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Explore Our Resources

Below you will find a number of topics ranging from personal to business banking.

MSB, Business Banking, Online Banking

How to Avoid Check Fraud and Detect Altered Checks

Tax season often brings an increase in check fraud activity, and we are currently seeing specific patterns in several markets. Based on recent site visits and bankwide data, fraud trends include altered checks, fraudulent IDs, and tax refund schemes that can put MSBs at risk.

Fraud Trends We Are Seeing Now

Fraud is not evenly distributed across the country. Recent analysis shows:

  • South Florida, Georgia, Pennsylvania, New Jersey: Higher occurrences of altered checks and double presentment
  • Georgia: More fraudulent IDs
  • Northeast Area: Spike in large tax refund checks for young individuals
  • East Coast overall: Higher volume of fraud compared to other regions

Understanding these localized trends can help MSBs tailor their detection and prevention efforts based on where their business operates.

Why Fraud Is Often Missed

In busy MSB settings, tellers and staff are under pressure to process customers quickly. Fast service is important, but it should not come at the expense of proper verification. Common reasons fraud is missed include:

  • Rushing to clear lines during peak hours
  • Focusing only on the ID and not the instrument
  • Not using available tools like UV lights or thorough inspection methods

Slowing down when suspicious signals appear can prevent significant losses later.

Detecting Chemical Alterations with Simple Tools

One of the most common fraud methods involves chemical alteration (sometimes called “check washing”), where fraudsters remove original payee information and rewrite it.

How to detect it:

  • Use a UV light, which costs less than $30 and is easy to use
  • Hold the check under UV light before acceptance
  • Look for:


    • Security features glowing consistently
    • Areas where ink or paper looks inconsistent
    • Borders or payee lines that glow differently from the rest of the check

Areas that glow differently often indicate tampering.

Even if the check has no embedded security feature, an altered area will reflect under UV light in a way that the original paper will not.

Behavioral Red Flags to Watch

Fraud prevention is not only about tools. People exhibit behavior that often signals something is wrong:

Watch for customers who:

  • Avoid eye contact
  • Provide unsolicited, overly friendly explanations
  • Insist on hurrying rushing you
  • Offer reasons that don’t make sense for the transaction

These behaviors, when combined with instrument anomalies, are stronger indicators of fraud.

Money Mule and Tax Refund Schemes

In some cases, the check is real, but the transaction context is not. A common example seen in Michigan:

  • Younger individuals cashing unusually large tax refunds
  • Refund amounts not aligned with typical income for that age group
  • Refunds linked to questionable tax preparers

These patterns suggest the check itself may be authentic, but the process that generated it was fraudulent. The bank will eventually identify the issue, but MSBs may face loss if the check is returned.

Why Slowing Down Protects Your Business

Slowing down and asking questions helps you protect your business from future exposure.

It’s natural to want to avoid losing a small fee by turning away a suspicious check. However, a rushed decision can expose your business to a much higher loss when a check is returned or fails later verification.

Protecting your business means:

  • Slowing down when something doesn’t feel right
  • Asking more questions
  • Using tools like UV light to confirm legitimacy
  • Prioritizing compliance over short-term fee income

When fraud is prevented at the front line, the long-term financial health of your business is protected.

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Community

Skydive DeLand: A Legacy of Innovation, Community, and Global Impact

For many residents of DeLand, the airport on the north side of town feels like a world of its own. Planes climb into the sky daily. Parachutes bloom overhead. Visitors arrive from across the globe. What many may not realize is that Skydive DeLand is not only a local attraction. It is one of the most influential skydiving centers in the world.

A History That Shaped the Sport

Skydive DeLand began operations in 1982, taking over a location that had already seen continuous skydiving activity since 1958. From its earliest days, the company was led by competitors at the highest level of the sport. Both founders were National Champions, and one went on to achieve the title of World Champion in four-person team competition.

That competitive ambition changed the sport.

