See how a well-built vendor finance program can lift your close rate by 20–30% in Canada using leasing-led structures, without becoming a bank.
If you sell equipment in Canada and don’t offer clean, in-house financing options (through third-party funders), you’re leaking deals. A structured vendor finance program can realistically lift your close rate by 20–30% because it removes the two biggest killers of otherwise good quotes: “I’ll talk to my bank” delays and upfront cash anxiety.
Almost 49.3% of Canadian SMEs requested external financing in 2023, with demand even higher in manufacturing, construction and agriculture. (Statistics Canada) Approval rates for small business debt requests were still about 89% in 2024, but lenders have become more selective. (ISED Canada)
Your buyers want financing. The credit system is open for business. The gap is often at the dealer level: no clear program, no process, no partner. That’s fixable.
Key point: A vendor finance program attacks the three biggest leak points in your sales funnel – sticker shock, bank delays, and “we’ll think about it.”
Most “I can’t afford it” moments aren’t about the total price. They’re about cash flow.
BDC’s guidance on equipment finance makes this explicit: buying is usually cheaper over the life of the asset, but leasing reduces strain on cash flow by lowering upfront cost and spreading payments – and can make it easier to keep gear up to date. (BDC.ca)
When your quote shows both:
you’re letting the customer solve for cash flow instead of killing the deal at the sticker.
This is exactly what a leasing-led vendor program does through structures like:
Statistics Canada shows that 49.3% of SMEs requested external financing in 2023, but the type of financing varies: debt, leases, trade credit and more. (ISED Canada)
If your only answer is “talk to your bank,” you’re:
Meanwhile, the asset-based finance industry that the Canadian Finance & Leasing Association represents is literally built to finance vehicles and equipment through leases, secured facilities and lines. (Canadian Finance & Leasing Association)
A vendor finance program plugs your sales process into that ecosystem through a partner like Mehmi’s Equipment Financing team, instead of leaving customers to fend for themselves.
Most dealers don’t need a spreadsheet to know where deals die. The pattern is usually:
Replacing that with:
is easily worth a 20–30% lift in your win rate on qualified quotes, especially in sectors where two or three lenders dominate and your buyers are tired of hearing “no” on specialized assets.
Key point: Credit is available, rates are lower than the 2022–23 peak, and SMEs are still actively seeking financing. A vendor program helps you ride that wave instead of fighting it.
ISED’s 2023 SME financing survey shows:
In other words, if you serve those sectors and don’t have a financing story, you are out of sync with the market.
The federal Small Business Credit Condition Trends 2014–2024 report notes:
That’s the paradox: the system is still lending, but marginal files get more scrutiny. That’s exactly where equipment-specialist partners like Mehmi help – by structuring deals in a way that makes sense for lenders who understand your assets.
The Bank of Canada’s key rate has dropped from 5% in 2023 to 2.25% as of October 29, 2025, after several cuts through 2024–25. (Bank of Canada)
A recent poll of economists expects that policy rate to stay around that level into 2026–27 rather than falling back to near-zero. (Reuters)
For your customers, this means:
A vendor program that leads with clear payment options and realistic terms positions you as the partner who understands those constraints – not just the one pushing a machine.
Key point: The lift comes from fewer drop-offs at each stage of the funnel – not from magic rates.
Think of your sales process in four moments:
A well-designed vendor finance program (like Mehmi’s Vendor Program) changes the math at each stage:
When your website, showroom and proposals show “From $X/week + tax, OAC,” you:
The difference between “starting with cash only” and “starting with payments as an option” is usually several percentage points of extra qualified opportunities.
When you can say:
“Most of our clients finance this over 4–5 years through a Canadian leasing partner. Want to see that option while you’re talking to your bank?”
and then send a Mehmi application link, you stop losing deals to:
Even a modest reduction in bank-related fallout – say 10–15% fewer lost quotes – stacks quickly across a year.
Asset-based finance isn’t just about “yes/no.” It’s about packaging:
CFLA’s equipment data show that leasing and secured facilities account for a large share of total equipment and vehicle financing volume in Canada – around 40% of such financing via leases alone in 2021. (Canadian Finance & Leasing Association)
Working through a specialized partner increases the approval rate on your quotes, particularly for:
Higher approval rate on the same volume of apps = higher close rate.
A surprising number of “approvals” never become funded deals because:
A vendor program with a clear checklist and Mehmi doing the heavy lifting – for example, confirming Eligible Equipment and helping your customer through final steps – keeps more of those approvals alive. Even shaving a few days off cycle time can be the difference between a lost buyer and a delivered machine.
