Table of Contents
- The Financial Stages of Business Growth
- Business Checking and Savings Fundamentals
- Business Loans for Expansion
- Managing Cash Flow as You Grow
- Building a Banking Relationship That Grows With You
- Frequently Asked Questions
The Financial Stages of Business Growth
A Coweta business moving from startup to established operation passes through predictable financial stages. Each stage has different banking needs — and getting the right product at the right stage matters more than most owners realize.
Early stage: separate business and personal finances immediately. Middle stage: establish a business credit relationship before you urgently need it. Growth stage: use leverage strategically to fund expansion that revenue alone can’t sustain. Mature stage: optimize cash management and plan for ownership transition or succession.
Related: Business Services at FNB Coweta | Securing Small Business Loans in Coweta
Business Checking and Savings Fundamentals
The first financial move for any business: open a dedicated business checking account. Commingling personal and business funds creates legal liability problems, makes accounting nearly impossible, and disqualifies you from most business loan programs.
FNB Coweta offers business checking accounts with debit card/ATM access and Now and Super Now accounts for qualifying sole proprietorships and nonprofits. Our business savings accounts (minimum $250 to open) and Insured Money Market Accounts ($2,500 minimum) provide places to hold operating reserves and short-term capital.
Contact FNB Coweta for current business account rates, features, and minimum requirements.
Business Loans for Expansion
Business growth typically outpaces the cash that operations can fund. Commercial lending bridges that gap — allowing businesses to invest in equipment, inventory, real estate, or working capital ahead of the revenue those investments will generate.
- Business term loans: fixed-amount, fixed-rate, fixed-term for defined investments
- Lines of credit: revolving access to working capital for seasonal needs or cash flow gaps
- SBA loans: government-backed lending with more flexible terms — FNB Coweta offers SBA program options
- Construction and real estate loans: for businesses expanding physical footprint
FNB Coweta has worked with Coweta businesses of all sizes across all industries since 1903. Big bank treatment regardless of business size. Contact our commercial team to discuss your growth plans.
Managing Cash Flow as You Grow
Growth-stage businesses often run into a counterintuitive problem: revenue is increasing but cash is tight, because growth consumes cash before new revenue arrives. Managing this requires either a cash reserve built during profitable periods or a line of credit that covers the timing gap.
The businesses that navigate growth most successfully build their banking relationships before the pressure is on — establishing a credit relationship when they don’t urgently need it, so it’s in place when they do.
Building a Banking Relationship That Grows With You
FNB Coweta is the oldest locally owned bank in Wagoner County. We’ve seen Coweta businesses grow from sole proprietorships to significant local employers. We know the market, the community, and the specific challenges of doing business in this part of Oklahoma.
A relationship with a community bank isn’t just a product — it’s a lender who knows your business context, makes local credit decisions, and can move at the speed your business needs.
Visit us at 106 South Broadway, call 918-486-6561, or contact us online.
Frequently Asked Questions
When should I open a business checking account?
Immediately — ideally before your first business transaction. Commingling personal and business funds creates problems that get harder to unwind over time. The sooner you separate finances, the cleaner your business accounting and legal position.
Does FNB Coweta offer SBA loans?
Yes. SBA loans are available through FNB Coweta. Contact our commercial lending team to discuss your business’s eligibility and current SBA program options.
What do I need to apply for a business loan?
Typically: two to three years of business tax returns, a current balance sheet and profit/loss statement, personal financial information for principals, and a description of how the loan will be used. For startup businesses, a business plan and cash flow projections are typically required. Contact FNB Coweta to discuss your specific situation.