To pursue world-class performance, the founders enhanced the way teams trained. They invested in aircraft, facilities, personnel, and infrastructure that allowed for intensive, structured team training. At the time, very few drop zones operated seven days a week. Skydive DeLand quickly became a full-time operation, open year-round.

As teams discovered the level of support and consistency available in DeLand, they began traveling here from all over the world. What started as a training philosophy became a global destination.

For many years, Skydive DeLand was recognized as the most active skydiving center in the world.

Building the Skydiving Capital of the World

As training programs expanded, so did the industry surrounding them. Equipment manufacturers began relocating to DeLand in order to test new parachute designs and innovations in real-world conditions.

Today, more than 20 skydiving-related companies operate in the DeLand area. Together, they form the largest parachute equipment manufacturing cluster in the world. Skydive DeLand serves as the anchor for that ecosystem.

Manufacturers rely on the consistent jump activity to test new canopies and equipment designs. Similar to how automotive companies rely on test tracks, skydiving manufacturers rely on active drop zones.

The result is that DeLand became known internationally as the Skydiving Capital of the World. Travelers from Europe, South America, and across the United States continue to visit year after year, particularly during the late winter and spring seasons when weather conditions are ideal.

A Community Within a Community

Beyond competitions and equipment development, Skydive DeLand has fostered a global community.

Teams train here for weeks or months at a time. Large events have attracted hundreds of participants. National championships have been hosted here. At any given time, visitors may be staying in local hotels, RVs, or short-term rentals.

That international presence supports tourism, local hospitality, and small businesses throughout DeLand. A past industry census estimated more than 600 jobs connected directly or indirectly to the skydiving and equipment manufacturing sector.

During economic downturns, when other industries struggled, Skydive DeLand remained strong. Tandem jumps and recreational experiences continued to attract visitors. Equipment manufacturing remained active. That stability helped support the broader local economy during difficult periods.

The people who make up the skydiving community are also deeply engaged locally. Many longtime jumpers and industry professionals participate in other civic and community activities throughout DeLand. For those who retire from jumping, many continue to invest their energy in the town they have come to call home.

The Loss of a Founder

In 2025, the Skydive DeLand community experienced a devastating loss.

Bob Hallett, one of the two original founders and the majority shareholder of the company, passed away unexpectedly following a traffic accident on his way to work. He had been with the company since its early days and remained actively involved in daily operations.

Bob was not only a business leader but a central figure in the skydiving community. His vision and commitment helped shape Skydive DeLand into the global leader it became. His passing deeply affected employees, jumpers, manufacturers, and longtime friends across the industry.

For a company that has operated as both a workplace and a close-knit community, the loss was profound. Yet the legacy he helped build continues in the culture, the operations, and the global impact of the organization.

A Global Reputation With Local Roots

One story reflects just how far Skydive DeLand’s reach extends. A local Stetson professor once attended a conference in Taiwan and turned on the television in his hotel room. There was a feature about Skydive DeLand. He returned home surprised to discover that an internationally recognized skydiving center operated just minutes from where he lived.

That story captures something unique about Skydive DeLand. It has put DeLand on the world map, even if some residents are not fully aware of what happens at the airport each day.

Visitors are welcome to observe jumps from the viewing areas or enjoy the adjacent restaurant deck. Others choose to experience a tandem jump. Some begin lifelong careers in the sport. Whether someone comes to watch or to participate, Skydive DeLand remains open and active every day.

For more information, visit SkyDiveDeLand.com to learn about tandem experiences, training programs, and upcoming events.

Skydive DeLand is more than a drop zone. It is a global training center, an innovation hub, and a long-standing contributor to the DeLand community. Its history reflects ambition, resilience, and a deep commitment to both sport and town.

