Track your Spending
When you applied for a business loan, you had a plan for that money. That plan might have been a detailed, 20-page document, or it might have been the simple intention to buy inventory for the holiday season. In the loan application process you likely refined that plan, put together a rough budget for the funds, and mapped out where the new capital would be spent. Now that that loan has been disbursed and the money is in your account, you will need to make sure you follow that plan.
One of the easiest methods to track how you are spending your loan is to avoid co-mingling funds. Do not put the capital in your business checking account where money from normal operations flows in and out. Instead, open a separate checking account solely for the project that the loan is intended to fund. If it was a store remodel, for example, pay the painters and workmen from that account. This facilitates monitoring the project’s total costs, as well.
If you do not want the hassle of maintaining separate business accounts, at a minimum avoid co-mingling personal and business finances. It can be far too easy to be short of personal funds and pay your mortgage or car payment with money intended to fund a business project. As well, spending the funds on smaller business expenses which could have been funded from operations fritters it away.
Remember that those funds in your account have a cost to you. You paid fees and will be paying interest on the capital you have borrowed, likely because the returns you will eventually receive from your business’ plans are higher than the cost of capital. That differential will shrink if the money is not used to grow your business.