How Do I Get Commercial Equipment Leasing?
Another mistake many small business owners make is to mix up their personal credit lines with their business credit lines – which should never be. Although your personal credit score, credit rating, or credit history will show a lot about you as a personal loan borrower, it does not adequately show how you perform as a businessman – for that, the bank or other lenders will have to examine the company’s own credit history instead.
What you should also bear in mind about pursuing Commercial Equipment Leasing is that you should also be scrutinizing the lenders themselves before you submit yourself and your company to scrutiny. Take into account the attitude of the staff towards you, and ask about the level of experience the lender has had with this type of business loan. There are certain lenders who will only allow companies operating in a specific industry to get Commercial Equipment Leasing from them while other lenders lend to almost all companies, provided these are financially sound.
It would be nice if you had contacts among the owners or managers of other similarly-sized companies and ask them for referrals to lenders. These small company owners or managers will be able to give you insider info on how these lenders operate, how they were treated during the loan processing process, and the experience of the small company owners or managers with making payments on the Commercial Equipment Leasing loan. A crucial question to ask your contacts is: if you need to, would you ask for a Commercial Equipment Leasing loan from the same lender or choose another?
If you do succeed in getting through the initial steps of securing a Commercial Equipment Leasing loan, try asking what payment options are open to you from that preferred lender. Do they require fixed monthly payments alone, or can you be given the skip lease option (which means you can stop paying during lean months when company earnings are weak)? Another option is a step-up lease payment plan, meaning you start paying low amounts then move up to the higher payment amounts incrementally. The lender might also have what is known as a 60-day deferred commercial equipment leasing plan that doesn’t ask you for a downpayment but will defer your payments for two months. Its counterpart is the 90-day commercial equipment leasing plan that will defer your payments for three months, and also needs no downpayments.