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Business Banking

Consumer vs. Business Accounts: What’s Different and Why Vigilance Matters

At first glance, a checking account is a checking account. Money comes in, money goes out, and you check the balance when you need to. But the day you start running a business, the rules change, because the risk changes. Business accounts aren’t just “bigger” consumer accounts. They typically handle more transactions, more users, more payment types, and more moving parts.

There’s another key difference many owners don’t realize until it’s too late: business accounts generally do not have the same level of consumer protections that consumer (personal) accounts do. When something goes wrong, the process, timelines, and potential liability can look very different. That’s why fraud prevention for businesses isn’t optional. It’s operational.

The Real Differences Between Residential and Business Accounts

Consumer (personal) accounts are usually simpler:

  • Fewer transactions per day
  • Typically one or two account users
  • Less frequent ACH activity, wires, payroll, or vendor payments
  • Less complexity in access and approvals

Business accounts are different by design:

  • Higher volume and higher dollar amounts
  • Multiple payment types (ACH, wires, checks, cards, bill pay, merchant deposits)
  • More authorized users (owners, managers, bookkeepers, outside accountants)
  • More opportunities for errors—and more opportunities for abuse

And because business accounts are treated differently than consumer accounts, the responsibility to monitor activity and catch issues early often rests more heavily on the business.

Why Internal Fraud Is So Common (and So Preventable)

Most business owners are busy. Delegating bookkeeping is smart, because your time is valuable. But delegation without visibility is where risk grows, especially when one person has end-to-end control.

Internal fraud often looks like:

  • A “trusted” bookkeeper creating a second vendor profile with a familiar name
  • Cutting checks to a PO box with vague memos (“supplies,” “misc.”)
  • Initiating ACH payments and coding them into a harmless expense category
  • Making small, repeated withdrawals that blend into normal activity
  • “Approving” their own work because no second set of eyes exists

It’s rarely dramatic at the beginning. It’s usually quiet, incremental, and designed not to be noticed.

A Fictitious Example of What Happens When You Don’t Check

Consider Lisa, who owns a growing medical practice. She hired a bookkeeper to “handle the finances” and assumed monthly reports were enough. Lisa rarely reviewed actual transactions unless something felt off.

Over time, the bookkeeper began issuing checks to a vendor that sounded legitimate. The amounts were small—$180 here, $250 there—coded as routine office supplies. The practice was busy, revenue was strong, and nothing looked “wrong” at a high level.

Six months later, Lisa’s accountant flagged unusual expense patterns during a quarterly review. By then, the total loss wasn’t a rounding error. It was meaningful, and the cleanup took time, created stress, and required uncomfortable conversations. The hardest part wasn’t just the money; it was realizing the problem could have been caught early with simple, consistent oversight.

Simple, Practical Habits That Make a Big Difference

You don’t need to become your own bookkeeper. You just need a rhythm of review that helps you spot unusual activity quickly, especially because business accounts don’t always come with the same consumer-style protections.

Try these straightforward habits:

  • Set a daily review window (5–10 minutes).
    Same time every day. Scan for unfamiliar vendors, duplicate payments, odd dollar amounts, or unexpected transfers.
  • Turn on transaction alerts.
    Alerts for large-dollar withdrawals, ACH activity, wires, or new payees can act like an early warning system.
  • Review check images and payee details.
    Make it routine to confirm who got paid and why, especially for checks that feel “normal.”
  • Separate duties when possible.
    Ideally, the person who initiates payments is not the same person who approves them.
  • Require dual approval for high-risk actions.
    Wires, ACH batches, new payees, and changes to account settings should require a second set of eyes.
  • Ask for “exception reporting.”
    Have your bookkeeper flag reversals, refunds, new vendors, manual entries, and off-cycle payments proactively.

