Sales Training System — Days 1 through 10
Progress
Day 1
Day 01 — Foundation
Know What You're Selling
Before you say a single word to a merchant, you need to own the product. If you can't explain it in 30 seconds, you're not ready to dial.
The Most Important Distinction

MCA is NOT a loan. It is a purchase of future receivables. The funder buys a percentage of future revenue at a discount. This matters legally, in how you pitch, and in how the merchant perceives cost.

  • No fixed payment schedule like a bank loan — payments flex with revenue
  • No collateral required in most cases — unsecured working capital
  • Decision in 1–3 hours. Funding in 3–24 hours depending on deal complexity.
  • Credit score matters less — business performance and cash flow are king
  • Use of funds is typically unrestricted — merchant decides
📋 Basic Deal Structure
  • Advance Amount — the cash the merchant receives upfront (e.g., $100,000)
  • Factor Rate — the multiplier applied (e.g., 1.35 × $100k = $135,000 payback)
  • Payback Amount — total owed (advance × factor rate)
  • Daily/Weekly Split — the percentage of deposits debited each day or week
  • Term — estimated payoff period (typically 4–18 months)
Basic Qualification Criteria
  • Time in business: typically 6+ months (12+ months preferred)
  • Monthly revenue: usually $10k+ minimum (varies by funder)
  • Business checking account with regular deposits
  • No open bankruptcies
  • Industry type — some high-risk industries have restrictions
🎙️ 30-Second Elevator Pitch

Memorize the logic, not the words. This should sound natural, not rehearsed.

"We work with business owners who need capital fast — and can't wait weeks for a bank to say no. We can get you a decision in 1–3 hours and funded the same day or next business day, based on your revenue — not just your credit score. Most of our clients use it for inventory, payroll gaps, or expansion. Would that be relevant to what you have going on right now?"

Notice: no mention of rate. Lead with speed, ease, and a question that forces them to self-identify the need.

🚫 Things To Never Say on Day 1
  • "Our rates are really competitive" — invites APR comparisons
  • "It's basically like a loan" — it's not, legally or structurally
  • "The factor rate is 1.35" — never lead with cost, lead with value
  • "I'm calling about a business loan" — inaccurate and sets wrong expectations
🧠 Knowledge Check — Day 1
1. An MCA is legally defined as:
A short-term business loan with fixed payments
A purchase of future business receivables at a discount
A revolving line of credit secured by assets
2. Typical approval speed for an MCA is:
24–48 hours
1–3 hours for approval, funded same day or next business day
3–5 business days
3. When first pitching a merchant, you should lead with:
The factor rate so they know what to expect
The full term and payback schedule
Speed, ease, and a question about their need
Day 02 — Foundation
Know The Math
Numbers are your weapon and your shield. Know how to build a deal on a $100,000 advance and defend the cost — without ever saying "APR."
1.15
Lowest Factor Rate
1.50
Highest Typical Rate
1–3hr
Approval Time
3–24hr
Funding Time
🔢 Deal Math — Always Use $100,000 as Your Example
ADVANCE: $100,000 FACTOR RATE: 1.35 ───────────────────────────────── PAYBACK AMOUNT: $100,000 × 1.35 = $135,000 COST OF CAPITAL: $135,000 − $100,000 = $35,000 ───────────────────────────────── Estimated term: 9 months (189 business days) Daily payment: $135,000 ÷ 189 = ~$714/day ───────────────────────────────── At 1.15 factor: Payback = $115,000 | Cost = $15,000 At 1.25 factor: Payback = $125,000 | Cost = $25,000 At 1.35 factor: Payback = $135,000 | Cost = $35,000 At 1.45 factor: Payback = $145,000 | Cost = $45,000
🛡️ Defending Cost Without Mentioning APR

Never let the merchant convert factor rate to APR. Redirect to ROI every single time.

  • The ROI Reframe: "The cost is $35,000 on a $100,000 advance. If that capital generates $50k in new revenue next month, you made your money back before the second payment."
  • The Bank Comparison: "A bank takes weeks to decline you. We get you a decision in 1–3 hours. That window of opportunity has a real dollar value."
  • The Opportunity Cost Frame: "What's the cost of NOT having $100k this week? A missed contract? Empty shelves going into your busy season?"
  • The Daily Breakdown: "We're talking about $714 a day on a $100k advance. If your business does $5,000 a day in revenue, that's 14% of one day's revenue — and it's helping you generate more of it."
⚠️ Stacking — Know the Risk
  • Stacking = merchant has 2+ active positions simultaneously
  • Most reputable funders will decline or restrict stacked deals
  • Always ask: "Do you currently have any business financing in place?"
  • One existing position may be workable — depends on daily balance and payback remaining
Day 03 — The Merchant
Who You're Calling
Every merchant is different, but they all fit patterns. Learn the industries, the decision-maker types, and how to read a call in the first 90 seconds.
🏭 Hot Industries for MCA
  • Restaurants & Food Service — seasonal cash flow, high daily volume, equipment needs. They understand fast decisions.
  • Contractors & Construction — invoice lag, material costs upfront, job-to-job revenue. Classic working capital problem.
  • Retail — inventory purchasing, holiday seasons, lease obligations.
  • Trucking & Logistics — fuel costs, maintenance, invoice factoring gaps.
  • Medical & Dental — insurance reimbursement delays create real working capital needs.
  • Auto Repair — equipment, inventory, and they're used to quick financial decisions.
  • Restricted/Difficult: Firearms, cannabis, adult entertainment, non-profits, startups under 6 months.
🧭 The 3 Decision-Maker Types
  • The Owner-Operator — wears all hats, makes fast decisions, hates being sold to. Respect their time. Be direct.
  • The CFO / Bookkeeper — numbers-focused, skeptical, will ask about APR. Come prepared with math and documentation.
  • The Gatekeeper — receptionist, office manager. NOT your target. Always ask: "Is [owner name] available? We're reaching out about business financing."
⏱️ Reading a Call in 90 Seconds

Within 90 seconds, know: Are they open? Do they have a pain point? Are they the decision-maker?

