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This Entrepreneur Is Proving That a Zero-Interest Loan Platform Can Work Check out what's taking crowdfunding to a new level.

By Michelle Goodman

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

José Mandojana
Square deals: Community Sourced Capital’s Rachel Maxwell.

Rachel Maxwell's path to financing entrepreneurs wasn't an obvious one. Before receiving her MBA in 2012, she worked in international climate policy while running an analytics and market research firm with her husband. But her data-crunching background and interest in sustainable energy soon led her to pursue sustainable business financing solutions for local communities.

"What I figured out was that we really needed a distributed economic system, much like we needed a distributed energy grid," says Seattle-based Maxwell. A year spent researching the topic led to Community Sourced Capital, a zero-interest crowdfunding platform for community-based ventures. To ensure that future directors, advisors and investors would honor the mission, CSC became a certified B Corporation and a registered Social Purpose Corporation, a Washington state business designation.

"Everybody said to us, "No one will do this,'" says Maxwell, who serves as CEO. But she is proving them wrong. "Most of the [lenders] do know and live within a few miles of the businesses they support. What we found is that people will make zero-interest loans if they're connected to the business or the community that is being improved by the loan."

Since CSC's launch in 2013, some 3,700 people have loaned more than $800,000 to U.S. restaurants, breweries, boutique hotels, farms, retailers and manufacturers. The average campaign ranges from $15,000 to $20,000, with most lenders contributing $100. "Ninety percent of the campaigns that run on our site successfully reach their funding goal, which is about 50 percent more than the industry average," Maxwell says.

Borrowers pay $250 to run a four-week campaign seeking $5,000 to $50,000 on the site. Lenders contribute to campaigns in $50 increments, or "squares." If a business gets funded, CSC charges the borrower $50 per month throughout the three-year repayment term. There's no interest involved. Instead, borrowers repay CSC a percentage of their revenue that flexes with their earnings. CSC then passes those payments on to lenders (or "squareholders").

CSC's team vets each campaign posted on the site. Maxwell focuses on whether the amount requested is enough to complete the specified project (say, a new oven or solar panels), whether the business can feasibly repay the loan and whether the business has a community in place to fund the loan. Interested borrowers must share project details, budget and timeline, as well as specifics on their cash flow and how they interact with their community. "We are very hands-on with the businesses we work with," Maxwell says.

Maxwell hopes to succeed in the Pacific Northwest before marketing CSC nationwide; to that end, she is forming partnerships with local governments and economic development organizations. Craft3, a nonprofit community development lender, is matching CSC loans dollar for dollar in select Oregon and Washington communities; other partners include the Washington State Department of Commerce and Seattle's Office of Economic Development. "What we are doing is developing relationships and partnerships that will be replicable across the country," Maxwell says. "But we need to do it in our own backyard first."

More Finance and Capital Brilliance

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The FlashFunders no-fee equity investment platform streamlines the fundraising process by offering entrepreneurs SEC-compliant documents and FDIC-insured escrow accounts, saving them thousands in legal fees.

Online financial service Fundbox helps small businesses clear outstanding accounts receivables by offering low-cost advances on invoices of $100 to $25,000.

VerInvest is a secure, confidential verification platform that eases compliance with securities laws by enabling qualified financiers to verify their accredited investor status and connect with startups seeking capital.

Most angel investors are men. To get more female financiers onto term sheets, Pipeline Fellowship offers boot camps in 10-plus U.S. cities that teach women the fine art of angel investing.

London-based Earthport aims to upend the archaic process by which money is sent overseas. So far Bank of America, Western Union and the World Bank have signed on to Earthport's centralized, cloud-based network.

Local Lift enables merchants to raise financing by offering exclusive deals to consumers in the immediate area, while presenting their plans for improvement and explaining how their efforts will fuel community growth.

The Aspiration platform for middle-class investors has a "pay what is fair" approach to fees and donates 10 percent of revenue to charitable causes.

Michelle Goodman is a Seattle-based freelance journalist and author of The Anti 9-to-5 Guide.

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