Systems to Discuss With Your Bank (and How Surety Can Help)

Strong habits matter, but systems are what help you scale safely. Depending on your business, ask about tools such as:

  • Positive Pay (check fraud controls):
    Helps protect against altered, counterfeit, or unauthorized checks by matching checks presented for payment against your issued-check information.
  • ACH controls:
    Filters or blocks, approved lists, and thresholds for ACH debits to help prevent unauthorized electronic withdrawals.
  • Dual control / dual authorization:
    Two people required to approve certain actions, especially wires, ACH batches, and changes to payment settings.
  • User access controls:
    Limit who can initiate, approve, view, or export account data—reducing the risk of “too much access in one seat.”
  • Online banking alerts and reporting:
    Increased visibility so you can identify unusual activity quickly.

Surety Bank can help you evaluate which controls fit your operation, set permissions correctly, and implement tools like Positive Pay in a way that’s practical—not burdensome. The goal is to put guardrails in place that make fraud harder to commit and easier to catch, without slowing down your business.

The Bottom Line: Be Proactive, Not Reactive

Residential accounts are often simpler and tend to come with broader consumer-style protections. Business accounts operate differently—more volume, more access, more complexity, and often less built-in protection. That’s why vigilance isn’t just a best practice; it’s part of responsible business ownership.

Fraud prevention isn’t about paranoia. It’s about professionalism: review regularly, limit access wisely, and build systems that protect your business long before problems appear.

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RESOURCES

Why Cash-Heavy Businesses Should Avoid Personal Deposits and Skip the “Quick Bank Run”

For cash-heavy businesses, deposit routines are not just an operations detail. They are a security issue, a controls issue, and often a cash-flow issue. When business cash gets deposited “personally,” meaning an owner or employee deposits cash through personal banking habits or into the wrong account, it can blur your recordkeeping and weaken internal controls. The IRS notes it is a good idea to keep separate business and personal accounts because it makes recordkeeping easier. The U.S. Small Business Administration also emphasizes separating funds by using a dedicated business bank account to keep bookkeeping clean and accurate.

Just as important is the security perspective. Regularly sending someone to the bank with cash exposes employees to real risk, and it creates a predictable pattern that can be exploited. The ABA Banking Journal has noted that too many cash-handling touch points, including trips to the bank, increase risk and can put employees in physical danger. Brink’s similarly points out that employees are exposed to theft risk when transporting cash, and that partnering with trained cash logistics professionals can reduce the risk of theft and increase accountability through secure transport procedures.

Why “Just use a courier” might not be the right fix

Some businesses try to replace bank runs with a courier pickup, but not every courier model is designed for cash. Cash transportation is high-risk, and the best solution is typically a purpose-built cash logistics provider whose job is secure cash handling, documentation, and transport. Trained cash logistics professionals and armored services are structured to reduce theft exposure and strengthen chain-of-custody and accountability, which is fundamentally different from general delivery services.

A safer approach: Smart Safe with a professional cash logistics partner

Surety Bank’s Smart Safe is designed specifically for cash-heavy businesses that want stronger security and a cleaner, more reliable deposit process. Surety explains that, through its partnership with Loomis, Smart Safe lets your business deposit cash on-site, receive provisional credit to your Surety Bank account, and eliminate unnecessary bank runs. From a security standpoint, Surety highlights benefits like real-time tracking of deposits, enhanced security for cash and employees, and better accountability with fewer cash shortages.

From a cash-flow standpoint, Surety’s process is built around speed. You enter the amount, deposit the cash into the Smart Safe device, and Surety provides provisional credit to your business account based on that entry. Loomis also describes provisional credit as daily credit for cash deposits without having to go to the bank, reducing time and helping reduce the risk of robbery outside the store.

What to do next

If your business handles cash, the goal is to reduce handling, reduce trips, and reduce uncertainty. A strong plan usually includes keeping all business cash activity in business accounts and processes with clear documentation and daily reconciliation, minimizing manual bank runs, and using a Smart Safe with a professional cash logistics partner so deposits are tracked and transport is handled by specialists.

Contact our Treasury Services department today to learn how Smart Safe can help you strengthen security, simplify deposits, and improve visibility into your cash.

