Long story short, the business I’ve been managing for past several years for an absentee owner has fallen into a hole of debt from another industry related endeavor the owner had tried to get into and failed. It’s left me in the position of needing to find a new career path
One of my long time customers offered to invest with me to start my own business in hopes we can maintain some of the previous customer base.
I have all the tools and knowledge to get the jobs sold and finished but need about $25k to fully start off in the manner I would like so I can maintain the same professionalism my customers have become accustomed to. I project to gross around $200k in the first year with a 65% gross profit.
My investor has offered the loan at no interest, want 35% equity as a yearly distribution, hands off with the business. He also brings to the table a much more powerful sense of business than I myself possess, a rolling line of interest free credit, and bookkeeping/admin/marketing help. Our goal is to grow the business in a scale that will require amounts in the 6 digits in the future and our deal is to restructure our percentages at that time as profits grow. But loans remain interest free.
I feel like 35% is nothing with the resources I’ll have available to me as a new business owner. But also recognize the power that removes from myself going forward so I’m looking for others thoughts?
35 percent ownership of year one gross profit 65 percent equals stakeholder ROI 82 percent. And this is in perpetuity?
Agree. Why do this?
“I project to gross around $200k in the first year with a 65% gross profit.”
Stress test - gross sales 130K
(NOI $84.5K / 12 months) / 1.5 = $4,700
This is maximum allowable monthly payment business could support considering economic crisis (i.e. 33 percent decline in sales revenue) and make financial sense.
So, I’d pay usury rates on $25k loan before I’d give up 35 percent ownership.