  • Tone of voice — rushed means bad timing, curious means you're in
  • Do they ask questions back? That's engagement.
  • "We're all set" vs "We're doing okay but..." — huge difference
  • Never fight the gatekeeper — ask for their help instead
Day 04 — The Merchant
Pain Points & Triggers
Merchants don't call you because they want an MCA. They call because something is wrong. Your job is to find the wound and show them the bandage.
🔥 The 7 Merchant Pain Points
  • 1
    Cash Flow Gaps — money coming in next week but bills due today. Most common trigger.
  • 2
    Payroll Stress — nothing creates urgency like making payroll Friday. These close fast.
  • 3
    Inventory Purchasing — seasonal businesses, bulk deals, supplier discounts they can't pass up.
  • 4
    Equipment Failure / Purchase — broken equipment = no revenue. Speed matters most here.
  • 5
    Expansion Opportunity — second location, new hire, marketing push they need to fund now.
  • 6
    Tax Obligations — quarterly taxes, IRS installments. Real urgency, real deadline.
  • 7
    Slow Season Bridging — restaurants in winter, landscapers in January. They know it's coming.
💡 How to Uncover the Pain
"What's your biggest challenge in the business right now?" "Has anything changed in the last 90 days that's affected cash flow?" "If you had $100,000 available this week, what would be the first thing you'd do with it?" "What's been holding you back from growing the way you want to?"

The last question is powerful. It assumes they want to grow — almost every business owner does. Now they're telling you their dream, and your capital is the vehicle.

Day 05 — The Sales Process
The Opening Call
The first 20 seconds of a cold call determine everything. Too scripted and you're dead. Too casual and you have no authority. Hit the middle.
📞 The Opening Framework
[PATTERN INTERRUPT] → [WHO YOU ARE] → [WHY IT'S RELEVANT] → [PERMISSION TO CONTINUE] "Hey [Name], this is [Your Name] with [Company] — I'll be upfront, this is a cold call, so I'll keep it short. We help business owners access capital fast — decision in hours, not weeks. Is that something that's even on your radar right now, or terrible timing?"

Why "terrible timing?" — It's disarming. It signals you're not a pushy rep. It invites an honest answer instead of a reflex "not interested."

🚪 Getting Past the Gatekeeper
  • Never pitch the gatekeeper. They can't approve, only block.
  • Use their name if you know it: "Hi, is [owner first name] available? It's [your name] calling regarding their business account."
  • If asked what it's about: "It's regarding business financing — they would know the context."
  • Build rapport on callbacks: Remember the gatekeeper's name. Be warm. They remember who treated them well.
📵 When They Say "Send Me Info First"
"Absolutely — I want to make sure I send the right thing. Can I ask you two quick questions so the info is actually relevant to your situation?"

This keeps them on the call. You now have permission to qualify. If they're a real prospect, they'll answer.

Day 06 — The Sales Process
Qualifying & Pitching
Qualify first. Pitch second. In that order, every time. A pitch without qualification is just noise.
🎯 The 4 Core Qualifying Questions
  • 1
    "How long have you been in business?"
    Minimum 6 months. Under that, most funders pass.
  • 2
    "What's your average monthly revenue?"
    Minimum $10k/month most funders. Advance range is typically 75–150% of monthly revenue.
  • 3
    "Do you have any current business financing in place?"
    One position may be OK. Two or more is a red flag.
  • 4
    "What would you use the capital for?"
    Reveals motivation. Helps you pitch to the right pain point.
🎙️ The Pitch Structure (After Qualifying)
1. VALIDATE THEIR SITUATION "Based on what you're describing — [restate their pain] — that's exactly the scenario we help with." 2. PRESENT THE SOLUTION "We could look at getting you somewhere in the range of $75,000–$100,000, with a decision in a few hours." 3. ANCHOR THE VALUE "That's capital you can put to work immediately — [tie it to their stated goal]." 4. NEXT STEP / MICRO-COMMITMENT "What I need to get you a real number is 3 months of bank statements. Can we do that today?"
Day 07 — Closing
Objection Handling
Objections aren't rejections. They're requests for more information or reassurance. Master these 8 and you'll close twice as many deals.
🥊 The 8 Objections & How to Handle Them
ObjectionResponse
"The rate is too high"Shift to ROI: "What will this $100k do for your business? If it fills one contract, does it pay for itself?" Never defend the rate — pivot to return.
"I need to think about it"Uncover the real one: "Totally fair. What specifically would you want to think through? Is it the cost, the timing, or something else?"
"Send me the info""Happy to — what email? And while I have you, let me ask two quick questions so I send the right thing." Stay on the call.
"I already have funding""Are you happy with them? We work with a lot of clients who have existing positions — sometimes we can consolidate or get you better terms."
"I don't need money""Most of my best clients funded before they needed it — that's when you get the best terms. If it makes sense in 90 days, it probably makes sense now."
"My partner needs to decide""Absolutely — when can all three of us connect? I can do a quick 10-minute call with both of you." Get the decision-maker on the line.
"The bank gives me better rates""100% — banks are cheaper when they say yes. How long did your last bank application take? And did they approve you?"
"I've been burned before""That's the most common thing I hear — which is exactly why I want you to understand everything before you sign anything. Let me walk you through it."
🔑 The Golden Rule of Objection Handling
Feel → Felt → Found "I understand how you FEEL — many of my clients FELT the same way — but here's what they FOUND once they moved forward..."

This framework validates without agreeing and uses social proof to carry the point. It's not a trick — it's empathy plus evidence.

