Helpful insights on good business practices, commercial loans, alternative forms of financing and planning your company’s future.

Four tricks — and treats — for small businesses

October 31, 2011

Economy and Financial

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Running a successful seasonal business, Lorenzo Caltagirone says, takes a year-round effort. As the owner of Total Fright, a specialty Halloween shop in Georgetown, he says he’s learned to plan ahead for the sudden influx of business in October.

Here are four tips he’s picked up during his six years in business.


Halloween season can bring in big bucks for specialty costume shops, as long as they are well-prepared for the sudden influx of business. (Tim Sloan – Getty Images)

1. Listen to your customers.

“You absolutely have to listen to your customers and know what they’re looking for,” Caltagirone says. “This is the biggest advantage small businesses have over large corporations. As a small business, we can change from one day to the next. We can add inventory, we can improve our service, we can do anything we need to without dealing with red tape and corporate rules. We constantly ask our customers if they’re finding what they’re looking for. Sometimes, they’ll come up to us and say ‘you should carry this costume, or this mask’ — and so we do.”

2. Be prepared.

 This is perhaps more true for specialty seasonal shops than it is for any other kind of retailer.

Caltagirone begins leafing through catalogues for next year’s costumes in December. By January, much of the store’s Halloween inventory has already been finalized.

Half of the store’s annual business is conducted in the month of October. And of that, 80 percent of sales take place in the week before Halloween.

“We rely very heavily on Halloween,” Caltigirone says. “We have a lot to lose if we’re not completely prepared. People are last-minute shoppers, and they expect the world of you.You have to be patient — everything that can go wrong, often does.”

3. Be adaptable.

Caltigirone’s shop is called Total Fright during Halloween season. During the rest of the year, it transforms into Total Party.

“We metamorphosize,” he said. “If you step in here today, you wouldn’t even know that we’re a general party store 11 months out of the year. You have to be able to change depending on your needs, your customer’s needs, and you need to be able to make that change fully.”

Before he realized this, Caltigirone says he was maintaining two stores — a Halloween store and another party store. “It was a complete mess,” he says. “A real pain.”

Now that he’s merged the stores, he says he’s been able to better utilize the space, his staff and other company resources.

4. Stay in control.

“You have to maintain order,” Caltigirone says. During Halloween season, Caltigirone only allows about 10 customers into the store at a time. The rest wait in a line that stretches far down the hallway and is manned by a security guard.

“People get into a frenzy,” he says. “It becomes impossible to maintain the store if we allow massive amounts of people to run wild. It ruins the shopping experience, too, when there are so many people in your way that you can’t see the products.”

As an added bonus, he says having control over the number of customers in the store also helps deter shoplifting.

Allied Affiliated Funding Provides over $10.8 Million in New Fundings During September

October 26, 2011

Allied Affiliated Funding is pleased to announce over $10.8 million in new fundings during the month of September through a portfolio acquisition in the Northeast.  These newly acquired clients are located throughout the United States with a primary focus in the apparel and textile industries. 

“This acquisition further strengthens Allied’s nationwide market presence and solidifies our role as a key player in the current consolidation of the factoring industry,” said Clay Tramel, Chief Executive Officer of Allied.  “We welcome the addition of these new clients, and with our expertise and capital, we look forward to exploring future portfolio acquisitions as well.” 

Allied is a nationwide commercial finance company specializing in providing working capital solutions for small- to medium-sized businesses through accounts receivable financing or factoring.  For 19 years, Allied has provided working capital for commercial businesses with commercial accounts receivable with annual sales ranging from $1 million to $60 million and facility needs from $100,000 to $5 million.  Allied targets a variety of industries including technology, oil field services, manufacturing, staffing, service companies, telecommunication, transportation, wholesalers and distributors, energy services/management and government contractors.

Allied is headquartered in Dallas, TX, with regional sales offices located in Alabama, Mississippi, Pennsylvania, and New York.  For more information about our factoring services, please visit our Web site at www.FundingByAllied.com or call us at 1-877-404-9904.

More Small Businesses Are Selling Receivables at a Loss

October 6, 2011

Owners who can’t get bank credit or aren’t selling much are tapping commercial financiers known as factors—despite their higher cost

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In February 2010, Tiffany Bucher’s bank sent her an e-mail she assumed was a mistake: Her company’s checking account had been frozen and her $150,000 line of credit was being pulled. She later learned that the bank’s new president was nervous because Bucher’s company was involved in a lawsuit and its financial records were disorganized. “We had never missed a payment. I had $80,000 in payroll due the next morning. I was completely panicking,” recalls Bucher, president of Infincom, a Phoenix-based office equipment and software dealer.

Although she insists the company was having no trouble making its $546 monthly loan payment, Bucher couldn’t persuade her banker to change his mind. (The bank’s president did not respond to a request for comment.) So the next day, she turned to a commercial finance company, Factors Southwest Funding. FSW Funding covered her payroll obligation within 24 hours and she now uses the company regularly. “Factoring has been my life saver,” says Bucher, whose 48-employee company had $8.5 million in revenue last year.

