Loading summary
Will Smith
The personal guarantee has long been a non starter for certain searchers who would otherwise jump at the opportunity to buy
Interviewer / Host
a business with an SBA loan.
Will Smith
And in many cases such searchers are higher net worth, older, more seasoned and so actually pretty well qualified to succeed at business ownership. But the prospect of losing their assets, their home and is just too much risk to accept. Understandably well. Today's guests have launched an insurance product to help mitigate this risk. Personal Guarantee Insurance or pgi. Brendan Burdett and Ryan Connor have founded Braddock Road Insurance Corporation, or bric, to bring PGI to the SBA business buyer market. And they're not alone. Another startup is due to launch their PGI product in the months ahead. And by the way, this isn't pie in the sky. PGI already exists in the UK and other markets, so watch this space. If PGI takes off here, the effect on our market could be dramatic and could finally enable those of you who would stay on the sidelines to get in the game. Here are Ryan Connor and Brendan Burdett, founders of Brick. As a searcher, you know it's a numbers game, and part of winning that game is being able to quickly evaluate acquisition opportunities before wasting time on deals that will never close. Daniel Duran from Acquisition Lab Capital has scored hundreds of SMB deals using a proprietary 22 dimension rubric covering business quality, deal structure and buyer fit. And in a WEBINAR this Thursday, June 11, he'll walk us through exactly how Acquisition Lab Capital evaluates a deal from first look to investment committee decision, and show you how to apply the same lens to the deals sitting in your inbox right now. You'll leave with a clear, repeatable system for separating the deals worth pursuing from the ones that will drain your time, money and attention. The webinar is Score it or Skip a Framework for Fast Deal Evaluation and it is this Thursday, June 11th at noon Eastern. Link to register is right at the top of this episode's show Notes or on the Acquiring Minds homepage.
Interviewer / Host
Acquiringminds Cool Foreign
Will Smith
welcome to Acquiring Minds, a podcast about buying businesses. My name is Will Smith. Acquiring an existing business is an awesome opportunity for many entrepreneurs and on this podcast I talk to the people who do it. If you ask owners in the ETA and search community which insurance broker provides highest quality work, great outcomes and and has a practice dedicated to searchers and acquisition entrepreneurs. One name comes up again and again. Oberle Oberle Risk Strategies has worked with hundreds of searchers over nearly a decade and is in fact led by a two time successful searcher August Felker, which makes Oberle, a specialty insurance brokerage for searchers by a former searcher. And if you've got a business under Loi, Oberle will provide complimentary due diligence on that business's insurance and benefits program. An easy, no risk way to get
Interviewer / Host
to know August and the team at Oberle.
Will Smith
To take advantage, check out oberle-risk.com that's O B E R L E- risk.com link in the notes
Interviewer / Host
Brendan Burnett Brian Conner welcome to Acquiring Minds.
Brendan Burdett
Thank you Will for having us. We're really excited to talk to you about us.
Will Smith
So guys, I broke something of a
Interviewer / Host
policy that we have here on Acquiring Minds that we don't have vendors or service providers come on the podcast to talk about their offering. But the reason for the exception is
Will Smith
that your offering could have big implications
Interviewer / Host
and the offering is Personal Guarantee Insurance pgi. So as probably every listener knows, the personal guarantee, the PG looms over the SBA ecosystem and prevents many would be entrepreneurs who might otherwise buy a business from doing so. The risk of just losing everything is too high. Countless potential searchers have asked me, have asked in webinars what is the way around the PG and doing an SBA style acquisition? And the answer has always been a flat there is not one. But PGI Personal Guarantee Insurance could effectively change that. There's still the personal guarantee, but the risk of it, the bite of it, is potentially mitigated. So we're going to dive deep into this over the next hour. Let's start with introductions. Brendan, if you'd go first.
Brendan Burdett
Yes. Will you hit the nail on the head? This is a big pain point in this space and we're trying to solve it. And I first learned about this space about 10 years ago when I was in business school about the search funds, about entrepreneurship through acquisition. I spent my career at the State Department before that, so I wanted to get some experience operating in a business setting before I moved into the space. Then five years as a consultant, including some time at Hiscox, which is a specialty insurer here in the US and then about a year and a half ago, Ryan and I started talking. Ryan and I went to college and to high school together, known each other for 20 years. We've always wanted to do something together and we actually thought about buying an insurance agency with an SBA loan. But the personal guarantee was a sticking point for me and my family. And Ryan had had a personal guarantee at a previous company. So about a year and a half ago we started building this company to try to solve this pain point in this space.
Interviewer / Host
Great. Thank you, Ryan.
Ryan Connor
Hey, thanks, Will. My name is Ryan Connor. I grew up outside of D.C. and was a lawyer and worked after law school at some law firms and then was at some insuretech and fintech startups. Really diving into the regulatory as part of that journey. As Brendan mentioned, I had a personal guarantee, and it was for about $2.7 million. I didn't have $2.7 million to my name at the time. And I woke up every morning thinking about it and then would kind of
lose sleep at night, every night.
And when Brendan said, you know, let's do eta, let's, let's jump in here, I just couldn't really convince him to take that jump and take on that risk because psychologically, it's pretty devastating. And Brendan and I go way back. I, you know, love him as a friend. I love his family. And I wanted to figure out a way together that we could mitigate that psychological pain and hopefully bring more entrepreneurs into this space and take advantage of the SBA program.
Interviewer / Host
Okay, guys, so let's get right into the meat of this. I've been talking to people in the ecosystem about personal guarantee insurance. Their thoughts, their questions. This is. There's starting to be a lot of chatter about this. People have questions, and a lot of what comes back to me is, sounds very intriguing, but how's it really work? So we're going to do our best to unpack that. Let's start simple. Say more about the product, personal guarantee insurance, and how it would work, the basics, Absolutely.
Ryan Connor
I can start off, and Brendan's really our numbers and data person, and I've helped on the regulatory side.
I want to first just start off
and say that this is all pursuant to a lot of SBA regulations, existing insurance regulations. We've worked with a number of lenders as well as regulatory experts in the space to make sure this is done right. And we actually believe the personal guarantee is a good thing. It's a good motivator.
And all we're really trying to do is turn down the risk, essentially from a 10 to a 5 on the entrepreneur. We're not going to promise that if things go wrong that there's still not pretty bad consequences from this. But we're really stepping in at a point where you may not have a lot of options, where your business has gone under. You've maybe taken out what's called an MCA loan that's really tripled down what you owe, and there's not a Lot of options. And at a very high level, what we do is we look at your loan, we price it accordingly each year, and as long as you've got coverage, it's an annual policy. If something goes wrong with your business, what's going to often happen is your lender goes after you. And first what happens, they're going to have to go through what the SBA needs them to do, which is oftentimes liquidating the corporate assets. All that means is they're selling everything. You have to try and be able
to pay down that loan that you owe.