Day 08 — Closing
Roleplay Simulator
Practice live with an AI merchant. Choose a scenario and handle the call. You'll get real-time coaching after each response.
🎭 Choose Your Scenario
Beginner
Advanced
🔴 LIVE ROLEPLAY Cold Call — Restaurant Owner
Merchant
🍕
"Yeah, hello?"
Day 09 — Operations
Submissions & Underwriting
A deal only gets funded if the submission is clean. Know what underwriters look for and you'll stop losing deals in the pipeline.
📁 Clean Submission Checklist
  • Completed merchant application (all fields, signed)
  • 3–6 months of business bank statements (most recent)
  • Voided business check
  • Government-issued ID for all owners 25%+
  • Business license or proof of ownership
  • Most recent business tax return (for larger amounts, $75k+)
  • Landlord contact (if brick-and-mortar)
  • Existing MCA contracts disclosed (if any)
🔍 What Underwriters Look For
  • Average Daily Balance (ADB) — the floor. Low ADB = high risk. UWs want consistency.
  • NSF Count — non-sufficient funds. 3+ in a month is a red flag. More than 5 may be a decline.
  • Negative Days — days where the account went negative. More than a handful monthly is concerning.
  • Deposit Consistency — regular deposits vs. big lumps with dry spells. Consistency = lower risk.
  • Existing Positions — how much of daily revenue is already committed?
  • Revenue Trend — growing, flat, or declining? 3 months of decline = tighter terms.
Why Deals Get Declined
  • Too many NSFs or negative days in statements
  • Revenue doesn't match what merchant told you
  • Undisclosed existing positions discovered in statements
  • Business under 6 months old
  • Open bankruptcy or prior default on MCA
  • Restricted/high-risk industry for that funder
Day 10 — Operations
Pipeline & Mindset
Reps who can't manage their pipeline don't last 30 days. Reps who can't manage their mindset don't last 60. Master both.
📊 Pipeline Stage Definitions
  • 1
    New Lead — contact info only. No conversation yet.
  • 2
    Contacted — reached decision-maker, had initial conversation.
  • 3
    Qualified — confirmed TIB, revenue, position status. Real prospect.
  • 4
    Docs Requested — asked for bank statements and application.
  • 5
    Submitted — full package sent to funder.
  • 6
    Approved — offer received from funder. Presenting to merchant.
  • 7
    Funded — deal closed. Wire hit. Merchant is a client.
📅 Follow-Up Cadence
Day 0: Initial call → follow-up text/email within 2 hours Day 1: Follow-up call if no response Day 3: Second follow-up — try different channel (email vs call) Day 7: "Just checking in" — keep it short and human Day 14: Final value-add touch — share relevant info or offer Day 30+: Long-term nurture — monthly check-in list

The rule: The fortune is in the follow-up, but the relationship is in the tone. Never sound desperate. Always sound like you're checking in, not chasing.

🧠 Mindset Rules for MCA Sales
  • Volume creates luck. The reps who make 100 dials a day aren't luckier — they just create more chances.
  • No is just not yet. A declined deal today is a funded deal in 3 months. Stay in touch.
  • Your reputation is your book. One happy merchant refers three. One burned merchant tells ten.
  • Track everything. Dials, contacts, qualifieds, submits, approvals, fundings. Know your conversion ratios cold.
  • Outwork the slump. Every rep hits a cold streak. The ones who survive dial through it.

🏆 TRAINING COMPLETE

You've covered 10 days of MCA foundation. Check out the Assisting Documents reference tab for scripts, terms, and lender tiers. Now go make dials.

Reference — Operations
Assisting Documents
Your reference library. Opening scripts for every lead type, a full MCA glossary, and a breakdown of every lender tier in the market.
Dialer Lead Outbound Dialer — No Prior Contact
Rep: "Hey, is this [First Name]? … Hey [First Name], this is [Your Name] calling from [Company]. Real quick — our system flagged your business as potentially qualifying for working capital up to $100,000. I know you probably get these calls — I'll keep it short. You been in business over a year?" [If yes] → "And you're doing at least $10,000 a month through the business?" [If yes] → "Perfect. We can usually get a decision back same day — sometimes within a couple hours. Is capital something you've thought about lately or not really on your radar right now?"
💡 Key: Two quick qualifying softballs first. Gets them saying "yes" before you ask anything real. Keeps energy up.
Fresh Inbound Fresh Lead — Application + Statements Already Submitted
Rep: "Hey [First Name], this is [Your Name] from [Company]. I'm calling because you submitted an application with us — I just pulled it up and wanted to personally reach out. First off — appreciate you taking the time to submit. I had a chance to take a quick look and it looks like you may qualify for somewhere in the range of $75,000 to $100,000. I wanted to go over a couple of quick details with you to get you the most accurate number. Do you have two minutes right now?"
💡 Key: Personalize immediately. Reference the submission. Give a dollar range early — it creates anchoring and keeps them engaged. "Two minutes" is a low-commitment ask.
Email Blast Lead Callback — Responded to Email / Web Form
Rep: "Hey [First Name], this is [Your Name] with [Company]. You filled out a form on our site about business funding — I wanted to make sure I reached out personally rather than just sending an automated email. I see you're in [industry/city if known] — we work with a lot of [industry] businesses. The process is really straightforward: I ask you about 4 quick questions, and if you qualify, we can usually get you an offer within a few hours. Is now an okay time or is there a better time today?"
💡 Key: Acknowledge the form submission — it differentiates you from a random cold call. Use any data you have from the form (industry, location) to show personalization.
Pure Cold Call Zero Prior Contact — No Lead Source
Rep: "Hey [First Name], I'll be upfront with you — this is a cold call, so feel free to tell me to kick rocks if it's not relevant. My name is [Your Name], I'm with [Company]. We help small business owners access working capital fast — we're talking decisions in hours, not weeks like a bank. No collateral, no long applications. I don't know if that's something that's ever crossed your mind, but I figured it was worth 30 seconds. What kind of business are you running over there?"
💡 Key: Radical honesty about it being a cold call builds immediate credibility. Ending with a question about their business gets them talking about themselves — the easiest thing anyone does.
Dialer Lead Second Attempt — Left Voicemail Previously
Rep: "Hey [First Name], this is [Your Name] again from [Company] — I left you a voicemail [yesterday / earlier this week], didn't want you to think I disappeared. I know you're probably busy running the business — just wanted to circle back because the offer window I mentioned is still open. If the timing was just bad last time, no worries at all — I just want to make sure you at least had a chance to hear what we can do. Still have two minutes?"
💡 Key: Reference the prior voicemail — shows persistence without being creepy. "Offer window" creates soft urgency. Acknowledge their busy schedule — it's respectful.
Voicemail Script Voicemail — When You Don't Reach Them
Rep: "Hey [First Name], this is [Your Name] with [Company] — quick voicemail. We work with business owners in [industry/area] and based on what I see, you may qualify for up to $100,000 in working capital. Decision same day, no collateral required. If that's even remotely interesting, give me a call back at [number] — I'll keep it short. Again, [Your Name], [Company], [number]. Talk soon."
💡 Key: Under 20 seconds. Give a number. Create curiosity — don't explain everything. Repeat your name and number at the end. Never leave more than 2 voicemails total.
Renewal / Repeat Existing Client — Renewal Outreach
Rep: "Hey [First Name], it's [Your Name] — how's everything going with the business? I was looking at your account and it looks like you're about [50–60%] paid down on your advance. A lot of our clients at this stage actually renew early — it lets you access fresh capital while keeping the daily payments roughly the same. I wanted to reach out before someone else did — you've been a great client and I want to make sure we take care of you first. Want me to run some numbers real quick?"
💡 Key: Warm tone — this is a relationship call, not a sales call. Mention the paydown percentage to show you know their account. "Before someone else did" creates loyalty urgency without being pushy.
Gatekeeper Bridge Getting the Owner's Name / Direct Line
Rep: "Hi there — who am I speaking with? … [Name], great. I was hoping you could help me out. I'm trying to reach the owner or whoever handles the financial side of the business. Is that someone you could connect me with, or let me know the best time to reach them? I appreciate it — what's the owner's first name, just so I'm not going in cold?"
💡 Key: Ask the gatekeeper for their name first — shows respect. Frame yourself as needing their help (not just demanding transfer). Getting the owner's first name is gold — use it immediately on the real call.
📖 MCA Terms Glossary — Know Every Term Cold

