The numbers are pristine. The projected ROI is a staggering 47 percent. But Marcus isn’t looking at the ROI. He’s looking at a red box on his computer screen that tells him his bank’s single-client exposure limit has been reached at exactly $67 million, even though the project needs $87 million to breathe.
Exposure Limit Hit
(17 Clicks)
The Bureaucratic Dance
‘It’s not that we don’t believe in the vision,’ Marcus says, and I can tell he’s using his ‘sincere’ voice, the one he probably practiced in a mirror during his 7-day orientation nearly three decades ago. He is a prisoner of a checkbox. The bank doesn’t love my brilliant idea; it loves the 80 or 90 percent of it that fits neatly into a pre-defined risk bucket. The remaining 7 or 17 percent-the part where the actual innovation and scale live-is treated like a toxic asset.
This is the frustration of the modern entrepreneur. You are told to think big, to scale, to disrupt. But when you finally bring a truly ‘big’ idea to the table, the very institutions built to fuel the economy suddenly develop a fear of heights. They’d rather lose a $97 million winner than risk a $7 million variation in their exposure report.
The Allergy to Excellence
Traditional banks aren’t actually in the business of lending money based on the quality of an idea. They are in the business of buying certainties. If your project is so unique that it doesn’t have 17 direct comparisons in the local market from the last 7 years, they don’t know how to price the risk. So, they just chop the top 27 percent off the loan request and tell you to find the rest elsewhere.
The Acceptance Range vs. Full Scale
The Alternative Vision
AAY Investments Group S.A. exists because of this very paradox. While the traditional players are busy measuring the drapes in their safe zones, there are entities that understand that scale requires a different kind of vision. They view a $197 million request as a serious starting point rather than a reason to call a board meeting.
“You are offering them the opportunity to be part of something they couldn’t build themselves.”
– Chen C.-P. on Shifting Perspective
We go into banks like supplicants, hoping they’ll bless our $57 million or $107 million projects. We forget that the bank is a service provider, and if their service is capped at a mediocre level, they are the ones failing the market, not us.
Thermostats vs. Heating Elements
You can’t convince a thermostat to let the room get to 87 degrees if it’s programmed to shut off at 77. You just have to find a different heating element. Move into the world of private capital, where ‘exposure’ is viewed as an opportunity rather than a liability.
Body Language of Power: Before vs. After Negotiation Stance
Asking for a favor
Offering partnership
The Symphony in a Ringtone
If they truly believed in the dreams of their most ambitious clients, they wouldn’t have 27 different ways to say ‘we can’t do that.’ They would find a way to make it happen. But the reality is that they are built for the average, the safe, and the 80 percent. If you are aiming for the 100 percent-or the 127 percent-you are looking in the wrong place. You are trying to fit a symphony into a ringtone.
I’m done trying to shrink my projects to fit into the small, square boxes of traditional bank policies. If the bank loves 80 percent of my idea, they can keep their 80 percent of the interest. I’ll take the whole 100 percent somewhere that actually has the vision to see it through.
Walk Around It
Success isn’t about finding a path within the system; it’s about recognizing when the system is the obstacle.
There’s a whole world of capital on the other side that doesn’t care about ‘single-client exposure limits’ or the 7 different types of fear that keep Marcus awake at night. They care about the $237 million in value you’re about to create, and they have the 107 percent commitment needed to get you there.