It's the sad lament of entrepreneurs across the country: Due to the current financial crisis, there simply is no opportunity for starting a business or growing one in the U.S. today. After all, growing a business takes money--and nobody is loaning them money since the economic woes started last September. But don't tell that to Arnold McIntosh. An entrepreneur himself, McIntosh is convinced that there is money out there for small businesses. And he's backing up his beliefs with a program he has produced to help entrepreneurs find it.
"My whole reason for creating the 'Unsecured Business Lines of Credit' program is to encourage small businesses to grow" says McIntosh, "and to show them that there is a way to get the financing. I'm an entrepreneur at heart, and I love helping other entrepreneurs."
"Unsecured Business Lines of Credit" is a special report written by McIntosh, a licensed general building contractor who has seen the principles work for himself. Coming as an electronic file via email, the report promises to help an entrepreneur secure up to as much as $1 million in credit for his business. And the program works no matter what size the business is or how much experience the business proprietor has.
"This is a stated income/asset, no credit score, application-only process which requires no tax returns or business financials," says McIntosh. What this means in plain terms is that, by following the principles outlined in the report, a business owner can get thousands, tens of thousands, even hundreds of thousands of dollars of credit extended to his business. And he can get it:
Based on an application only
With no business financials
With no tax returns
Without regard to the business credit score
With no personal guarantee
And without reporting the matter to the credit bureaus.
"We're talking revolving lines of credit and perpetual lines, with interest-only payments," says McIntosh. "This is absolutely unsecured business credit. And the lines never convert to term loans."
McIntosh points out that the information in the report is crucial in today's economy, where credit is hard to come by. At the core of the economic crisis is a virtual shutting-off of most credit--unless you know where and how to look.
"Today, most people go to the bank or lender to apply for a loan, and they end up with their feelings hurt. With us, as long as you meet the requirements, you will get funded."
Nor is it a lengthy process; you won't spend weeks trying to get the funding. McIntosh says the whole process should take only 30 to 45 days, from start to finish.
"There are even Audio Links we will send you that explains the whole process," McIntosh says.
Those interested in starting the process can visit McIntosh's web page and fill out the short application. They will be contacted soon afterwards.
Arnold R. McIntosh
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