Every term a merchant, underwriter, or funder might use. If someone says it, you know what it means.

Advance Amount
The gross dollar amount funded to the merchant upfront. Also called "funded amount" or "purchase price."
Factor Rate
A decimal multiplier (e.g., 1.35) applied to the advance to calculate total payback. NOT an interest rate. Does not compound.
Payback Amount
The total amount the merchant must repay. Calculated as: Advance × Factor Rate. On $100k at 1.35 = $135,000.
Cost of Capital
The difference between payback and advance. On $100k at 1.35 = $35,000 cost. What the merchant actually "pays" for the money.
Daily Payment (ACH)
Fixed dollar amount debited from the merchant's bank account each business day. Most common repayment method.
Split Withholding
A percentage of daily credit card deposits withheld for repayment. Fluctuates with revenue. Used when merchant processes cards.
Estimated Term
Projected number of months to pay off the advance based on current revenue. NOT a fixed term like a loan.
Average Daily Balance (ADB)
The average end-of-day balance in the merchant's business account over the last 1–3 months. Primary UW metric.
NSF (Non-Sufficient Funds)
A returned debit or check due to insufficient funds. Multiple NSFs signal cash flow stress and are a major underwriting red flag.
Negative Days
Calendar days when the business bank account balance fell below zero. Underwriters count these per month.
Stacking
When a merchant takes multiple MCA positions simultaneously from different funders. Considered high risk and often leads to default.
Position
A single active MCA agreement. A merchant with two MCAs has "two positions." Also called an "advance" or "deal."
Payoff / Balance
The remaining amount owed on an active MCA. Used when calculating renewals or payoffs for consolidation.
Renewal
When an existing MCA client receives a new advance, typically once 40–60% of the prior advance is paid down.
Consolidation
Paying off one or more existing MCA positions and replacing with a new single advance. Simplifies payments for the merchant.
Time in Business (TIB)
How long the business has been operating. Minimum threshold for most funders is 6–12 months.
ISO (Independent Sales Org)
A broker or intermediary company that originates MCA deals and submits to funders. Most reps work for an ISO.
Funder / Lender
The capital provider that actually deploys the money. ISOs act as the sales arm; funders underwrite and fund deals.
Underwriting (UW)
The process by which a funder reviews a submission to determine risk, eligibility, and offer terms.
Submission Package
The complete set of documents sent to a funder: application, bank statements, voided check, ID, and any additional docs.
Offer / Approval
The funder's response with specific terms: funded amount, factor rate, payback, and daily payment. Not a guarantee until funded.
Stipulations (Stips)
Additional documents or conditions required by the funder before funding. Common stips: tax returns, landlord letter, AR aging.
Contract / Agreement
The executed MCA agreement signed by the merchant. Outlines all deal terms, rights, and obligations.
Funding Date
The date the wire or ACH is sent to the merchant's account. The deal closes on this date.
Wire / ACH Funding
The method of transferring funds to the merchant. Wires are same-day; ACH typically next business day.
Commission / Points
The rep's compensation, calculated as a percentage of the advance amount or as "points." E.g., 5 points on $100k = $5,000.
Buy Rate
The minimum factor rate at which the funder will approve a deal. The ISO can mark up above buy rate to increase commission.
Markup
The difference between the buy rate and the rate quoted to the merchant. Adds to the ISO's/rep's commission.
Chargeback
A clawback of commission from the rep/ISO if the merchant defaults early in the advance (usually within 60–90 days).
Default
When a merchant stops making payments on an active MCA. Can trigger confession of judgment (COJ) in some states.
Confession of Judgment (COJ)
A legal clause allowing the funder to obtain a court judgment without a full trial if the merchant defaults. Now restricted in many states.
Personal Guarantee (PG)
Agreement by the business owner to be personally liable for the advance if the business defaults.
UCC Filing
Uniform Commercial Code lien filed against the merchant's business assets by the funder. Signals an active MCA when checked.
UCC Search
A check of UCC filings to identify existing MCA positions before submitting a new deal. Critical for due diligence.
Gross Revenue
Total deposits into the business account before deducting expenses. The primary metric funders use to determine advance size.
Net Revenue
Revenue minus expenses. Less commonly used than gross in MCA underwriting, but relevant for higher-tier funders.
Monthly Gross Revenue (MGR)
Average monthly deposits over the last 3–6 months. Advance amount typically ranges 75%–150% of MGR depending on tier.
Debt Service Coverage (DSC)
How much free cash flow remains after all debt payments. Higher-tier funders calculate this. Lower DSC = tighter terms.
Restricted Industries
Business types most funders won't touch: cannabis, firearms, adult entertainment, non-profits, gambling, legal services.
Reverse Consolidation
A product where the funder makes one large daily payment to cover multiple MCA positions, then collects a single daily debit from the merchant. Reduces total daily outflow.
Bridge Advance
A small short-term advance designed to bridge a merchant until a larger deal is approved or a prior position pays down.
Holdback
Percentage of credit card sales withheld for repayment in a split-withholding arrangement. Typically 10–20%.
Term Sheet
A document outlining the proposed terms of an MCA offer before the formal contract is signed.
Syndication
When multiple funders co-fund a single deal, each providing a portion of the capital and sharing the risk.
🏦 Lender Category Breakdown