And then after that is really what's called the personal guarantee kicks in, they're going to come after you. The lender itself has to come after you, your home, your assets. And what we do is we come in and we write a very simple check that covers a portion of what you owe directly to the lender itself. We're not going to be able to save all your assets. We're not going to be able to get you out of trouble. But what we do, again, is turn down that risk from a 10 to a 5. And we feel like if we can imperil the entrepreneur at a point where they don't really have a lot of options, it's going to be able to help you mitigate a lot of the really terrible consequences of this. What happens is if you default and go through this terrible process, you can actually never be able to access any government loans again. A lot of times, the lien that the bank puts on your house won't go away, even if you go through personal bankruptcy. And we're just doing everything we can to come in and empower you during this difficult process. I'll pause there. Brendan, anything I'm missing or anything else to add there?
Brendan Burdett
Yeah, we're covering 50% of the risk. When the personal guarantee gets called, as Ryan said, we'll send a payout directly to your lender that reduces the loan balance directly in half. We're aiming to bring more capital into the system and improve recoveries for banks for the SBA and allow borrowers to have a system that they can work through. That's going to be easier than the full weight of the full loan amount personally guaranteed, you know, by their personal assets.
Interviewer / Host
So when you said turning the risk down from 10 to 5, you were actually saying mathematically, literally, the, the. The amount. So 50% coverage. So. So let's say. And we're going to do some kind of more deep dive examples in a minute, but just for right now, let's say I have a $2 million SBA loan that I'm defaulting on and I have PGI. You guys write a million dollar check
Brendan Burdett
to my lender after the corporate assets are liquidated.
Interviewer / Host
So after the corporate assets are liquidated, so everything is right, liquidated. And in, so in a business that has capital assets that will be more in some of these sort of airball business services type businesses that a lot of SBA buyers acquire, that might be very little.
Ryan Connor
Yeah, absolutely. And the way that we thought about this was again from personal experience. It would be a lot easier to sleep at night, to have a little
bit of peace of mind being on the hook for $500,000 versus a million.
And I think one of the things that the two of us really admire
and value about entrepreneurship is that resilience,
that creativity, that ability to negotiate.
And we're trying to be something where we can offer something, bring people some cash at the table that they can navigate these situations better. I'll pause there, but just want to make sure that that makes sense.
Interviewer / Host
Yeah, okay, but let's just carry on with our little micro example here. So I've. Or the business assets have been liquidated, let's say I still have a balance of $2 million on the loan, and you guys stroke a million dollar check, I still owe a million dollars. And if that's more than my net worth, aren't I still cleaned out?
Ryan Connor
Absolutely. What that's doing, though, it's still helping you get out of some of the personal consequences of bankruptcy when it gets a lot worse. And just taking a step back, not
to get into the real bad weeds
of this, but the, what you want to do when you're going through these situations is really be cooperative with your lender and be able to come up
with a way to work with them.
What a lot of entrepreneurs that happens is they, they get scared and then they disappear, which unfortunately is the worst thing that can happen, because then your collections go over to the US treasury and the amount you owe can actually increase, which is pretty scary. And what we're trying to do is again, keep you in that cooperative phase with your lender so that you can work out a way to potentially have a payout plan or come up with some way to avoid those more draconian consequences when it goes over to the treasury itself. A lot of times, some of the folks we've spoken to that are potential insured individuals already come to the table with a lot of assets. So one or two of them have two, $3 million because they're mid career operators, they've developed some significant house and personal wealth as well as their spouse. And if they're jumping into the ETA journey later in life, they have a lot more to lose than someone might be earlier in the process. And so in that case, yes, you're totally right, they still may lose that entire million, but it's protecting and shielding their additional assets if they have assets that are over that 1 million. And that's what's been really interesting to us as we've spoken to a lot of folks that say, hey, I've been on the sidelines for two years because I'm so scared of this. And the call I'm having with you is something that can help me actually unlock getting a deal across the line that I can go to my family, I can go to my spouse and really explain this. And that was really our goal of what we're trying to do is not solve the pain point entirely, but provide a tool for a lot of those mid late career operators to just think about that risk on a holistic basis.
Interviewer / Host
Good, framing the holistic basis because I think I was oversimplifying where if the business is in default, you lose everything as if there's some binary outcome. And of course there's a whole spectrum of outcomes. And if you're somebody with resources already, like you said, a balance sheet of two or three million dollars, let's say, and your business fails, you may be able to absorb the entire pay down the loan personally without even going into bankruptcy. But then you've just depleted your family's, all of your family's resources or some significant percentage of your family's resources. And so to have that pain is, is, is material. Extremely so.
Brendan Burdett
Yep.
Interviewer / Host
Yeah. Okay, let's actually get into the kind of philosophy of this a little bit. One of the other things that jumped out at me and others that I've talked to about this is, is the, is the idea that the personal guarantee, as much as kind of we all hate it, it does serve an important purpose of skin in game, serious skin in game. And so their, their one reaction to this whole category of product might be that are we facilitating bad behavior by taking away or mitigating some of the teeth of the pg? Your response?
Brendan Burdett
That's another important part of why we're doing 50%. We want to keep this alignment of incentives between the lender and the borrower. We want the skin in the game to exist. We just don't want the downside risk to be potentially catastrophic. That's what we're trying to take away with this insurance policy. Take what can be a truly catastrophic risk. If it's sent over to the Treasury Department, they'll put a 20% fee on top of what you owe. They'll use all their incredible financial tools to siphon your wages and garnish your, you know, Social Security payments. If it goes on that long, it can be a truly awful experience. With our insurance product, paying down 50% of the loan creates an opportunity for the borrower to work with their lender to come up with a payment plan to create it to there's a scenario now that exists that didn't exist before. It's a catastrophic loss that's then turned down 10 to a 5. Something that could be manageable for folks.
Ryan Connor
And just to be total totally kind
of humble about this, we realize we're first to market. We realize that there there may be
other forms of coverage and we really
wanted to just get this out to help people as soon as possible and
we we might have ways to make
this product better in the future and get feedback.
It was it's a pretty large lift to come up with new types of insurance. You think about Cyber is really kind of the only new funky thing that that's come out in the last 20, 30 years and we wanted to be really conservative initially just to get something
out to start helping people and we want to get feedback.
We want to make it better and
continue to approve it and want to totally recognize that it is a new concept. But we wanted to again just make that first step
Will Smith
looking to secure an SBA loan to buy a business Meet Pioneer Capital Advisory your go to Partner for sophisticated buyers who want deals closed quickly and on the best possible terms. The Pioneer team has closed more than 100 SBA loans averaging timelines well below industry standards. Founder and owner Matthias Smith and CEO Valerie Stash bring over two decades of SBA lending experience. Matthias and Valerie have built a team that meticulously works your deal from underwriting to close. You'll have a full bench working on your behalf, sales associates who streamline onboarding M and a financial analysts who craft investor grade lender decks and an operations team that manages every step of the closing process with institutional level rigor. Pioneer is not a single person but your true deal team. Visit pioneer cap.com or click the link in the notes.
