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Small Business Credit Card Financing Tacoma WA

Credit cards can be a great way to creatively finance your startup business in Tacoma. Shop for a good interest rate, understand fees, manage your credit score and you could be on your way to entrepreneurial success.

Tony M. Ashton (RFC®), CLU, CSA
(800)924-1275 X206
445 East Cedar Blvd.
Othello, WA
Washington Mutual
(253) 305-5380
6616 6th Ave
Tacoma, WA
Columbia Bank
(253) 566-1172
2401 Mildred St W
Tacoma, WA
Keybank
(253) 593-3910
1120 S 11th St
Tacoma, WA
Columbia Bank
(253) 396-6900
1301 A St
Tacoma, WA
Mr. Perry L. Smith (RFC®), CHFC, CLU
425 462 2072
800 Bellevue Way N.E. #400
Bellevue, WA
Keybank
(253) 597-6044
15117 Meridian E
Tacoma, WA
Mutual Consolidated Savings
(253) 383-8780
Tacoma, WA
Armed Forces Bank
(253) 964-1725
41st Division & A St
Tacoma, WA
Bank of America
(253) 305-3000
3408 S 23rd St Ste 1
Tacoma, WA
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Creative Business Financing Options: Credit Cards

The history of startup businesses includes many business legends that got started by leveraging credit cards as a creative business financing tool. Sergey Brin and Larry Page used plastic to start Google in the mid-Nineties. They ran their credit cards to the max, and mindful of their limits they chose to buy used computers and employ open-source software – meaning that their capital restrictions actually contributed to today’s global dominance by Google of the search engine business!

On the other hand, there’s Monroe Mann. In 1999, he started a company in New York City to teach business skills to artists and other freelancers, calling it the Unstoppable Artists Business School . But he relied almost solely on credit card debt to finance some big up-front expenses such as advertising in a local theater newspaper, running his tab up to $65,000. And in 2003, just before deploying to Iraq as part of his National Guard unit, Mann had to file for bankruptcy. He’s renewed his business since his return from the war, but Monroe doesn’t finance anything with credit cards anymore!

Credit card debt is a slippery slope,” says Jay Trien, a certified public accountant in Morristown , N.J. “It’s easy, but it’s also dangerous. It doesn’t mean you shouldn’t use credit cards for bootstrapping your business. It just means you need to keep on top of it.”

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