Not all funders are the same. Understanding each tier tells you where to submit a deal — and what to expect back. Match the merchant's profile to the right lender tier or you're leaving money on the table.

A Paper Lenders
Prime Tier — The Gold Standard
Factor Rate: 1.10–1.25 TIB: 2+ years Monthly Revenue: $50k+ Credit: 620+ NSFs: 0–2/month max
  • Best rates in the market. Merchants with clean statements, consistent deposits, and strong revenue history qualify here.
  • Underwriting is thorough — expect to provide tax returns, P&L statements, and possibly business credit reports.
  • Approval takes longer (same day to 24 hours). More stipulations. But the deal terms are the most favorable for the merchant.
  • Typical advance: 1–1.5x monthly gross revenue. $100,000–$500,000+ possible for strong profiles.
  • Examples of merchant profile: established restaurant chain, medical practice, construction company with contracts on file.
  • If your merchant qualifies A Paper, always lead here. Better terms = happier client = referrals.
B Tier Lenders
Standard Tier — The Bread & Butter
Factor Rate: 1.25–1.38 TIB: 1+ year Monthly Revenue: $15k+ Credit: 550+ NSFs: Up to 4–5/month
  • The most common tier. Most merchants who have been in business 12+ months with decent statements land here.
  • Underwriting is faster than A Paper — decisions in 1–4 hours. Fewer stips required.
  • Will accept some NSFs, occasional negative days, and moderate existing positions.
  • Typical advance: 75%–125% of monthly gross revenue. Standard terms, standard process.
  • This is where most new reps build their book. Volume play. Consistent performers land deals here daily.
  • Submit here when the merchant is solid but not pristine. Don't force an A-Paper submission on a B-Paper file — it wastes time.
C Tier Lenders
Subprime Tier — The Turnaround Play
Factor Rate: 1.38–1.49 TIB: 6+ months Monthly Revenue: $10k+ Credit: 500+ NSFs: Up to 8–10/month
  • For merchants with messy statements, low credit, and a rough last few months — but still operational and making deposits.
  • Higher factor rates. Shorter terms. Lower advance amounts relative to revenue (50%–75% of MGR).
  • Approvals can be same-day but offers are often conditional — small advances to test the merchant first.
  • NSFs, negative days, and low ADB are acceptable but tracked carefully. Existing positions must be minimal.
  • Merchant profile: a newer business, a seasonal business in a tough stretch, or an owner rebuilding after a setback.
  • Don't lead with C Paper unless you've already tried B. But don't let a deal die when C Paper can save it — funded is better than nothing.
High Risk Lenders
Last Resort Tier — High Rate, Last Resort
Factor Rate: 1.45–1.55+ TIB: 4+ months Monthly Revenue: $8k+ Credit: 450+ NSFs: 10+/month acceptable
  • Will fund merchants that most other funders pass on: distressed files, high NSF counts, heavy existing positions, low ADB.
  • Factor rates are the highest in the market. Small advance amounts. Short payback windows (3–6 months typical).
  • Underwriting is fast and lenient, but offers are small and expensive. Merchant receives the least favorable terms.
  • Common use case: merchant is in crisis (payroll, taxes, equipment failure) and needs something immediately.
  • Handle with care — transparency is critical. Be honest about the rate and the cost. A merchant who feels misled becomes a chargeback and a complaint.
  • High risk lenders are also sometimes used as bridge funders — getting a merchant stabilized so they can move to a better tier in 3–6 months.
Reverse Consolidation Lenders
Specialty Product — Multi-Position Relief
Factor Rate: 1.10–1.20 Positions: 2–5 active MCAs Monthly Revenue: $30k+ TIB: 1+ year Purpose: Cash flow relief
  • Reverse consolidation is NOT a new advance. The lender pays all the merchant's existing MCA positions and the merchant makes one single daily payment back to the reverse lender.
  • The daily payment is lower than the combined payments the merchant was making before. This is the pitch — instant cash flow relief.
  • Lower factor rate than the merchant's existing positions, but the term is extended, so total cost may still be significant.
  • Ideal merchant profile: 2–5 stacked positions, drowning in daily debits, revenue is good but cash flow is strangled.
  • This is a specialty product — not every ISO works with reverse consolidation lenders. Know which funders in your network offer it.
  • The pitch: "You're paying $2,000 a day across three advances right now. We can get that down to one payment of $1,200 a day and give you breathing room." That message sells itself.
🗺️ Quick Tier Selection Guide
Merchant ProfileStart HereBackup
Clean statements, 2+ years, $50k+/mo revenueA PaperB Tier
Decent statements, 1+ year, $15k–$50k/moB TierC Tier
Messy statements, 6–12 months, some NSFsC TierHigh Risk
Multiple active positions, cash flow stressedReverse Consol.C Tier
Crisis situation, heavy NSFs, last resortHigh RiskDecline + nurture
Advanced — Day 11
Reading Bank Statements
Underwriters live and die by bank statements. If you can read them faster than the merchant can lie about them, you'll never be blindsided by a decline.
📊 The 6 Numbers That Matter
  • 1
    Average Daily Balance (ADB) — Add up every end-of-day balance, divide by number of days. The floor underwriters won't go below. Aim for ADB at least 10–15% of monthly deposits.
  • 2
    Total Monthly Deposits — Every credit into the account. This is gross revenue. Add up all deposits across 3 months and divide by 3 for the average.
  • 3
    NSF Count — Non-sufficient funds events per month. 0–2 is fine. 3–5 is yellow. 6+ is red. Count them across all 3 months.
  • 4
    Negative Days — Days the account went below zero. Even 1–2 per month is a flag. More than 5 in any single month is a problem.
  • 5
    Existing MCA Debits — Look for recurring round-number debits going out daily or weekly. These are active positions. Add them up — that's the daily debt service.
  • 6
    Revenue Trend — Is Month 1 → 2 → 3 going up, flat, or down? A declining trend means tighter offers or declines from A/B paper funders.
🔍 How to Spot Existing MCA Positions