Interviewer / Host
A few things to respond to there Ryan first of all you mentioned first to market so interestingly you there are I'm aware of at least two you guys and another And I think I'm hearing about yet another startup insurance offering, PGI Startup. And so just as an aside. What, what, what. Why is it in the air all of a sudden? It's not just one service provider with a, you know, with a new insurance product, you guys, it's a, it's a small handful of service providers coming out with this. Is. Has there been some rule change or, or is it just pure coincidence?
Ryan Connor
You know, Will, we're, we're, we're pretty simple guys.
We're not super sharp.
And we saw this product in other areas of the world, you know, and said, is there a way to bring this here? There's, there's a lot of folks that had worked on a similar product before that. It's, it's. You know, what's really funny about it is when we talk to a lot of people, they say, well, why doesn't this exist? And I think a lot of it is really just bringing something new to market, but there's nothing genius about it. And we just kind of put our
heads down and it's a massive market.
That's part of it as well, is
even outside of sba, most conventional loans, commercial real estate require this, personal guarantees as well.
And so I think a lot of other entrepreneurs saw that as a way to get into the space, you know, and we hope that there's as much coverage and as many options as possible.
We know that we're the first ones to market.
And I think the one thing that I would say is that we really
enjoy speaking to small business entrepreneurs because
we're kind of there, you know, we
understand that pain point.
And we're just trying to be really a resource to have people to talk to when they're like, my deal closed.
What. What do I do next?
Or how do I get this across the line?
And that's really what our kind of
bread and butter is, just developing relationships, helping people and, and trying to get
them into this world.
And that's, that's what we're going to double down on and what we can offer. And if you call us at any
time, we're just here to be a resource.
Interviewer / Host
So there are personal guarantee insurance products elsewhere in the world, so there's a precedent for this sort of product.
Ryan Connor
Yes, there's, there's a product in several other countries outside the US And I think it's generally done pretty well. I think the difference is with the US is you've got this really robust
sba, SMB lending market, which is different than where some of Those other countries
operate anything I'm forgetting there, Brendan, the
Brendan Burdett
growth in entrepreneurship through acquisition, through search funds, through the SBA loan program has really increased interest in what the personal guarantee does. The downside protection. You've had people talk about this for several years and many people, many folks on the commercial real estate side, you know, have done many deals before. They're required to do personal guarantees from kind of early on in their careers. But in eta, often you've never taken out a loan before. So the personal guarantee is something new that you have to wrap your head around and it's a pain point and it's great. There's other companies trying to do this. We think SBA loans are a really incredible product. It's an incredible vehicle to buy a small business with. The returns you can get because you only have to put 10% down are really fantastic. Allows lenders to move loans that they wouldn't without the, the backing that the SBA provides. So anything that is growing this market and supporting entrepreneurs, we think is, is very good for everybody.
Interviewer / Host
To your point about the fact that the personal guarantee is, is kind of ubiquitous in, in, in real estate land, and I've often wondered why there is such, I don't know, resistance in our market or maybe I should say acceptance in the real estate market. I don't know, maybe the howls on the real estate side are just as loud. But someone pointed out to me that, well, in real estate land that going back to the, the liquidation of the assets, you always have the real estate. So if your real estate project doesn't turn out the way you want it to, there's still this asset that will, that will, that you can sell to pay down at least some of that, some significant part of that loan. Am I thinking about that the right way?
Ryan Connor
Yeah, 100%.
And that's, that's one, one conversation we
have with a lot of folks getting
into this space where they say, how can I reduce my risk? And one of the really simple, low hanging fruits is if you can acquire business with 7A that has real estate. And then with a lot of the new rules that I'm sure you've heard about as well. If you can, if you can attach that real estate collateral, it's going to essentially reduce your, your personal risk and your personal guarantee, which we then provide some coverage.
There's.
But that's one thing that really does help mitigate things.
Interviewer / Host
Great. I want to return to the psychology and the philosophy of the personal guarantee and how the purpose that it is meant to Serve is skin in game. But skin in the game is also not binary or monolithic. And even without a personal guarantee, many searchers have a lot of skin in the game in, in, in the business anyway. They have probably, well, it can vary some, maybe less than six figures, but many will have a couple hundred thousand dollars, maybe more in the deal. They will probably have years of their life and career invested in the business. They will have the reputational damage, the emotional and personal damage of having to, of having to dissolve a business and let go of everybody. I mean, they'll. So, yeah, so there's a, there's a lot of, There's a lot of already of financial skin in the game and reputational and emotional skin in the game, even without the personal guarantee. So it's not as if the personal guarantee is the only thing keeping people motivated.
Brendan Burdett
Certainly not. There's, you know, you have to have a real sense of self, a real passion to be willing to get into the space and take ownership of your journey. And what we think is an incredible thing, it's really kind of an American story of being willing to pull yourself up by your bootstraps to make something of yourself, to build wealth for yourself and your family. And we're really encouraged to help people out in this space because it's such an incredible thing people can do, and we want people to be empowered to do that. And of course, there's, there's a lot of weight on your shoulders as a business owner, so why should that be even higher with the full weight of
Ryan Connor
a personal guarantee and will just going
back to kind of using it as a tool?
One thing you think about, you buy your business and maybe you want to buy another one or you want to figure out a way to reduce the risk. One of the one things you think about in year two, three, four, as
you're paying down that loan and you're running that business, is how can I
reduce my risk of that personal guarantee? And a lot of folks, the first thing they do when they perform really well is they will actually refinance that SBA into a conventional loan that doesn't require personal guarantee. But the rates on that conventional loan may not be as solid as that original sba. And so we've spoken to a few folks that say, hey, this is also a really good decision point for me as I think about increasing my personal liability on my first business and then buying a second or third business, and again provides a tool for me to expand, potentially have a holdco, and also analyze whether refinancing into a conventional loan that doesn't have a PG may be different or have a different analysis when you refinance it back into SBA or actually just keep running that SBA loan. So again, we're trying to be a tool as people build their family and net worth and think about do I want to acquire a franchise, a second one, a third one, what does that look like as a, as a total picture of my, my family and building that.
Interviewer / Host
Yeah. And so you would have, I guess you'd have personal, a personal guarantee insurance policy written per SBA loan that you have.
Brendan Burdett
That's what we're currently offering. We're doing this fairly simply to introduce it to the market. We'll have one policy for each loan that, that is taken out.
