Would you sign a personal guarantee if you have investors?

It’s a fact of life that a banker, lender or lessor will ask for a personal guarantee from the founder or entrepreneur most every time. But what if you’ve diluted your interest from 100% to something less than 50%?

Should your investors expect you to carry 100% of the risk?

The short answer is “yes.”  Seems unfair, doesn’t it?

To most lenders, the guarantee is still a requirement, putting the entrepreneur in a position of additional risk that is not spread among the shareholders.

Recently, one of my companies offered the founder with a 20% remaining interest after several rounds a reward for signing two large personal guarantees necessary to grow the business – in the form of a warrant to purchase common shares at today’s common share price.  A win-win for the investor and entrepreneur assuming the company does grow and have a liquidity event someday.

The eye-opening process of borrowing for a small business

Starting and running a small or growing business can be a challenge to the most confident and optimistic entrepreneur.  And the process of borrowing money or financing asset purchases can be an eye-opener for those who are not used to today’s lender and seller aversion to grant easy credit.

The easy solution when entrepreneurs have controlling interest

[Email readers continue here…]  Most any entrepreneur with a clean credit record can obtain a bank card with a $50,000 limit, if s/he is willing to give a personal guarantee and has enough assets to back the promise it contains.  As the amounts get higher or as banks get into the picture, the negotiation around a personal guarantee becomes more of an issue with the lender and the entrepreneur.  As a rule of thumb, a company with a majority owner in control will be required to provide such a guarantee for most any borrowing of significant size in relation to assets.

Some thoughts on elimination of personal guarantees

All entrepreneurs assume risk when starting and growing a business.  It is only smart to consider ways to mitigate risks when opportunities to do so arise.  Approach your banker when times are good and discuss whether the increased collateral from growth is enough to eliminate the guarantee.  Approach your co-investors to negotiate some mitigation of personal risk, such as a backup guarantee in return for warrants.  Consider approaching another bank or lender with your increased strength and negotiate a “take-out” loan that eliminates the original lender without requiring a personal guarantee.

Most of all, keep your line of credit clean.  Communicate with your lender if a payment is going to be late.  And of course, here’s that old adage: “Never run out of cash.”

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This entry was posted in Ignition! Starting up, Protecting the business, Raising money. Bookmark the permalink.

2 Responses to Would you sign a personal guarantee if you have investors?

  1. I do not believe entrepreneurs should personally guarantee that which they do not fully control and therefore only sole proprietors should obligate themselves for the debts of their company. It makes no sense to guarantee something one does not control.

    Also, it makes much more sense to finance many companies by selling a percentage of revenues than borrowing money or selling ownership interests. If the projected profit margins are not sufficient to pay a royalty then the business opportunity should be reconsidered.

    Most new enterprises do not produce the anticipated profits and life is too short to be future burdened and damaged by unpaid personal obligations.

  2. William Schoettle says:

    I am burdened by three personal guaranties. I think entrepreneurs who sign personal guaranties should accumulate some sort of tax benefit. Perhaps related to passing the business on to heirs? (like they allow in Germany in Sweden, tax free). Us small business owners put our selves on the line. The economy benefit enormously from our effort and risk. Seems fair something should be baked into the system to reward us.

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