Look for recurring debits in round numbers going out daily or weekly — like $485.00 every business day. Those aren't vendor payments. That's an MCA. If you see two of them, the merchant is stacked whether they tell you or not.

  • Daily debits between $100–$2,000 in round numbers = almost always MCA
  • Look for company names like "PayFast," "Kapitus," "Fundbox," "BlueVine," "CAN Capital"
  • Weekly debits on the same day every week = likely weekly split MCA
  • Add all recurring debits to get total daily debt service — compare to ADB
Live Call Bank Statement Script
"While I have you — I'm going to pull up the statements you sent over and walk through them with you so there are no surprises when I submit. Give me just 60 seconds." [Scan for ADB, NSFs, negative days, existing debits] "Okay so I can see your average daily balance is around [$X] and your monthly deposits are coming in around [$Y]. I do see [X NSFs / some existing debits / a dip in Month 3] — I want to make sure I position this correctly with the right funder so we don't waste your time. Let me ask you about..."
Advanced — Day 12
Renewal Conversations
Renewals are the easiest deals you'll ever close. The merchant already trusts you, already knows the product, and already has a track record. Don't overcomplicate it.
📅 When to Call for a Renewal
  • The 50% Rule — Most funders will renew once the merchant is 50–60% paid down. Set a calendar reminder the day you fund a deal.
  • Early Signs — Merchant reaches out asking questions, business has visibly grown, or you see their deposits up on renewal statements.
  • Don't Wait for Them to Call You — Another ISO is calling them right now. The rep who calls first gets the renewal.
🎙️ The Renewal Script
"Hey [Name], it's [Your Name] — how's the business been going? I was looking at your account — you're about [55%] paid down on your advance, which means you're actually eligible for a renewal now. Here's what that looks like for you: we pay off your remaining balance of [$X], and you get [$Y] in fresh capital. Your daily payment stays roughly the same — around [$Z/day]. Essentially you get a fresh start with more capital and the same payment you're already used to. A lot of our clients do this every 4–6 months. Want me to run the exact numbers for you?"
🔢 Renewal Math — Know This Cold
Example: Merchant funded $100,000 at 1.35 → Payback = $135,000 Currently 55% paid = $74,250 paid → $60,750 remaining Renewal offer: $120,000 advance at 1.30 factor New payback: $156,000 Funder pays off old balance: $60,750 Net new capital to merchant: $120,000 - $60,750 = $59,250 New daily payment ≈ same or slightly higher Pitch: "You get $59k in fresh capital and your daily payment barely moves."
Advanced — Day 13
Negotiate With Underwriters
A decline isn't always final. Underwriters are people. If you can give them a reason to say yes, sometimes they will. But you have to know how to ask.
🧠 What Underwriters Actually Respond To
  • Context They Don't Have — UWs see numbers, not stories. If the NSFs were from one bad month due to a supplier dispute, tell them. Give them the narrative.
  • A Smaller Ask — Declined at $100k? Ask if they'll do $60k. A smaller advance means less risk. UWs will often approve a reduced amount.
  • Additional Documentation — Tax returns showing strong net income, invoices showing future receivables, landlord letters showing lease stability. Give them comfort.
  • A Higher Factor Rate — If the risk is the issue, offer to accept a higher factor rate. Sometimes UWs will approve at 1.45 what they declined at 1.35.
📞 How to Call a UW and Advocate for Your Deal
"Hey [UW Name], I submitted [Merchant Name] — deal ID [X]. I saw it came back declined for [reason]. I wanted to take two minutes to give you some context that might not be visible in the statements. [Explain the specific context — bad month, seasonal dip, one-time event] Would you be open to reconsidering at a reduced amount of [$X]? Or if the factor rate is the issue, the merchant has indicated they're flexible on terms. I've worked with this merchant directly and they're solid — I wouldn't be calling if I didn't believe in the deal."

Never argue with a UW. Ask questions, provide context, and offer alternatives. Arguing gets you blacklisted. Advocating professionally gets you approved.

🗂️ When to Move to a Different Funder vs. Fight the Decline
  • Fight the decline when: the reason is explainable, the merchant is strong overall, and you have documentation to support your case.
  • Move to next tier when: the file genuinely has issues, the UW has seen everything, or the offer will be so small it won't help the merchant anyway.
  • Walk away when: the merchant is clearly overextended, multiple funders have declined, and funding them would set them up to fail.
Advanced — Day 14
The Previously Declined Merchant
Declined merchants are not dead deals. They're warm leads with a trust problem. Fix the trust problem and the deal follows.
🩹 Why They Got Declined — The Real Reasons
  • Wrong funder tier — The other rep submitted a C-paper file to an A-paper funder. This happens constantly. The fix is simply knowing which funder to use.
  • Incomplete submission — Missing a month of statements, unsigned application, or wrong account. UWs decline rather than ask for missing items.
  • Timing issue — They applied after a bad 3-month stretch. Time has passed. Pull fresh statements — the story might be different now.
  • Genuinely unqualified at the time — But businesses change. Revenue grows, NSFs resolve, existing positions pay off. Check the current picture.
🎙️ The Re-Engagement Script
"Hey [Name], I know you went through this process before and didn't get the result you were looking for — and I'm sorry about that. That's actually why I'm calling. A lot of times declines happen because of the specific funder that was used, not because the business doesn't qualify. We work with multiple funding sources at different tiers, and I'd like to take a fresh look at where you are today. Has anything changed in the business in the last 3–6 months? Revenue up? Any existing positions paid off? Would you be open to letting me take a second look with no commitment? Worst case I confirm it's not the right time yet and give you a clear roadmap for when it will be."
🗺️ The "Not Yet" Roadmap

If they genuinely can't qualify right now, give them a specific 90-day plan. This is what separates you from every other rep who just disappears after a decline.