Interviewer / Host
And going back to the 50 number guys and how you've said you've wanted to introduce this to the market conservatively and then you're going to keep evaluating and see how the market responds. So that 50% number was the magic number that you guys arrived on, or the, I guess insurance carrier behind you who's going to be the actual underwriter of these policies, mandated that or you know, how did you arrive at that precise. Or it's, you know, just kind of a nice round number. How did you arrive at that exact number? Because these other providers who are going to be coming out in the market have a different number than 50%.
Ryan Connor
Absolutely.
The, the coverage that we look at is, is really going to be on a first of all kind of loan by loan deal and we're happy to chat with anyone on, on what they're looking at. So everything is independent. We have an independent analysis. What we really wanted to think about is working backwards from the framework of what the SBA and the lenders want in place. Lenders performance really is dependent on if they're defaulting on a lot of loans, they can lose their preferred status with the sba. What we wanted to do at a
thousand foot level is do this in
a way that is compliant with a lot of different competing demands.
Our number one priority is obviously serving
the customer and really being there for the insured.
But we also wanted to be something that could be used as a tool for lenders and a lot of deals. And we didn't want anything to happen where the lenders felt like this policy could wipe out their lending book as well.
And we arrived at that by speaking with a lot of different groups and making sure we're aligned there.
One thing that we've also found is if you Want to have the sellers of your business stay on and actually help with that business. Under an SBA loan, those sellers also
need to sign up for a personal guarantee.
And it's going to be really hard to tell someone, hey, you are selling your business, you're going to get a bunch of cash, and then you're handing your business over to someone else, and then you're on the hook for $5 million. And we see this policy as a tool to help with some of those deals as well. And if you're getting to a place where you're taking all the risk off of the individual, one just doesn't align incentives as well. And two, we do believe that there is something good to having some, some teeth in the game. But we want to, you know, we're first to market and we're happy to chat with anyone on, on individual specifics and just want to be a reference.
Interviewer / Host
You know, it's interesting from the lender perspective, they're always sort of threading a needle because their business is the business of lending. So they're incentivized to issue as much debt as possible. On the other hand, of course, they're also, they also need to make sure that it's strong debt and as little of that aggregate debt defaults as possible. So they're always kind of being pulled toward issuing debt, but also being conservative and, and that's the, I guess the, the science of art and science of being a lender. But anyway, this. So this product in some ways plays with that, interestingly, because in some ways this could bring, this could grow the market. This could bring in people to do SBA loans that otherwise would not have. So that's exciting. From the lender's perspective, on the other hand, Ryan, as you just touched on it, could incentivize bad behavior or sloppier, you know, people who may maybe. Borrowers who maybe feel less teeth, less threat because of a mitigated PGI to get into deals that they shouldn't. Um, how would you say lenders. How, how have you been working with lenders to tease that out and to, and to bring this to market? What, what has their reaction been? Just talk, talk about that.
Ryan Connor
Absolutely. So we've had some very supportive lenders that have helped us from really getting the regulations correct and the credit and underwriting.
We want to do everything in compliant
with the SBA SOPs as well as the lenders. And one individual specifically, we wouldn't have gotten off the ground without him. His name's Ted Shipley. And he is a phenomenal attorney at Live Oak's team. So it was really speaking with Live Oak's credit team initially and making sure we were doing this in a way that was fully compliant with the sba. Brendan, anything I'm missing there?
Brendan Burdett
Yeah. He put us in touch with their top lawyers, which are the top legal team in the SBA space. They've worked very closely with us to make sure our policies align with all of the regulations that the SBA requires lenders to follow. And I think lenders see the value here because they talk to borrowers that get cold feet and abandon the process late because they have to explain to their spouse that their house and their personal assets are going to be on the line. They lose borrowers all the time. And we talked to someone this morning that bought a business in a previous life and deliberately avoided SBA loans because of the personal guarantee requirement. And so if there's value on the front end in closing more loans, there's value on the back end, too, because the payout of our insurance policy goes directly to the lender, reducing their downside risk,
Interviewer / Host
effectively kind of giving them more collateral in. In the loan. Right. Which is a good thing. It's. It ends up being a. Effectively for them. It ends up being a safer loan, actually. Right.
Brendan Burdett
Many lenders do look at this as another form of collateral. You know. You know, you need to be careful whenever you bring a new insurance policy to market. You don't really want behavior to change too much. We don't want lenders to see this and then take undue risks with this new insurance policy. You did mention the one type of behavior that we would like to see. And it's more people coming into the system, people that would have avoided the SBA loan previously because of the pg. Now there's a way to kind of wrap their head around the risk and reduce it by 50%. We want them to come into this market and take this journey that can really be incredible for them and their family.
Interviewer / Host
Well, on that point, one of the interesting wrinkles here, dynamics to the pg, is that in many cases, these. These would be SBA acquirers that we keep talking about that make the calculated decision not to do this because it's just too much risk, because let's say they have a family and they have a mortgage, and they just do not feel it would be responsible to put. To make their kids homeless. And I'm going to give you guys a quote here. Th. Those types of people are al. Also by nature of being further along in life and having a family and having real estate or a home are likely going to be more established, more experienced further in their careers and therefore better qualified. And it's sort of in a sort of statistical sense, you know, it's all case by case but in theory a better, stronger borrower because they are mid-40s, 50s, that person is probably more equipped to, you know, jump into an sb, into a small business as owner of that small business than a 29 year old. So I actually there was very timely. There was a post on Search Funder just a couple days ago last week by David Schreiber. Um, David's Let me quote him and I just want to read it for, for the audience, but it captures this perfectly. Okay, so this is an excerpt from, from his post. Quote. After two plus years of part time searching across a number of industries in my geo, my search has ended in keeping my day job.
Will Smith
Now this wasn't a failure to find deals.
Interviewer / Host
I found a lot of interesting businesses. It was a failure to tolerate risk. I could have closed on a number
Will Smith
of deals, but I never solved for the house.
Interviewer / Host
With a young family, I was not willing to put my primary residence on the line for an SBA loan and
Will Smith
potentially make us homeless.
Interviewer / Host
Zero risk tolerance when it comes to my house.
Will Smith
I tried everything to get around it,
Interviewer / Host
HELOC, leasebacks, ABL, etc. And then he later says I'm happy
Will Smith
to put skin in the game but
Interviewer / Host
just don't threaten to make my kid homeless. End quote. Now if you look at David's LinkedIn, he's seems like a very strong borrower, a very well positioned professional to go buy and run a business successfully. And so he's, he strikes me as kind of the very type of borrower ideal for this product. If you want to respond, maybe, maybe we've already said it a bunch of different ways, but if you'll respond to that exact quote.
Ryan Connor
Yeah.