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RESOURCES

What MSBs Need to Know When Adding a New Product or Service

How Early Planning Helps You Get Online and Start Earning Faster

Adding a new product or service can significantly increase revenue for an MSB. Whether it is money transmission, ATM services, or another offering, early coordination with the bank helps ensure your new service launches smoothly and begins generating income as quickly as possible.

Many service-related delays occur when new offerings are added without notifying the bank in advance.

Why the Bank Needs to Be Involved Early

Each product or service comes with specific monitoring, reporting, and account requirements. The bank must be able to review activity accurately and ensure it aligns with regulatory expectations.

When a new service is launched without notice, activity may flow into the wrong account or lack required reporting. Fixing these issues after the service is live often causes delays or temporary interruptions.

Common Product and Service Additions

ATM Services
If you are adding an ATM, the bank typically requires:

  • A separate account dedicated solely to ATM activity
  • A copy of the ATM processor agreement
  • Monthly cash load and transaction reports

ATM activity cannot be combined with other MSB transactions due to reconciliation and compliance requirements.

Money Transmission Services
This includes services such as Western Union or other money transfer providers.

While these services may not require a separate account, they do require monthly reporting. At a minimum, reports must include:

  • Sender
  • Receiver
  • Transaction date
  • Amount
  • Destination country

These reports allow the bank to identify patterns, monitor risk, and meet regulatory obligations.

Even if a third-party provider has its own compliance program, the bank is still responsible for monitoring the activity flowing through your accounts.

A Key Risk to Avoid

Some MSBs assume that because a vendor manages compliance on their side, the bank does not need reporting. This is a common misconception. Ultimately, the funds flow through the bank, and the bank must conduct its own review.

Failing to provide required reporting can delay approvals, reviews, and future expansion plans.

How Early Planning Saves Time and Money

Adding services often requires:

  • Account setup or restructuring
  • Reporting expectations to be established
  • IT coordination
  • Vendor documentation

When these steps are completed in advance, services can go live quickly. When handled after launch, they often result in delays, holds, or additional review.

The Bottom Line

Growth is a positive step for any MSB. Whether you are adding a new product, service, or location, early communication with the bank helps ensure the process is efficient and compliant.

Starting the conversation early allows the bank to guide you, prepare properly, and help you move forward with fewer obstacles and less frustration.

If expansion is even a possibility, reaching out now can save significant time later.

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RESOURCES

What You Need to Know When Adding a New Location

Opening a new location is an exciting milestone for any MSB. New storefronts mean new customers, increased volume, and business growth. However, opening a new branch also brings additional banking, compliance, and operational requirements that must be completed before you can begin operating.

One of the most common causes of delayed openings is a lack of early or consistent communication with the bank. When the bank is informed early and kept in the loop, the process moves faster and far more smoothly.

Why Communication Is Critical

From the bank’s perspective, opening a new MSB location is not simply adding another address. There are multiple regulatory, licensing, and operational steps that must be completed before the first transaction can take place.

We often see situations where a customer notifies the bank months in advance, receives a checklist of required items, then communication stops. When the customer reconnects and is ready to open, none of the required steps have been completed. At that point, the bank cannot approve activity, even if the storefront is ready.

Consistent communication ensures both sides stay aligned and prevents last-minute delays.

What Is Required Before a New Location Can Operate

Depending on the state, services offered, and geographic location, opening a new branch may require:

  • Updated FinCEN registration to reflect the new location
  • State check cashing licenses for the specific state
  • Remote Deposit Capture setup and successful trial deposits
  • Cash courier agreements
  • Confirmation that Surety Bank can service cash needs in that area
  • Internal system setup for deposits, approvals, and reporting

Even experienced MSBs are sometimes surprised to learn that requirements vary by state and location. A location that works in one market may require different preparation in another.

A Common Misunderstanding

Many MSBs assume that once a lease is signed and the store is ready, operations can begin immediately. From a banking and regulatory standpoint, this is not always the case.