"Here's what I'd recommend: over the next 90 days, focus on keeping your daily balance above [$X] and reducing the NSF count to zero. Once [existing position] is paid off, your debt service drops significantly. Call me back in [specific month] and I can get you approved at a better rate than you'd get today."
Advanced — Day 15
Build Your Book of Business
New reps chase leads. Experienced reps work their book. The goal isn't to close one deal — it's to build a client base that generates renewals, referrals, and repeat business forever.
📖 What a Book of Business Actually Looks Like
  • Funded clients on a renewal calendar — Every client you fund goes on a 90-day follow-up schedule. At 50% paydown you call. Every time.
  • Warm pipeline — Merchants who weren't ready but said "call me back." A book has 20–50 of these at any time. Each one is a future deal.
  • Referral network — Accountants, bookkeepers, insurance brokers, commercial real estate agents. These people talk to business owners every day. One referral partner can be worth 10 cold calls a week.
  • Industry concentration — The best reps specialize. Become the go-to person for restaurants, or for contractors. Word travels fast inside industries.
🤝 Asking for Referrals Without Being Awkward
"[Name], I'm really glad we were able to get this done for you. I have one quick ask — if you know any other business owners who could use fast capital, I'd love an introduction. I treat every referral the same way I treated you — straight, no pressure, no surprises. Would anyone come to mind?"

Ask right after funding, not before. That's when trust is highest and they feel good about the experience. Timing this wrong is the most common referral mistake.

📈 The 90-Day Book Building Sprint
  • Week 1–2: Fund your first 2–3 deals. Set renewal reminders immediately.
  • Week 3–4: Ask each funded client for one referral. Follow up on all warm pipeline.
  • Month 2: Identify 3 referral partners in your area. Reach out with a clear value prop.
  • Month 3: First renewals start coming due. Work them hard — renewals close at 3x the rate of cold calls.
Advanced — Day 16
Advanced Objection Handling
Day 7 covered the common objections. These are the ones that only show up when you're deep in a deal — the ones that kill closes if you're not ready.
🥊 The 6 Advanced Objections
ObjectionResponse
"I need to talk to my accountant first""Absolutely — can we get them on a quick call together? I can answer any technical questions they have in real time. When's a good time today or tomorrow?" Never let the accountant become a ghost blocker.
"What happens if I can't make payments?"Be honest: "If revenue drops significantly, most funders will work with you on a modification. What we want to avoid is defaulting without communication — the key is to call us before you miss, not after." This builds trust.
"I want to wait until after the holidays""That actually might be the perfect reason to do it now — most of our clients use holiday season capital for inventory and staffing. By the time January hits, you've already put it to work. What would you use it for this season?"
"My attorney needs to review the contract""Of course — I'll send you a clean copy right now. Most attorneys take 2–3 days. Should I hold the offer for you in the meantime? Some offers have a 48–72 hour window." Creates urgency without pressure.
"I got burned by [specific company]""Tell me what happened." Then listen fully. Then: "That's exactly why we do things differently — [specific thing that addresses their experience]. I'd rather lose the deal than have you feel that way again."
"Can you lower the factor rate?""Let me go back to the funder and see what I can do — but I want to be honest with you, the rate is largely driven by what the statements show. The strongest lever you have is the health of the account. What I can do is look at the term to get your daily payment lower."
🔑 The Advanced Rule — Objections Near the Close

Late-stage objections are almost never about what they say they're about. "I need to talk to my accountant" usually means "I'm scared." Your job is to find the real fear and address it directly.

