janet Davas, mentor with the W.K. Kellogg Foundation and founder of Hatch, LLC, & nationally recognized Liberty's Kitchen.

"We're especially thankful for the support of the brilliant team at the White House Office of Social Innovation and Civic Participation like David Wilkinson and fellow Syracuse University graduate Laura Tomasko," said W. Michael Short. "We're also very thankful for the incredibly inspiring team at Clinton Global Initiative and the Clinton Foundation like Dan Goldberg, Stacey Pellegrino, Geoffrey Wnuk, Rose Tobiassen, Shital Patel, Ruchi Bhargava, Kimberly Lovett, and many others."

"The national expansion announcement was also made possible by our involvement in the Ashoka U Accelerator, which helped us refine our model and formulate our CGI Commitment to include a significant focus on empowering the next generation of high impact entrepreneurs that are unable to access the funding needed to launch and grow their ventures," said Short. "The Ashoka U Commons Accelerator is a world-class program."

Click here to read the original article from Global Social Enterprise Institute.

IN THE NEWS: Newhouse School & Alumnus Develop National Entrepreneurship Initiative

The S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University and Short Enterprises have partnered to establish a network supporting entrepreneurs throughout the U.S. The Initiative's primary focus will be the launch of a new funding plat…

The S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University and boutique management consultancy SHORT ENTERPRISES have partnered to establish a network supporting entrepreneurs throughout the U.S. The Initiative's primary focus will be the launch of a new funding platform streamlining access to financing from community lenders. The platform is designed to provide a transparent alternative to expensive predatory online lenders and is focused on financial inclusion and economic empowerment in underserved communities.


Newhouse partners with alumnus on CGI-sponsored project to support entrepreneurship across the U.S.

Via Newhouse School Press Release (October 22, 2014) - The Newhouse School at Syracuse University has joined forces with entrepreneur and Newhouse alumnus W. Michael Short on his firm’s latest endeavor with the Clinton Global Initiative America (CGI-A).

Short will announce the launch of this new venture, the Startup Insider Initiative, at the 4th Annual Entrepreneurship Bootcamp for Veterans with Disabilities (EVB) Conference at the CNN Center in Atlanta, October 24-26.

The Startup Insider Initiative, a CGI-A Commitment to Action, will involve the launch of a new e-publication and web platform for entrepreneurs and small business technical assistance and resource providers throughout the United States. CGI-A Commitments to Action are projects that aim to address significant global, national or local challenges.

Newhouse students began working with Short Enterprises on the project in early September and the school’s student-run PR firm, Hill Communications, will assist with the implementation of the public relations campaigns during the roll-out of the project.

“Our students are thrilled to take part in this exciting endeavor,” says Robert Kucharavey, a professor of practice in public relations at Newhouse. “The initiative is giving our students an opportunity to showcase their talents on a high-profile project while learning from a phenomenal social enterprises company started by one of our alums.”

The initiative will feature the best and brightest entrepreneurs and businesses from across the U.S and build a network among participants in order to facilitate opportunities for growth, expansion and job creation. In addition to providing a space for entrepreneurs to connect, Startup Insider Initiative will focus on engaging young women in the entrepreneurial process, supporting social and civic entrepreneurs, fostering an online support community and cross-sector global coalitions in support of youth entrepreneurial programming and supporting the economic empowerment of veterans through entrepreneurship.

“We’re very pleased to have the Newhouse School on board,” says Short. “Bob Kucharavey is one of the most talented and knowledgeable professors I have ever had the privilege of working with and his phenomenal students have already begun to identify effective strategies to engage the project’s key constituencies and I’m so very impressed with the work the students have done so far.”

Short Enterprises is also collaborating and partnering with a number of other organizations on the initiative including the New York State Family Business Center at Le Moyne College, New York State Small Business Development Center at Onondaga Community College and the Martin J. Whitman School of Management at Syracuse University.

The launch of Startup Insider was inspired by Short’s participation in the Clinton Global Initiative America Community Investing Working Group, which is focused on developing actionable strategies to broaden the domestic social finance market in order to use private capital in areas of small business lending, affordable housing, health and community and economic development.

The working group includes leaders from the MacArthur Foundation, Bush Foundation, Ford Foundation, Global Sustainable Finance at Morgan Stanley, Urban Investment Group at Goldman Sachs, U.S. Community Reinvestment Fund, Federal Reserve Board and U.S. Treasury Department, among others.

“Startup Insider presents a unique opportunity to support budding entrepreneurs and assist them with gaining traction and exposure, sharing ideas and accessing crucial resources,” says Short. “We’re fortunate to have the support of a number of great organizations and the EVB conference is the perfect venue to announce the launch of our first Clinton Global Initiative Commitment to Action.”