And you know, I think David put a lot of heart and effort and we want to get David across the line. You know that those are the type of people we're not going to go to market promising we can save your house. We don't want to do that. We want to be totally transparent and say we're going to do everything we can to hope you make that psychological choice to follow your path of entrepreneurship. And for David's case, it is difficult, right. When you've got folks depending on you, it's the last thing you want to do is put your dependents in that situation. And we think that part of it is silly. Right? This person's put two and a half
years, and he would do phenomenally at running a company.
And when you speak to a lot of lenders, a thing that's been really interesting to us is those are the types of folks that lenders want to really help and support, and they're the. They're the ones that are being prevented from getting across the line. It's kind of odd, but a lot of folks really don't like the ETA search fund world in the SBA space, and they want to attract folks like David, and we want to be that kind of extra nudge to hopefully get
Brendan Burdett
him there and folks can learn more about what we're offering. Personalguaranteed.com is our website, and there's a way now to understand this risk in a different manner. There's a way to price the downside risk and reduce it and reach out to us. Check out our website, learn more. And we'd love to talk to David and see if this is something that might have gotten him over the edge.
Interviewer / Host
Yeah, I haven't. I don't think we've named your firm. Please do.
Brendan Burdett
It's. We're Braddock Road Insurance Corporation, or bric. The high school that Ryan and I went to in Alexandria, Virginia, right down the road from you is. Was on Braddock Road. So that's. That's where we got to know each other on the freshman football field. And. Yeah, our website again, www.personalguarantee.com.
Interviewer / Host
great, guys. Okay, so let's return now a little bit to some of the mechanics of how this would work. So we're here. You know, you were talking. We were talking about the lenders, and you were talking about, you know, being compliant with, you know, SBA rules and what the lenders need, etc. So is this issued at closing?
Will Smith
Is it.
Interviewer / Host
Is it all tied up in the loan in some way, or is it just a completely separate. Walk us through the actual sequencing here and what it would look like to actually get one of these issued on a loan.
Ryan Connor
Absolutely.
Absolutely. So two options. Not to get super boring and in the weeds, but to close any SBA loan, you have to go out and get life insurance. You generally need hazard insurance. You might need title insurance as part of that. We can help you and get you across the line before closing. The second option is we have a time period after closing where we can look at things and also underwrite. So if you've closed recently, we're happy to connect with you, and we do that because there's a lot of crazy paperwork flying around when you're actually trying to get to closing. And we want to have some flexibility in helping people really just get that across the line. And again, it's really just around closing and afterwards as well. So happy to help.
Interviewer / Host
And if you do it after closing, then in fact the sba, the SBA lenders really don't have a say. They can't tell you entrepreneur, business buyer to get, you can or can't get this insurance product. So as much as you guys and you know, I guess me are trying to make sure that this plays nicely with the SBA lenders, it's not like you actually need their permission or, or am I wrong?
Ryan Connor
That's, that's a really good question. This is a private insurance product. We don't really interact with, with the
lender on the policy and it's something
for the individual to take out. Contractually it doesn't have to be part of that closing process. If you do want your lender, your
SBA loan broker, anyone you're working with,
we're happy to collaborate with them, but
it's really a decision for, for you to make and is not a requirement in any way.
Interviewer / Host
And when you talked about getting the insurance policy written before pre or post close, what do you envision the norm being?
Brendan Burdett
We can provide a quote. Once you have the details of the loan, the name of the business, the type of business, the amount of the loan, we can provide you an initial quote, but we won't actually bind the policy and provide you the policy documents until after the loan closes because we need, you know, we need an actual risk to manage with our insurance policy.
Interviewer / Host
So it necessarily has to be actually written after close because that's when the loan actually exists.
Brendan Burdett
Correct?
Will Smith
Buying a small business sounds simple.
Interviewer / Host
Find a company, due diligence, get a loan close.
Will Smith
In reality, you wear every hat just to get the deal done. And then the moment you close, you have to throw those deal making skills out the window and learn how to operate. You shouldn't have to rebuild this infrastructure from scratch and you definitely shouldn't do it alone. That's why Walker Deibel created Acquisition Lab. What started as an accelerator has expanded into a complete ecosystem for acquisition entrepreneurs. Over six years, the lab's 1,200 members have acquired over a billion dollars in businesses. The lab puts everything under one roof. An active community, deal reviews, post close services and a dedicated fund helping experienced operators buy larger businesses. If you're serious about buying a business, come see why Lab members have a 40% success rate. Learn more in the show notes or@accentlab.com acquiringminds
Interviewer / Host
We've been speaking sort of in abstract terms and if we can get some real numbers here. Now, I know that you guys can't talk pricing. As I've learned just a touch about insurance by talking to you and some of the others. It's a highly regulated market. I think I would have guessed that, but I realized that insurance carriers, the geicos of the world, don't, don't advertise pricing. That's probably. They're probably regulated against that. And also, every single insurance policy is custom, as we. It sounds obvious to say, but I never quite thought about it.
Brendan Burdett
Risk can be very unique and so you need to. Need to underwrite them. Each insurance policy for each risk that you provide a policy for.
Interviewer / Host
Exact. Exactly. So the question in anybody who's interested in this product's mind is how much does it cost? And there is no pat answer. And you guys couldn't say it if there was one.
Brendan Burdett
On our website, we can provide a quote within 24 hours if you submit the information that we need.
Interviewer / Host
Okay, all right, great. So you can, you can get a custom quote there from the website. But in talking to folks and kind of gleaning a directional sense of what this might cost, I'm gonna say 1 to 2% loan value per year, which translates to say it's a million dollars in loan. That would be $10,000, 10 to $20,000 a year, which is. What is that? You know, $900 to. To what, $1800 a month. Is that math? Right. So let's for simple math, call it $1,000 to $2,000 per month, a per million dollars of loan value. So that would be, you know, three to six thousand dollars a month. If it was a $3 million loan, with that hypothetical, which you guys can't really just indulge me and let's use that as the kind of. The hypothetical cost. Can we. Can we have some examples here of like, different loan values to. To net worth ratios? Because.
Will Smith
Because I think.
Interviewer / Host
And let's preface this by, by tell me if I'm thinking about this the right way. I would think for the borrower, for the SBA buyer, the two key numbers that they need to think about as they approach the possibility of this product are the loan value. Obviously, that will determine price and it will determine what they're on the hook for. So loan value and then their own net wor. If it's a $5 million loan and I've got $50,000 to my name. That's a very different picture than I've got $5 million to my name and it's a $2 million loan. Whatever. So it's th. Would those be the two key numbers that kind of inform the rest of this calculation?
Brendan Burdett
We're going to look at a lot of the numbers that the, the bank looks at as well. You know, the debt service coverage ratio is important for the banks. It's going to be important for us to understand how the business is doing as well. So that's, that's the other component. But, but for the borrower, the, the loan value is very important. And then their net worth is also important to this. The ratio of their net worth to what they owe certainly impacts how they're going to view the risk of these loans and the risk of having the personal guarantee on their head. So all of that's going to go into our underwriting for each of these insurance policies. Yeah.
