Pre-Seed Funding
Capital for your brand new business
Capital for your brand new business
Pre-seed funding helps founders with initial expenses as you work to turn your idea into a business. This may include expenses related to prototyping, office or manufacturing space, salaries for employees or contractors, professional services (legal, accounting, marketing), and the costs of building inventory. Typically, these expenses begin to incur after you’ve completed a business plan and are working toward tangible deliverables and milestones.
Nearly all new business owners get started using one or more of the following: bootstrapping, friends and family funding, and loans from banks or other organizations that serve small businesses.
Bootstrapping is the term for when you, the owner of the company, invests some of your own money into the business either in the form of cash or collateral. When it’s time to seek additional funding such as bank loans, this sort of funding shows that you have put “skin in the game” and proves that you have a long-term commitment to your project.
Pre-seed, ideation phase, and early-stage businesses and entrepreneurs focused on research and development for initial product or MVP
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One of the most common ways to fund your new business when you’re just getting started is by asking family and friends for money or capital.
Pre-seed, ideation phase, seed funding, and validation
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Small and medium-sized businesses often receive funding through bank loans. Entrepreneurs with a solid business plan and good credit are likely capable of receiving a bank loan.
Another option is microloans which are small, low-cost loans provided by a Community Development Financial Institution (CDFI) or similar organizations that provide resources and support services to small businesses. In the Traverse City region, two options for microloans are:
Pre-seed, ideation phase, seed funding, validation, Series A, companies with early-traction, and scaling startups
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