If required licenses, amendments, or system testing are not completed, the bank cannot allow the location to operate. This is not meant to slow down your business. It is meant to protect both your operation and the bank from compliance violations.

How to Open Faster and With Fewer Issues

The most efficient openings share a few things in common:

  • The bank is notified as soon as expansion is being considered
  • Communication continues throughout the setup process
  • Documentation is submitted promptly
  • Questions are asked early, not at the last minute

When communication stays consistent, opening timelines are shorter, approvals are smoother, and unexpected delays are far less likely.

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RESOURCES

Maximizing the Capabilities of Your Point-of-Sale Software: A Compliance Tool Every MSB Should Be Using

For many Money Service Businesses (MSBs), a point-of-sale (POS) check-cashing system is required in order to bank with Surety. Larger MSBs generally use these systems as intended but smaller, “mom-and-pop” MSBs often don’t fully understand the capabilities of the software they’re paying for each month.

This gap has created significant issues for MSBs and for our analysts when performing compliance reviews.

The truth is: your POS system is not just a transaction tool. It is a powerful compliance engine. And when it’s used correctly, it protects both your business and the bank.

POS Software: You’re Paying for It, Make It Work for You

Every approved vendor on Surety’s list provides a robust set of compliance features. These tools are designed to:

  • Capture complete customer profiles
  • Store accurate ID information
  • Run OFAC checks
  • Detect fraudulent checks using magnetic ink (MICR) recognition
  • Flag expired IDs
  • Organize data for CTRs, SARs, and quarterly reviews

But when MSBs don’t know how to operate the system, or bypass required fields, these features fail, and risk increases.

Where Things Are Going Wrong

The transcription captures several recurring issues we see during reviews. Below are the biggest problems and how to fix them.

1. Poor or Missing Customer Photos

MSBs must take a clear photo of each customer.
But many stores:

  • Never adjust the camera
  • Capture the ceiling or a lamp instead of the customer
  • Skip the photo entirely

This becomes a problem when analysts need to match customers to suspicious activity.

Fix:
✔ Adjust the camera.
✔ Make sure the customer is actually looking at the lens.
✔ Retake the photo if it's unclear.

2. Incorrect Address Information from IDs

When an ID is scanned, the system autofills the address.
But 8 out of 10 profiles contain outdated, inaccurate addresses. This causes major compliance issues when filing CTRs or SARs.

Fix:
✔ Always verbally confirm the customer’s current address.
✔ Update the POS record manually when the ID address is outdated.

3. Not Running OFAC Checks

Some MSBs never used OFAC checks until Surety required POS systems.
Now they have access to the tool and still forget to use it.

Fix:
✔ Ensure OFAC checks run on every customer, every time.

4. Incorrectly Editing Check Information

This is one of the biggest issues.Many MSBs edit the payee section and mistakenly enter:

❌ The name of the person cashing the check (the conductor) instead of:

✔ The name of the entity the check is actually payable to.

This leads to:

  • Bad data
  • Incorrect reporting
  • Inaccurate cross-references during compliance reviews

Fix:
✔ Always enter the maker and payee correctly. ✔ Never leave fields blank. ✔ Never rely on whatever the system “guesses.”

5. Ignoring Fraud Alerts, Including MICR/Magnetic Ink Warnings

Your POS system is capable of detecting fraudulent checks before you cash them. But some MSBs override alerts manually, sometimes losing thousands of dollars.

Fix:
✔ Trust the system.
✔ Never override a fraud alert.
✔ Stop the transaction and ask questions.

Training is Available, Use It!

Most POS vendors offer:

  • One-on-one support
  • Training sessions
  • Feature walk-throughs
  • Troubleshooting help

MSBs are strongly encouraged to schedule additional training with their vendor to learn the system fully.