Ryan Connor
And just at a holistic level. Not to like go back to this, but that's why real estate can be really important is because you've got some actual collateral to protect that loan if things go bad. And why the new recent rules around the 7a and 504 program that if you can have a lot of real estate as part of your business acquisition, that is a way to help mitigate the downside protection on the loan and why it's such a kind of awesome new, new new program to, to take advantage of.
Interviewer / Host
And if people want to learn more about those new loan limits, the 7A combining 7A with 504 for $10 million total. See our webinar with Heather Anderson, which we did last week, where she unpacks it all. Very, very helpful and valuable. And just going back now to the numbers and we're going to walk through a couple examples. The other thing about the way those two numbers play the loan value and your net worth is also whether or not the premium makes sense to pay. So this isn't, this is a significant expense. As we said, you know, $1,000 a month per million dollars of loan. So if you don't have a lot of net. Of net worth to, I mean and over a number of years that premium starts adding up and it. Are you the aggregate that you paid in premiums could could for some people I guess catch up with the, the, the very number, their very net worth that they're trying to protect. And so then it makes less and less sense.
Brendan Burdett
And so a couple things There so one many insurance policies you have property insurance for your home or auto insurance. These premiums tend to go up over time in the annual underwriting. Our policy is going to go down over time in almost every case because it's a percentage of the loan that you're guaranteeing. But with the annual policies, you're not required to keep this. If you're doing really well, you're four or five, the business is humming along, your cash flows are great, you're paying down the loan much more quickly than you expected, which happens in many of these cases. There's no need to continue paying for our policy. It gives you flexibility as a borrower to how much coverage you want and how long you want to have that coverage. We've also spoken to a number of lenders that are actually interested in increasing the loan amount in order to pay for this initial premium policy. So that's another thing that we've spoken to a number of lenders about.
Interviewer / Host
Ah, interesting. So it would be financed. The point about things are going well and so you borrower entrepreneur may decide that you don't need the PGI anymore. What about the reverse case? It's not going well, or even if it's not even going terribly, but it's a typical J curve, which we all know is, is everywhere in this space where EBITDA drops in the years one first couple of years of ownership, you as insurer might say to yourselves, why don't you know, this business looks worse than it did a year ago when we originally issued this policy. We don't want to reissue it. Or the price is going up a lot because now all of a sudden EBITDA was 1.2 and now it's 700.
Ryan Connor
Yeah, absolutely. I can take that one. I think part of this is just taking a step back. A lot of folks assume these loans are paid almost as like their, their mortgages. And in the real world, what can happen is you have during that J curve, a lot of businesses that go on to do very, very well will miss some payments. And the, the banks want to work with you individually to really make things long term. And they're not gonna go after a lot of those loans. Just if you've got a little period that you're not performing. And that's really where we want to come in and provide that peace of mind that you do have some protection there. And to be super specific, we want to have that annual policy really to just check in, figure out a way that we can help you as you're Going forward, understanding what's going on with the business. But if we're not renewing folks and really causing a lot of issues, it's a small world and we know that this, this ecosystem really relies on reputation and trust. And if we did that, we would, we would be dead in the water. And you know, trust is really important to us and it's really just making sure that we know each year what's
going on with the business.
And when you speak to a lot of folks that have gone through this, a lot of folks just disappear because it's just so much psychological pressure and, and no one can really find them. And what we're trying to do is really support folks to have a collaborative process when things are going wrong. And our insurance, obviously you've got exclusions, coverage applies, details apply, are really where we can help people in those situations.
Brendan Burdett
We've spent a lot of time looking through all the data available on SBA loans and I think we'd encourage everyone who's getting interested in the space. You can look at how different types of loans behave over time and different economic environments, how different industries do, even how different lenders have done over time and they're under underwriting of these loans. And you know, the J curve is very well known. We want to be there when people need us and we want to provide a lot of value and support to entrepreneurs in this space. But, but we understand there are ups and downs and there's, you know, there's no smooth path to the top. There's going to be going to be dips and we want to be there to, to support you as much as we can.
Interviewer / Host
And the way that your arrangement with the insurance carrier, who's, who's behind you, who's actually underwriting these policies is you have what is called an insurance land delegated authority.
Brendan Burdett
Exactly.
Interviewer / Host
We're set up so you guys actually make the call. Because my follow up question would have been, well, you guys might, you know, your answer to the market is just trust us. But if it's, you know, some distant insurance carrier behind you who's actually going to be the one making the call as to whether or not to renew an insurance policy of a small business that doesn't look so good now they may say, sorry, no, we're working with
Brendan Burdett
the very well capitalized insurance company behind us, they're A minus rated, which is excellent in the parlance of am best, which is the rating agency. And what we are set up as is called a managing general agency or managing general underwriter. So we actually have delegated a authority from our carrier partner to underwrite these loans for insurance. And there's a long set of documents that explain the exact authority that we have and anything that's within the standards which we've agreed upon, we're able to underwrite the policies for. And then we used all the FOIA data to develop our underwriting and actuary model to come to an agreement with our insurance carrier. And we tried to, we worked for months with them to get this in the right place and to ensure we have enough authority in order to provide as much, much coverage as possible.
Interviewer / Host
But guys, I mean, you know, in many of the horror stories on acquiring minds, one of the kind of patterns of a SBA SMB acquisition gone wrong is some sort of seller fraud or malfeasance. And that can be catastrophic and can, can surface quickly and dramatically. So you're saying, and so let's say it happens in month eight or month six. And so the next, the second six months of the entrepreneur's ownership is just a tailspin. You're saying that even in a case like that, they can trust that you'll renew their policy when it really looks like there's been some skeleton in the closet where this business ain't what it seemed, they can trust you to renew that policy?
Ryan Connor
I think just to take a step back, we are not going to be able to reduce the risk to zero. And the best advice I ever heard in this world was from a close friend in Charlottesville, was you need to be able to sit at the dinner table, sit across from that owner and trust them with everything you possibly can. And if you don't trust that owner, no contracts or anything is really going to be able to totally mitigate the risk in that situation. And to be totally clear on your example, our policy is claims made and so exclusions apply. There's details, we're happy to review that with everyone. But if you've got our policy in place and the actual lenders coming after you for your personal assets in that period, we've got coverage in place. But again, the best advice we give people is you don't want to get into a deal where you're not 100% really trusting the owner to begin with. And when you really look into these stories where things go wrong with the personal guarantee, it's generally a lot of times it's when the seller has not disclosed things or the seller totally blows a non compete. And so anytime anyone's pushing against a non compete, you want to walk away any butterflies you have in your stomach that you don't trust this person, you just walk away. There's lots of incredible entrepreneurs out there and a lot of opportunities, but that's where really people go wrong, is when you've got the wrong individual you're sitting across from and no amount of contracts or anything can, can really get you out of that, unfortunately.
