The Selection Criterion as the True Entry Ticket
Why collateral, revenue durability, and useful life decide access to capital before profitability does.
Three articles, one correction. Across the three articles in Series One, the real issue was never whether the business was profitable. It was what each financing instrument actually underwrites. Asset-based lending selects for the collateral base. Revenue-based financing selects for the durability of the revenue. Equipment financing selects for the asset and its useful life. Three instruments, three criteria, and the income statement is the criterion for none of them.
The Selection Criterion is the property a capital instrument actually underwrites and advances against. It is the financing fact that governs access to that instrument before broader business health, profitability, or income-statement appearance can be read as the decision criterion.
Key points
Each instrument has a Selection Criterion, the specific property it underwrites and advances against. For asset-based lending, it is the Collateral Selection Criterion: the eligible collateral base and the working-capital cycle that converts it. For revenue-based financing, it is the Revenue Durability Criterion: the stability and recurrence of the revenue that services the payment. For equipment financing, it is the Useful Life Coverage Criterion: the value of the asset over the life it has left against the term. Read in order, the three entry tickets are the collateral base, revenue durability, and useful life coverage.
Each article made the same move in a different register: state the diagnostic case, name the property the instrument actually underwrites, and show how reading the income statement instead produces the wrong decision. The criteria differ. The discipline behind them is one.
Series synthesis
The single point of the series is that the Selection Criterion, not profitability, is the true entry ticket for each instrument. The market reaches for the income statement since it is the most visible document, and in doing so commits the Income Statement Misread, reading profit or loss as the verdict on whether a business can borrow. But profitability is the criterion for none of the three instruments examined here. A loss-making business with clean, controlled collateral clears the collateral criterion. A thin-margin business with durable, recurring revenue clears the durability criterion. A weaker enterprise on a strong, long-lived asset clears the useful-life criterion. In each case, the entry ticket is the property the instrument actually underwrites, and reading the income statement instead is reading the wrong document.
What unifies the three is not that profitability is irrelevant. It is that profitability is not the property any of these instruments is repaid from. Asset-based lending is repaid from collateral conversion, revenue-based financing from the revenue stream, and equipment financing from the asset. The entry ticket in each case is the property that produces the repayment, and the income statement reports something else. Reading it as the criterion is not a small calibration error. It is reading the wrong document for the decision at hand.
Profitability is one fact about a business. It is rarely the fact a given instrument underwrites.
The Selection Criterion is the entry ticket. The income statement is not.
A market that underwrites on the income statement will decline fundable businesses and approve unfit ones in the same motion, since it is reading a document that does not describe what any of these instruments is repaid from.
Reading the criterion instead is not a softer standard. It is a more exact one. It aims the decision at the property that actually governs repayment, which is the only standard that reliably separates the fundable from the unfit.
What the series does not close
Series One establishes what each instrument selects for. It does not address what the existence of such a facility signals. If a facility is underwritten on collateral, revenue durability, or an asset rather than on borrower health, then the presence of that facility cannot, on its own, prove the borrower is healthy. So a question opens that this series does not answer. If these facilities do not prove borrower health, what does their existence actually signal? That is the subject of Series Two.
That question is not rhetorical. A facility underwritten on collateral, durability, or an asset is real evidence of something, just not of borrower health. Working out what it is evidence of, what the mere existence of a facility actually tells a reader, is the work of the next series. Series One clears the ground by removing the wrong reading. Series Two builds on it by correcting what the right reading reveals.
Read Past the Income Statement
If your capital was decided on last year’s profit, it was decided on a document the instrument does not underwrite.
Request Capital Source review of the criterion that actually governs your borrowing.
Capital Source reads the property each instrument is repaid from: the collateral base and cycle, the durability of the revenue, or the asset and its useful life. Then it sizes capital to the criterion that governs the instrument rather than to the income statement.
Most lenders read financials. Capital Source reads control.
Frequently asked questions
What is the Selection Criterion?
It is the specific property an instrument actually underwrites and advances against. Each instrument has one, and it is rarely profitability. Asset-based lending selects for the collateral base, revenue-based financing for revenue durability, and equipment financing for the asset and its useful life.
Why is profitability not the entry ticket for these instruments?
