By Rolfe Larson, Joining Vision and Action (JVA)

When you’re looking for social enterprise financing, it may seem that anything will do. However, depending on the life cycle stage of your venture, some forms of financing are better than others. You want the right kind of capital for the needs of your business at that point in time.

social enterprise financingAccording to Jeannine Jacokes (Chief Executive Office, Partners for the Common Good) and Jennifer Pryce (Senior Investment Officer, Nonprofit Finance Fund and Calvert Foundation), there are basically four stages of business development

[1]:

Start-up or Seed Stage

At this point, it’s just an idea and a business plan, no track record. Your job is to find the right people and enter the marketplace, usually deeply on the cheap. Financing is very difficult at this stage, and it is often self-funded or from “seed” funders who already know you. Nonprofits can sometimes get grants to support this stage. More often than not, it involves drawing upon internal reserves and stretching staff every which way. Debt is usually a bad idea for this stage as the debt service (even if principle payments are deferred) adds a burden to cash flow at just the wrong time for the business.

Survival or Establishment Stage

This is now an operating business, with customers, but still deeply in the middle of product refinement and market adjustments as you learn from your first interaction with the marketplace. Revenue is beginning to come in the door, but that initial seed capital is running low while profitability is still just a goal. Similar to the previous phase, capital often comes from friends, family and, in some cases, funders with whom you already have a relationship. Sometimes Program Related Investments (PRIs) are available but that’s generally fairly rare. (And PRIs are still debt.)

Growth or Establishment Stage

The venture is growing, break-even or profitable, and gaining efficiencies as it expands. New competitive pressures are emerging, as there is a need for the company to develop better management and administrative systems to manage the growing demand. Seed capital has been used up but the firm needs capital to keep on growing. With some established operations and financial history, access to debt may become possible, but challenging, given limited cash-flow and collateral.

Mature Stage

This is the point of relative success, prosperity and stability, with a strong brand, loyal customers and a profitable business model. Yet no business can survive resting on its past successes, so to remain competitive, new investments will be needed to develop new products, improve old ones, or gain new efficiencies to keep your pricing competitive. Most businesses at this point need access to long-term working capital as well. Debt is the usual financing source for mature businesses, obtained from banks for whom this is their bread and butter business.

So depending on what life cycle stage your organization is in, it’s best to explore social enterprise financing that matches your situation.  There is no “one size fits all” approach. Two myths to watch out for: the one about venture capital, and the other about angel investors.

One place to get practical advice on starting or growing a social enterprise, including securing social enterprise financing, is JVA training and consulting. We offer a rich schedule of trainings as well as social enterprise consulting.

[1] Social Enterprise Alliance, Succeeding at Social Enterprise, Hard Won Lessons for Nonprofits And Social Enterprises, Wiley, 2010.