All of this is how you realistically get to a 20–30% improvement in your close rate on finance-eligible opportunities. It’s lots of small wins, not one big trick.
Key point: You don’t need a captive finance company. You need a leasing-first partner, a simple menu, and a process your team will actually use.
Pull the last 6–12 months of sales and ask:
Cross-check those patterns against Mehmi’s Industries and Eligible Equipment guidance. This gives you a realistic view of:
Your buyers don’t want alphabet soup. They want clarity:
Behind the scenes, your menu might include:
When the real issue isn’t the machine but the surrounding cash flow, Mehmi can layer in tools from its Business Loans suite – such as a Working Capital Loan or Invoice or Freight Factoring. You just need to recognize when that’s the conversation.
This is one of the simplest high-impact moves you can make. On your:
include something like:
“Estimated from $X/week + tax, OAC”
Use Mehmi’s Calculator internally to keep those estimates realistic. Then train reps to say:
“Most clients spread this over four or five years instead of paying cash. Want me to show you what that looks like?”
It sounds basic, but it’s how you normalise financing instead of treating it as Plan B.
BDC’s write-up on vendor financing calls out the main benefits (convenience, lower upfront cost, ease of upgrading) but also warns that shorter-term, rigid structures can be risky if not understood. (BDC.ca)
That’s your cue to:
Work with Mehmi to create:
Your salespeople should not need to become underwriters. They just need to confidently start the process.
Roughly:
If you want a formal summary to share internally, Mehmi can help you turn this into a short SOP – but even a one-page word doc works.
Key point: Treat your vendor finance rollout like any other investment – measure before and after.
Track three simple metrics:
Review quarterly with Mehmi. If you’re not seeing progress, adjust:
Key point: You can get all the close-rate upside without pretending to be a bank – if you stay honest about roles and careful with data.
Your materials should say something like:
“Financing is provided by independent third-party lenders. Approvals are subject to credit review.”
This aligns with how institutions like BDC describe vendor financing – suppliers make it easy to access credit; licensed lenders still make the decisions. (BDC.ca)
In a credit environment where underwriting is selective, promising “no credit check” or “guaranteed approval” is misleading and will backfire. Better to say:
“We work with Canadian financing partners who understand your equipment and will do their best to find a fit, subject to normal credit review.”
You’ll see sensitive data: ID, banking details, financials. Make sure you:
A trusted financing experience is part of your brand whether you like it or not.
You don’t need to build a finance company. You need a partner who:
A typical journey with Mehmi looks like:
You can explore more via Mehmi’s Blog and then reach out through Contact Us when you’re ready to make vendor finance a core part of how you sell.
The dealer
A Western Canadian dealer selling a mix of construction equipment and vocational trucks. Historically:
The problems
Step 1: Baseline and design
With Mehmi, they reviewed 12 months of sales:
They co-designed a vendor program built around:
Step 2: Implementation
Within a few weeks, they:
Reps were coached to ask early:
“Are you planning to pay cash, use your bank, or would you like to see a monthly payment option as well?”
Step 3: Results over 9–12 months
After the first full season with the program in place:
The dealer didn’t become a lender. They became the vendor that could confidently respond to “I’m not sure I can afford it” with “Let’s look at a payment structure that fits your cash flow,” and back that up with an actual program.
No. In a modern Canadian vendor finance program, you do not lend your own money. You:
The actual credit agreement is between your customer and the funder. You get paid as the supplier.
Yes, on finance-eligible opportunities, that range is realistic. The lift doesn’t come from magical rates; it comes from:
Tracking your close rate before and 6–12 months after launch will show whether you’re capturing that upside.
Generally, if you’re not lending your own money and are simply referring customers to licensed lenders or brokers, you do not need a separate lending licence. You’re acting as an intermediary, not as the creditor of record. Always confirm with your legal and accounting advisors, and be transparent that financing is provided by independent third parties.
With the policy rate at 2.25% as of late 2025, after a series of cuts from 5% in 2023, funding costs are lower than at the peak but still meaningful. (Bank of Canada) Your customers care less about the policy rate itself and more about whether:
A vendor program lets you show those payments clearly and tailor terms to the asset’s life.
Yes, with caveats. Many lenders will finance:
Age, condition and asset type all matter. Mehmi’s Eligible Equipment guidance and sector expertise help you understand what’s realistic before you promise anything.
A practical starting point is to:
From there, Mehmi can help you design and launch a program, train your team, and measure the impact on your close rate.