When you hit a late objection, ask: "Is there something about the deal itself that's giving you pause, or is it more about the timing?" This forces them to be specific. Specific objections can be solved. Vague objections stall forever.
Advanced — Day 17
Reading the Financial Story
Numbers don't lie but they don't tell the whole story either. Learn to read what the statements mean — not just what they say.
📈 Revenue Patterns and What They Mean
  • Consistent deposits, steady ADB — Best profile. Business is stable and predictable. A-paper candidate. Pitch confidently.
  • Large lumpy deposits, low ADB between — Project-based business (contractors, event companies). Revenue is real but concentrated. Explain this to the UW.
  • Strong Month 1, declining Month 2 and 3 — Seasonal business or a business under stress. Ask what happened. If seasonal, it's fine. If stress, probe deeper.
  • Growing month over month — Best renewal candidate. Business is on the way up. Higher advance amounts justified.
  • High deposits but low ADB — Money comes in and goes right back out. High operating costs or existing debt service. Check the outgoing debits carefully.
🚩 Red Flags vs. Explainable Anomalies
What You SeeRed Flag?What to Ask
3 NSFs in one monthMaybe"Was there a specific event that month — supplier dispute, slow period, unexpected expense?"
Revenue dropped 40% in Month 3Maybe"I see deposits dipped in [month] — was that seasonal or is something else going on?"
Daily MCA debits + NSFs same weekYesThe existing advance is draining the account. Stacking risk is real here.
Lots of transfers between accountsMaybe"Do you have multiple business accounts? We may need statements from all of them."
Account opened less than 6 months agoYesMinimum TIB issue. Check if there's a prior business account you can use.
Advanced — Day 18
Consolidation & Multi-Position Strategy
Merchants with multiple positions are often your best deals. They're in pain, they need relief, and the solution — consolidation — sells itself if you can show the math.
🔗 How Consolidation Works
  • The new funder pays off all existing MCA balances directly and issues a new single advance to the merchant.
  • The merchant goes from multiple daily debits to one — and that one payment is typically lower than the combined total they were paying before.
  • The new advance is usually larger than the payoff amounts, giving the merchant net new capital as well.
🔢 Consolidation Math Example
Merchant has 2 positions: Position A: $350/day remaining, $18,000 balance Position B: $420/day remaining, $24,000 balance Combined daily: $770/day | Total payoff: $42,000 Consolidation offer: $100,000 at 1.35 factor Payback: $135,000 Pays off: $42,000 Net new capital: $58,000 New daily payment: ~$714/day Merchant saves $56/day AND gets $58,000 in fresh capital. THAT is your pitch. Lead with the savings, then the capital.
⚠️ When NOT to Consolidate
  • Merchant's revenue can't support even the new consolidated payment
  • One of the existing positions has a prepayment penalty that eliminates the savings
  • Merchant wants to consolidate just to stack again — this is a trap and will destroy their business
  • Always verify the remaining balances directly with each funder before presenting numbers
Advanced — Day 19
Industry Deep Dives
Every industry has different pain points, different objections, and different hot buttons. Speak their language and you'll close at a completely different rate.
🍕 Restaurants & Food Service
  • Primary Pain Points: Equipment failure (walk-in cooler, oven, POS system), seasonal dips, supplier terms, staffing costs during busy season.
  • Best Time to Call: Monday mornings (planning week), after a holiday season, January (post-holiday cash drain).
  • Hot Button Language: "Keep your kitchen running," "cover your food costs while receivables catch up," "don't lose staff before your busy season."
  • UW Notes: Credit card split works well here — deposits are consistent and daily. High NSF risk if they're over-leveraged. Check for multiple POS accounts.
  • Typical Deal Size: $20k–$150k depending on revenue. Average factor rate 1.25–1.40.
🔨 Contractors & Construction
  • Primary Pain Points: Material costs upfront before invoice payment, labor payroll between jobs, equipment purchase/repair, bonding and insurance renewals.
  • Best Time to Call: Early spring (job season starting), when they just won a big contract.
  • Hot Button Language: "Bridge the gap between job start and first draw," "lock in material pricing before it goes up," "take the job you'd otherwise have to turn down."
  • UW Notes: Lumpy deposits are normal — explain this. Revenue looks irregular but it's project-based. Larger advances justified by contract size. May need additional docs (contracts, invoices).
  • Typical Deal Size: $50k–$500k. These are often your biggest deals.
🚛 Trucking & Logistics
  • Primary Pain Points: Fuel costs, maintenance and breakdowns, factoring delays on freight invoices, driver payroll, fleet expansion.
  • Best Time to Call: When fuel prices spike, Q4 (holiday shipping rush needs), after a breakdown.
  • Hot Button Language: "Keep your trucks on the road," "don't lose a load because a truck is in the shop," "expand your fleet to take on more contracts."
  • UW Notes: Strong industry for MCA. Deposits are regular. Watch for invoice factoring companies already taking a cut — that affects true revenue. Ask about factoring arrangements upfront.
  • Typical Deal Size: $30k–$250k. Good repeat client industry.
🏥 Medical & Dental
  • Primary Pain Points: Insurance reimbursement delays (30–90 days), equipment upgrades, EMR system costs, staffing, expanding to a second location.
  • Best Time to Call: Year-end (equipment tax deductions), when a new insurance contract causes reimbursement delays.
  • Hot Button Language: "Bridge the insurance reimbursement gap," "upgrade your equipment without tying up your line of credit," "fund the expansion before your competitor does."
  • UW Notes: Often A-paper candidates. Strong revenue, professional operators. May be harder to reach (gatekeepers). CFO/office manager often involved in decision. Expect more scrutiny on terms.
  • Typical Deal Size: $50k–$500k. High-value, long-term client relationships.
🛍️ Retail
  • Primary Pain Points: Inventory purchasing before peak seasons, lease obligations, renovation costs, e-commerce platform investment.
  • Best Time to Call: August–September (holiday inventory prep), January (post-holiday restock), before back-to-school.
  • Hot Button Language: "Stock up before your competitor sells out," "lock in inventory at current pricing," "renovate during the slow season so you're ready for the rush."
  • UW Notes: Highly seasonal — statements from off-peak months look weak. Always contextualize seasonality to the UW. Credit card split works well for POS-heavy retailers.
  • Typical Deal Size: $15k–$200k depending on inventory needs.
Advanced — Day 20
Your Personal Sales System
Talent gets you started. Systems keep you going. The reps who last 5+ years in MCA aren't the best talkers — they're the most organized.
The Daily Non-Negotiables
  • Morning Block (9am–12pm) — Dials only. No email, no admin, no CRM cleanup. This is your money time. 80+ dials minimum.
  • Midday (12pm–1pm) — Follow-ups from morning. Send documents to hot leads. Submit complete packages.
  • Afternoon Block (2pm–4pm) — Callbacks, second attempts, warm pipeline. These conversations are different — slower, more consultative.
  • End of Day (4pm–5pm) — CRM updates, notes on every contact, set tomorrow's call list. Never start tomorrow without a plan.
📊 The KPIs Every Rep Must Track
MetricWhat It Tells YouTarget
Dials per dayActivity level. If this is low, nothing else matters.80–120/day
Contact rateHow good your list is and your calling technique.15–25%
Qualified per dayPitch quality and lead source quality.5–10/day
Submission rateHow well you're converting qualifieds to doc submissions.30–40% of qualified
Approval rateQuality of your submissions and funder matching.60–75% of submitted
Close rateHow well you present offers and handle final objections.50–70% of approved
🧠 The Mental Edge
  • Separate identity from outcome. A bad day of dials doesn't make you a bad rep. Work the system, not your emotions.
  • Study your own calls. Record yourself. The things that make you cringe are exactly what to fix. Most reps never do this.
  • Compete only with yesterday's you. Did you make more dials than yesterday? Submit more deals? That's the only scoreboard that matters.
  • Protect your energy. MCA is a high-rejection job. The reps who last long-term have rituals — exercise, shutdown routines, boundaries on work hours. Burnout ends careers.

🎓 ADVANCED TRAINING COMPLETE

You've completed all 20 days. Now take the certification exam to earn your DH-MCA certification.

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