Why Accurate POS Use Matters to Both You and the Bank

When MSBs use the POS system properly:

MSB Benefits:

  • Fewer losses from fraudulent checks
  • Stronger compliance records
  • Faster and cleaner audits
  • Fewer callbacks and follow-ups

Bank Benefits:

  • Cleaner data for quarterly analysis
  • Accurate suspicious activity detection
  • More efficient reviews
  • Fewer non-compliance penalties for MSBs

If the system is used upfront, risk drops dramatically and compliance becomes smoother for everyone.

Your POS system can only help you if you use it. By taking advantage of the features you’re already paying for, you’ll reduce risk, increase accuracy, and build a stronger compliance foundation for your business.

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RESOURCES

Check Fraud Isn’t Yesterday’s Problem—It’s a 2025 Headache

Paper checks may feel old-school, yet they remain the easiest gateway for thieves. The U.S. Treasury reports that check-fraud suspicious-activity filings have climbed 385 percent since the pandemic, while 63 percent of companies faced attempted or actual check fraud in 2024, according to the Association for Financial Professionals’ 2025 survey.occ.govafponline.org Those numbers tell a blunt story: even as businesses adopt ACH and virtual cards, the humble check still opens a back door to five- and six-figure losses.

A Florida Business Learns the Hard Way (Fictitious Scenario)

The phone lit up in the back office of Sunshine Custom Cabinets on a Thursday afternoon.

Co-owner Angela Moreno glanced at the caller ID from her bank and expected a routine wire inquiry. Instead she heard:

“Ms. Moreno, six checks just cleared your account for almost ten thousand dollars each. Can you confirm them?”

Angela had mailed only three checks that week, none over $4,500. Somewhere between the post-office drop box and her suppliers’ lockboxes, thieves had “washed” the envelopes, bleached the ink, and rewritten the checks for a cool $59,821.32—wiping out two payroll cycles in minutes.

The next 48 hours blurred into police reports, fraud affidavits, and tense conversations with employees wondering if Friday’s pay would arrive. The bank eventually credited most of the money, but cash flow froze for nearly a month, and the team sank forty billable hours into cleaning up—a cost no insurance policy reimbursed.

Four Habit Shifts That Shut the Door on Washed Checks

  1. Treat outgoing mail like cash. Hand checks over the post-office counter or schedule a courier; avoid curbside blue boxes after hours, the favored hunting ground for “mailbox-fishing” crews.
  2. Upgrade the check itself. Print on security stock with chemical-wash indicators and write in permanent gel ink; solvents can’t lift that ink cleanly, and visible fibers split when erased.
  3. Reconcile daily, not weekly. Set same-day alerts and review every cleared item before funds settle; many recovery windows close within 24 hours.
  4. Add an automated backstop. A tool such as Positive Pay compares each presented check to the file you issue and flags mismatches for approval—catching duplicates, altered amounts, or fake payees that busy humans miss. It isn’t a silver bullet, but paired with disciplined habits it turns most forged checks into worthless paper.

Takeaway

Check fraud has morphed from fax-era nuisance to organized, AI-enhanced side hustle. The good news: consistent, unglamorous discipline—secure mailing, rapid reconciliation, and an automated pre-clearance layer—sends fraudsters looking for softer targets. Angela calls that Thursday “the most expensive lesson I never budgeted for.” Tighten your routine today, and you won’t need the same wake-up call.

Need a practical walkthrough of daily controls—minus the jargon? Talk with our Treasury Management team about fitting these layers to your workflow before your next envelope hits the mail.

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RESOURCES

How One Fraud Incident Can Damage Your Business Reputation: A (Fictitious) Cautionary Tale

This is a fictitious story—but it's based on real events that happen to small businesses every single day.

The owner of a thriving local furniture business had just signed the biggest deal of the year. Everything seemed on track until her bookkeeper received an email from a familiar client with “updated wire instructions.” The message looked legitimate. No red flags. So the payment—nearly $50,000—was sent. Two days later, the real client called to say the deposit never arrived. The money was gone. And so was the illusion that something like this “would never happen to us.”