None of these instruments is repaid from profit. Asset-based lending is repaid from collateral conversion, revenue-based financing from the revenue stream, and equipment financing from the asset behind it. The entry ticket is the property the instrument is repaid from, which is the Selection Criterion, not the income statement.
What are the three entry tickets established in this series?
The collateral base for asset-based lending, revenue durability for revenue-based financing, and useful life coverage for equipment financing. Each is the property its instrument selects for, and profitability is none of them.
Strategic disclosure
Capital Source structures and arranges capital for small and lower middle market businesses, including asset-based lending, purchase order, accounts receivable, revenue-based, and equipment financing. The analytical framework described here is the framework Capital Source applies to read credit and to size and govern those structures. This article is analysis, not a financing commitment, and any structure depends on the specific facts of the business.
Proud to be ranked on the 2024 and 2025 Inc. 5000 list of America’s fastest-growing private companies.
![B5_S1_Capstone_Selection_Criterion_Entry_Ticket.docx Document Orion_PAUL_Editorial_Aperture_v18(37).md File Orion_PAUL_Prompt_Review_Mode_v16(36).md File this is the capstone for a three part series Please run SOE analysis and provide scores and documentation The Selection Criterion as the True Entry Ticket.docx Document Create WordPress-compliant HTML for the article attached. Make it cut and paste format STRICT REQUIREMENTS: Do not shorten, summarize, or edit the article in any way The HTML must exactly reflect the full article content Preserve all structure, sections, formatting, and text exactly STYLING RULES (CRITICAL): Apply ALL styling using inline styles only Do NOT use a <style> block Do NOT rely on external CSS classes Do NOT include any font-family or font styling (WordPress handles fonts) COLOR AND FORMAT RULES: H1 must use: color:#075631; H2, H3 must use: color:#075631; Section headers should include light formatting for readability Use #075631 as the primary color Use #41b749 for highlights and accents CALLOUT / READABILITY RULES: Identify key emphasis paragraphs and render them as callout blocks using inline styling TABLE RULE (if applicable): Table headers must use background color: #075631 Header text should be white OUTPUT REQUIREMENTS: Return clean, copy-paste-ready HTML No explanations No markdown No commentary No placeholders UNIFORM HTML STYLE CONTRACT Use the exact same HTML pattern on every article. Do not invent new styling. H1: <h1 style="color:#075631; margin:0 0 16px 0;">[TITLE]</h1> Subtitle / H2 under title: <h2 style="color:#075631; margin:0 0 24px 0; padding-bottom:10px; border-bottom:2px solid #41b749;">[SUBTITLE]</h2> All main H2 section headers: <h2 style="color:#075631; margin:32px 0 14px 0; padding-bottom:8px; border-bottom:1px solid #41b749;">[HEADER]</h2> All H3 subsection headers: <h3 style="color:#075631; margin:26px 0 10px 0; padding-left:12px; border-left:4px solid #41b749;">[HEADER]</h3> All body paragraphs: <p style="margin:0 0 18px 0; line-height:1.65;">[TEXT]</p> All ordered lists: <ol style="margin:0 0 24px 24px; padding-left:20px; line-height:1.65;"> <li style="margin-bottom:12px;">[TEXT]</li> </ol> CALLOUT RULE — FIXED Only render these paragraph types as callouts: 1. thesis-consequence paragraphs 2. “strategic consequence” paragraphs 3. CTA opening paragraph 4. no more than 4 callouts per article Callout HTML must always be exactly: <div style="border-left:5px solid #41b749; background:#f3fbf5; padding:16px 18px; margin:24px 0; line-height:1.65;"> <p style="margin:0;">[TEXT]</p> </div> Do not vary: - background color - border width - padding - margin - line-height - header styling - paragraph styling - list styling Before returning HTML, verify that every repeated element uses the same inline style string. Update May 8 2026 to include Key Points Call out section Create WordPress-compliant HTML for the article above. STRICT REQUIREMENTS: Do not shorten, summarize, rewrite, or edit the article in any way. The HTML must exactly reflect the full article content. Preserve all structure, sections, formatting, wording, and sequence exactly. STYLING RULES: Apply all styling using inline styles only. Do not use a <style> block. Do not rely on external CSS classes. Do not include font-family, font-size, or font-weight rules. WordPress