Interviewer / Host
Let's do a couple examples, guys. Can we do that? Do you have a couple that you brought with you?
Brendan Burdett
Yeah, we've. So we've had a number of conversations. We've talked to a lot, a lot of borrowers. We, we spoke to, you know, Brian mentioned kind of in non specifics borrower spoke to in the last couple weeks who has been going through this process for a couple years. They, like many people in this space, have a very supportive spouse that is helping their family stay afloat as they have left their job and focused full time on DTA journey. And despite this support from the spouse, it's still tough to wrap your head around putting the house that you and your spouse live in on the line. And you feel this guilt inside because of the weight that you're kind of putting on your family going through this journey. And then your mind starts to wander and you think, if I buy a company, it goes bad, the weight's going to be worse that I put on this family. The guilt's going to be incredible. How am I going to, how am I going to do this? And without risking everything that my spouse and I have built. And this is the type of person that has really been waiting for a policy like this to be, to be available to him. And that's the type of person, there's many different types of people that we're trying to support, but someone who's really feels the weight of entrepreneurship and the guilt of potentially causing their family to be in trouble is the kind of person that we want to really encourage to wrap their head around the risk that they're taking and reduce that risk in a way that they can go full bore into the, you know, business ownership and entrepreneurship.
Ryan Connor
I think the thing that was really ironic about that was it was a second generation entrepreneur in Oregon and his parents had initially used SBA loans to build out their family's wealth. And I think it was actually through some restaurant franchises and some lodges and the parents, their whole family's net worth before they came over here was initially many years ago, built on the SBA program. And the story that's really sad was he didn't want to Put everything that his parents had earned. He was 40, 50 now. He didn't want to put all that hard earned wealth back on the line for his SBA loan. And it was just a really interesting story of how this can empower, you know, first generation families. And then once they've built out that
wealth and have something, there's a sense
of kind of risk and like you, you don't want to jump back into it if you have developed your initial stability there. And so that was really kind of heartwarming to hear of, like, okay, this is a way to really, from a multi generational way, take advantage of these SBA loans and continue to build out your family. But not having again be a tool to think about that when you've got a full family plan and you're thinking of inheritance, you're thinking of how to reduce that risk. But that was a really cool story.
Brendan Burdett
We spoke to another borrower in Arizona who a few years ago bought a cleaning company and has run that very successfully. They used an SBA loan to acquire that company. Now with that in a pretty good place, they're ready to take out another SBA loan to buy another company. But now the previous company was bought when they were single, when the risk profile was a little different. They are now in a relationship and maybe getting married at some point in the next couple years and see that bringing a spouse in to have this conversation about putting all their newly joint assets on the line through the personal guarantee is just a different thing to consider than his previous acquisition. And this policy is something that's going to help him have that conversation in slightly different terms than without the downside risk mitigation.
Ryan Connor
And I think the paper in pen is you can get really wrapped up into the stories of the EBITDA and the specific companies and how everything pencils and what a loan looks like. But when you zoom out, it's really stories from the heart of people changing life stages. They're getting married, they're inheriting grandparents money, maybe they're fresh out of business school, but they're starting to date. And without really factoring that in to how you look at entrepreneurship, how you jump in, you miss a lot of, I think the soul behind it. And it's those stories that we kind of wanted to build this out is just providing a tool so that people can navigate those life decisions within the decision of jumping into entrepreneurship.
Brendan Burdett
We spoke to a group of four guys in Ohio and Michigan that are rolling up doggy daycares and adjacent businesses and one of Them runs the business full time. The other three, I think, all work at hedge funds. They're all kind of splitting the SBA loans that they've taken out. And the PG on each of their heads just continues to grow as they take on more SBA debt. And this is one of the groups that they thought about refinancing everything, but then they heard about this as an option. And the cost of refinancing into a conventional loan with rates where they are now versus when they took out these loans, is so much higher than what they would have to pay to take out this insurance policy on loans that they take out moving forward.
Interviewer / Host
And by the way, in a, in a case where there are multiple borrowers or multiple PGs, what does that look like?
Ryan Connor
Yeah, really good question. We, we insure one individual, but the partners, anyone that's tied to that loan
essentially is, Is getting some advantage if they have that policy. So it can help if you've got two or three partners and maybe one has a lot of net worth and one doesn't, it can be a way to kind of MIT or distribute that risk in a way that evens out how much each one is on the line for. And so that's another way that again, as a tool to think about, as you've got a group of people, maybe someone says, well, wait a second. Why am I putting my $2 million net worth on the line when my buddy is not putting anything on the line? That's not really fair. And so again, as a tool, this can come in to potentially spread that risk a little more evenly.
Interviewer / Host
So the business pays for the PGI and the $2 million partner has his risk mitigated by 50% and the business pays for it. And so some. So the risk has been spread somewhat.
Ryan Connor
That could be one way to do it.
Correct.
Interviewer / Host
How else might you do it?
Ryan Connor
Oh, just as a tool, just as a way you think of partners. I think that's, that's the hard part. I don't, I don't know if there's a lot of opt. If you got three buddies and one's really rich and one doesn't have anything, you know that that's the tricky part is not to get into the nerdy part. But that's what joint and several liability means is, especially with the seller roles. Is anyone on that loan, the lender has to go after them for, for, for everything. And that's where it's hard to take a group of three people and commit to this and have everyone be on the hook. For everything. That, that's, that's the hard part of
Interviewer / Host
it, Ryan, the seller roles, you had touched on that earlier, remind us what the rule change was that's now in force. And, and let's explore this a little bit further.
Ryan Connor
Absolutely.
I am not, I'm not expert on the prior, but I can tell you some kind of live deals on how it generally works is an examp be. A seller is doing a business acquisition, meaning the original owner of the business, if you want, if you're coming in and you want to purchase that business, but you want that owner still to have some teeth in the game, you want them around to maybe help you with sales or operations, they essentially stay on the cap table and have some equity in that new business. Now the down the, the tricky part in, in convincing a person to do that, if I understand things correctly, is that the SBA is going to require that old owner to actually personally guarantee the entire amount for about two years. So even though they're just a 20% equity owner, they could still be on the hook for up to $5 million, let's say. And that can be tricky to again convince someone to, to do that. And what we would like to be able to do is, is have an offering that reduces the risk for everyone on that loan and can provide a tool for business brokers, loan brokers, to approach an owner that's maybe not totally willing to sign up for that because it's kind of crazy if you think about it. But if you can reduce the risk, it's just two years, it can be a lot more comfortable to think about.