With traditional financial institutions curtailing small business lending in the aftermath of the economic crisis, commercial finance companies have stepped into the breach to fund expansions and operations at small and midsized U.S. businesses. Because commercial funding is considered non-lending finance (factors buy invoices or accounts receivables at a discount, rather than loan against them), the industry is largely unregulated, particularly in comparison to banking. Factoring often comes with higher cost and greater long-term risk for small businesses.

David Banfield, chief executive officer of Interface Financial Group, an invoice discounter founded in 1972 that has 160 franchise locations worldwide, says his company has seen exponential growth since banks began spurning smaller loans. Three new franchisees opened this summer. “Until the past few years, the main funding supplier of capital for business in North America was the banking system,” Banfield wrote in an e-mail. “There are now fewer banks than a couple of years ago. Many have failed and many have been acquired. What that means for the smaller companies is that there are now less opportunities to go and seek out capital.”

Credit Crisis Sparked Factoring Boom

Technology is also fueling alternate finance options, primarily for small businesses. Nic Perkin, president of the Receivables Exchange, conceived his company in 2007 as a kind of Ebay (EBAY) for accounts receivables. It began operations in November 2008. “We certainly weren’t created as a business as a response to the credit crisis, but it has provided some wind in our sails,” says Perkin, whose typical clients are business-to-business companies with $2 million to $250 million in annual sales and list receivables on the exchange regularly or occasionally. “I’d be lying if I didn’t tell you that we got a big boost out of [the credit crisis]. We grew at 50 percent per month in 2009 and wound up with 500 percent first-year annual growth. The reality of it is, we probably would not have had that kind of growth otherwise.”

The commercial finance industry experienced the same sharp drop in demand in 2009 as bankers did, says Andrej Suskavcevic, CEO of industry trade group the Commercial Finance Assn., whose 250 members are mostly large factoring companies and asset-based lenders that typically make loans secured by machinery and equipment. Indeed, in 2009 the association recorded its steepest downturn since it began keeping records in 1976, with factoring volume falling to $116.6 billion, or 14.2 percent less than in 2008.

Demand has rebounded in the past couple of years, says Brian P. Cove, the association’s chief operating officer. And Mike Lubansky, a senior financial analyst at private company data provider Sageworks, says factoring is going mainstream: “In the past, some may have seen factoring, because of its higher cost, as associated with troubled situations. But now it’s just another source of financing, especially for funding that businesses need to grow when banks that have tightened credit standards and are focused on preserving capital are not able to lend as much.”

Caveat Emptor in Commercial Finance

That access isn’t cheap. Factoring may double the typical credit costs for a small business, says Bill Hettinger, author of Finance Without Fear and principal of Connecticut consulting firm the Institute for Finance and Entrepreneurship. Tom Swenson, founder and CEO of the Bank of Montana, says he’s advised small business customers considering factoring to shop prices aggressively before signing up. “Commercial financing is looked at as a caveat emptor, buyer-beware kind of situation. They figure you’re a business and you should know better—even though a lot of small businesses don’t,” he says.

Mark Deo, Torrance (Calif.)-based executive director of the consulting firm Small Business Advisory Network, says many entrepreneurs he consults with have turned to factoring, not only because they lack access to credit but also because they are having problems getting new business. “Factors are oftentimes the only source of funding for desperately needed cash, but it is very sad that business owners who have worked for years to build their businesses are entertaining factoring just to fund new purchases, equipment, or improvements,” he says.

Hettinger also worries about the long term: Companies with reduced profit margins are even less able to qualify for traditional credit. “Once you start factoring, it’s a difficult process to break. The key to a factoring or discounting decision is a complete analysis of all the financial implications of the decision. It’s more complicated to analyze than a bank loan,” he says.

Bucher didn’t have time for complex analysis when she turned to Robyn Barret, founder and managing member of FSW Funding. “I know it’s not the best solution and the cost is more for factoring,” she says, estimating that she paid $75,000 in factoring costs in 2010. “But I need the cash for payroll, parts, and supplies, and Robyn supplied it. To me, she’s the one that saved my business.”

Karen E. Klein is a Los Angeles-based writer who covers entrepreneurship and small-business issues.

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Allied Affiliated Funding Provides $4,000,000 Growth Capital Facility to New York Wholesaler

October 3, 2011

 

Date Funded:  10/3/11

Facility Amount:  $4,000,000

The Company:  This New York based company is a wholesaler of children’s sleepwear and hosiery. 

The Issue:  The company experiences seasonal fluctuations in their industry, resulting in a larger credit need during certain times of the year.  Their current factoring company was unable to provide sufficient credit for some of these customers due to concentration concerns.  Because of this, the company was faced with having to turn away new business from their existing customers.

The Solution:  The company was introduced to Allied, and Allied was quickly able to credit qualify the customers and the credit amounts needed.  To help facilitate additional orders and improve the company’s working capital, Allied was also able to provide the company a seasonal purchase order facility.

The Win:  This “Funding by Allied” allowed the company to meet their customers’ demands while also creating additional capital to accept new orders and grow their business. 

Allied Affiliated Funding
Corporate Headquarters

5151 Beltline Road, Suite 500
Dallas, TX 75254

Tel: 972-776-5300
Fax: 972-404-9955