handles fonts. COLOR RULES: Use #075631 as the primary color. Use #41b749 for accents and highlights. H1, H2, and H3 must use color:#075631. OUTPUT REQUIREMENTS: Return clean, copy-paste-ready HTML only. No explanations. No markdown. No commentary. No placeholders. UNIFORM HTML STYLE CONTRACT: Use the exact same HTML pattern on every article. Do not invent new styling. Before returning HTML, verify that every repeated element uses the same inline style string. H1: <h1 style="color:#075631; margin:0 0 16px 0;">[TITLE]</h1> Subtitle / H2 under title: <h2 style="color:#075631; margin:0 0 24px 0; padding-bottom:10px; border-bottom:2px solid #41b749;">[SUBTITLE]</h2> All main H2 section headers: <h2 style="color:#075631; margin:32px 0 14px 0; padding-bottom:8px; border-bottom:1px solid #41b749;">[HEADER]</h2> All H3 subsection headers: <h3 style="color:#075631; margin:26px 0 10px 0; padding-left:12px; border-left:4px solid #41b749;">[HEADER]</h3> All body paragraphs: <p style="margin:0 0 18px 0; line-height:1.65;">[TEXT]</p> All ordered lists: <ol style="margin:0 0 24px 24px; padding-left:20px; line-height:1.65;"> <li style="margin-bottom:12px;">[TEXT]</li> </ol> All unordered lists: <ul style="margin:0 0 24px 24px; padding-left:20px; line-height:1.65;"> <li style="margin-bottom:12px;">[TEXT]</li> </ul> KEY POINTS CALLOUT SECTION: Format the entire Key Points section as a single readability callout block. Use this exact wrapper: <div style="border-left:5px solid #41b749; background:#f3fbf5; padding:18px 20px; margin:24px 0; line-height:1.65;"> [KEY POINTS CONTENT] </div> Inside the Key Points callout: Use the standard paragraph, ordered list, and unordered list styles already defined above. Do not change the wording. Do not shorten the bullets. Do not convert bullets into paragraphs. Do not add icons, labels, boxes, or extra headings. Do not use a different background color. GENERAL CALLOUT RULE: Only render these paragraph types as individual callouts: 1. thesis-consequence paragraphs 2. “strategic consequence” paragraphs 3. CTA opening paragraph 4. no more than 4 individual paragraph callouts per article Individual callout HTML must always be exactly: <div style="border-left:5px solid #41b749; background:#f3fbf5; padding:16px 18px; margin:24px 0; line-height:1.65;"> <p style="margin:0;">[TEXT]</p> </div> Do not vary: - background color - border width - padding - margin - line-height - header styling - paragraph styling - list styling TABLE RULE: If the article contains a table, table headers must use background color #075631. Table header text must be white. Use inline styles only. these are the images for the series articles create an article specific image that represents the concept Chose and SEO text block Use the Capital Source colors leave some open space don't make it too busy Thought for 57s Edit Thought for 1m 54s Edit fantastic please convert to a downloadable jpg Thought for a few seconds Done: Download the JPG for some reason I can never download these and end up converting in adobe what am I doing wrong You’re probably not doing anything wrong. The issue is usually the way the ChatGPT download link is handled by the browser or app. Try this: Open the link in a browser, not inside the app preview. Click the JPG link, then use the browser’s download button or right-click / long-press and choose Save Image As. Check whether it opens as a preview instead of downloading. If it opens the image in a new tab, right-click the image and save it from there. Rename the file after downloading. Some systems save it without the .jpg extension. Rename it to: selection_criterion_true_entry_ticket_featured_image.jpg Use desktop if mobile keeps failing. Mobile ChatGPT file links can be flaky depending on browser permissions, iCloud/Files settings, or app sandboxing. Check Downloads, not Photos. On Mac it usually goes to Downloads. On iPhone it may go to Files → Downloads, not the camera roll. The file itself was created correctly as a JPEG. The likely problem is the download handoff from ChatGPT, not the conversion. title alt text description caption for image above Image title: Selection Criterion True Entry Ticket Featured Image Selection Criterion infographic showing collateral, revenue durability, and equipment useful life leading to qualified access to capital.](https://capitalsourcegroup.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/ChatGPT-Image-Jun-18-2026-01_07_46-PM-1160x773.jpg)
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