Interviewer / Host
You said Ryan, it's kind of tricky to convince a seller to do that. I, I think that that was an understatement. And where it's really bitten is in trades businesses where licensing is required because often the seller owner is the one with the license. And so keeping them involved, at least during a transition while you find, you buy or find some other license holder was, was a way to do it before. It's really hurt the, the, the ability for a borrower to acquire a trades business where there's, where licensing is strict and required.
Ryan Connor
Absolutely.
Interviewer / Host
And have you seen now as you talk about it, helping that, that particular dynamic, Ryan, have you actually seen examples of it or is this all in,
Ryan Connor
in theory, this is all new.
We're, we're new to market. Again, we want to be a tool so that, you know, again, the thing that is come across is just the creativity of a lot of SBA loan brokers. A lot of business brokers to get these deals across the line and we just want to be another tool to help with those transactions. And again, when you bring in additional liquidity to the system, you might be able to again get people more comfortable with different structures. And we're, we want to be open to facilitating those.
Interviewer / Host
You say you're first to market. So the offering is available now.
Brendan Burdett
Absolutely.
Ryan Connor
Personal guarantee.com and have you written any yet? We are in the process of underwriting
Interviewer / Host
the name of the firm again is Braddock Road Insurance Corporation or Brick or just Braddock Road. Brendan Burdett and Ryan Connor, thank you guys for coming on Acquiring Minds to explain this. What an interesting development in our world and we all hope that it, it brings more strong entrepreneurs, strong borrowers off the, off the bleachers and into the game. Really will be really, really interesting and exciting to see how this plays out. So good on you guys for trying to innovate in this market. And thanks for coming on.
Brendan Burdett
Thank you, Will.
Ryan Connor
Thanks so much, Will. Thanks for everything you do with this community. Thanks a lot.
Interviewer / Host
Hope you enjoyed that interview.
Will Smith
Don't forget to subscribe to the Acquiring Minds newsletter. We send an email for every episode
Interviewer / Host
with an introduction to the interview, a link to the video version on YouTube,
Will Smith
and soon key takeaways, numbers and more
Interviewer / Host
essentials from the interview.
Will Smith
For those of you who don't have
Interviewer / Host
time to listen or watch it, subscribe at acquiringminds.co. you'll also find all our webinars there on the website, both those we have coming up and recordings of past webinars.
Will Smith
At this point There are over 30 webinar recordings, a wealth of information on all the technical nitty gritty of buying a business.
Interviewer / Host
Acquiringminds copy.
Acquiring Minds Podcast: "How to De-Risk the Personal Guarantee"
Host: Will Smith
Guests: Brendan Burdett & Ryan Connor, Founders of Braddock Road Insurance Corporation (BRIC)
Date: June 8, 2026
This episode explores a pivotal innovation in acquisition entrepreneurship: Personal Guarantee Insurance (PGI). Host Will Smith interviews Brendan Burdett and Ryan Connor, co-founders of Braddock Road Insurance Corporation, who have launched a new insurance product, PGI, to mitigate the risks associated with personally guaranteeing SBA loans. The conversation deeply examines how this insurance works, its implications for buyers and lenders, and the potential to revolutionize the small business acquisition landscape—especially for higher-net-worth and risk-averse entrepreneurs currently sidelined by the daunting PG requirement.
Barrier to Entry: The personal guarantee (PG) required for SBA loans is a major deterrent for many qualified, experienced buyers. Many simply cannot stomach the risk of losing personal assets, particularly their primary residence.
Target Market: Mid- to late-career professionals with significant assets are most paralyzed by this risk, despite being some of the best-qualified buyers.
Emotional Toll: Personal experience from the founders spurred the creation of this product—Brendan was deterred from doing his own SBA acquisition for fear of the PG, and Ryan lived for years under the stress of a $2.7M guarantee.
Basic Premise: PGI covers 50% of the remaining loan balance after corporate assets are liquidated and the lender calls the PG, paying that amount directly to the lender.
Not Complete Protection: The product aims to "turn the risk down from a 10 to a 5," not eliminate it.
Who Benefits: Especially suited for buyers with a strong balance sheet who want to shield part of their assets (e.g., those with $2–$3M net worth).
Annual Policy: Renewable yearly, with premiums typically decreasing over time as the loan principal is paid down. Borrowers may discontinue the policy as their personal risk tolerance changes.
"I'm happy to put skin in the game but just don't threaten to make my kid homeless." — David Schreiber, quoted by Will Smith [37:56]
Maintaining Skin in the Game: By covering only part of the PG, the alignment between borrower and lender is preserved; the borrower still bears significant risk, but not a catastrophic one.
Potential Market Growth: With PGI mitigating risk, more strong, experienced operators may be empowered to pursue acquisitions, growing the pool of buyers and the SBA loan market.
Comparison to Other Markets: PGI products exist in the UK and other markets, where personal guarantees are also common on commercial loans and real estate.
Lender Involvement: PGI benefits lenders by increasing recoveries if a loan defaults and providing more comfort to borrowers, thus expanding the lending market.
Regulatory Work: Ryan and Brendan worked with major SBA lenders and legal teams (notably Live Oak Bank) to ensure compliance with all relevant regulations.
When to Buy: PGI can be arranged before or after loan closing—flexible to the chaotic nature of closing processes.
No Lender Permission Required: It’s a private policy; lenders cannot prohibit buyers from purchasing PGI.
Pricing: Heavily regulated and highly customized. Ballpark range (discussed as hypothetical by host): 1–2% of the loan value per year.
Decreases Over Time: Unlike other insurance premiums, this premium typically falls as the loan is paid down.
Not a Silver Bullet: PGI is not absolute protection—seller fraud and other catastrophic surprises cannot be fully insured away. Policies are "claims-made," subject to exclusions.
Annual Renewal: Policies reviewed and underwritten annually; while Ryan and Brendan stress their commitment to good faith renewals, there are no guarantees if the underlying business deteriorates sharply.
Multiple Guarantors/Partners: PGI can be used flexibly in partnerships, potentially helping owners distribute risk more evenly, especially if there is disparity in personal wealth among partners.
Seller Roll Rules: Recent SBA rules require sellers who stay on with equity to also sign the PG, presenting another use case for PGI to facilitate deals (e.g., in trades where seller licensing is crucial).
This episode stands out as both a detailed primer on a novel financial tool—personal guarantee insurance—and a heartfelt discussion about the human side of risk in entrepreneurship. PGI may not eliminate risk, but it offers real relief to those who would otherwise be sidelined by the prospect of total financial ruin, thereby fostering a more inclusive and robust small business acquisition ecosystem. The hosts and guests deliver a nuanced look at the psychological, financial, and market-level impacts of this innovation, positioning it as an inflection point for acquisition entrepreneurs.
For more detailed breakdowns and future episode summaries, sign up at acquiringminds.co.