Within a week, long-time customers started asking tough questions. A supplier tightened payment terms. A local partnership quietly backed out of an event. And worse—people started whispering that the business “might not be secure.”

This is how quickly a single fraud incident can unravel years of hard-earned trust.

Why One Fraud Event Can Be So Damaging

Even if you recover the stolen funds or file an insurance claim, the damage to your reputation can last far longer—and cut deeper.

  • Customers lose confidence. A majority of U.S. consumers say they’d stop doing business with a company that experienced a data or financial breach.

  • Vendors and lenders take notice. Your partners may adjust credit terms or even re-evaluate contracts.

  • Employees lose morale. When trust is shaken externally, it often ripples inward too.

  • News travels fast. In the age of online reviews and social media, bad news spreads faster than facts.

Steps You Can Take to Prevent It

Protecting your business starts with building strong internal controls and using the tools your bank offers:

Surety Bank offers many of these solutions through our Treasury team, and we can help tailor them to your specific operations.

If It Happens to You: Rebuilding Trust

Even with great controls, no system is bulletproof. If fraud strikes, your response will determine how much damage your reputation takes—and how quickly you can recover.

In the first 72 hours:

  • Notify your bank and law enforcement immediately.
  • Appoint a single spokesperson for clear, consistent communication.
  • Identify and close the breach—disable accounts, reset credentials, pause payments.
  • Contact affected clients or partners with transparency and professionalism.

In the weeks that follow:

  • Offer real solutions (like credit monitoring or fee reversals) to support affected customers.
  • Implement new controls and publicize your improvements.
  • Bring in a third-party review to verify changes and rebuild confidence.
  • Communicate successes—“90 days fraud-free,” audit completions, or security certifications.

Your Reputation Is Worth Protecting

This fictitious business was lucky—it survived. But the lesson is clear: fraud isn’t just a financial risk, it’s a reputational one. And once trust is broken, it takes time, strategy, and transparency to win it back.

At Surety Bank, we help businesses of all sizes protect their operations from fraud. Whether you need payment controls, alert systems, or a plan for what to do in a crisis, our Treasury & Fraud Prevention Team is here to help.

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RESOURCES

“Building Through the Turbulence” — Insights from CEO Ryan James

In the Summer 2025 issue of Building Central Florida Magazine, Surety Bank’s CEO Ryan James maps out a playbook for contractors battling the tariff-driven spikes in steel, aluminum, and other construction staples. James urges firms to replace one-job-at-a-time budgeting with rolling, company-wide cash-flow forecasts; to negotiate for delivery and payment flexibility; to lock in contingency capital before trouble hits; and to embed escalation clauses that keep margins intact—all while maintaining proactive, transparent communication with clients.

Read the full article on page 17:
Building Through the Turbulence – Building Central Florida Magazine

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RESOURCES

Check Fraud Isn’t Slowing Down—Here’s How Surety Bank Protects Your Business

It’s easy to assume that in a digital world, check fraud is a thing of the past. But the reality is quite the opposite. In 2023 alone, check fraud losses in the Americas totaled a staggering $21 billion—representing 80% of all global check fraud cases. Despite a steady decline in the use of checks, fraudsters are doubling down on a still-vulnerable payment channel.

So what happens when a check your business issued ends up in the wrong hands?

Let’s say you wrote a vendor check back in February. Today, that check suddenly clears—but it’s been altered or stolen. What’s your next move? Do you catch it in time? Will your bank reimburse the loss? If you’re like many business owners, you’d expect your bank to take care of it. But depending on the terms in your bank’s Deposit Agreement, you may only have 30 days from the date of your statement to report the fraud and recover those funds. And once that window closes, so may your chances of getting that money back.

At Surety Bank, we want our business clients to know that help exists—and it's called Positive Pay.

What Is Positive Pay?

Positive Pay is a fraud prevention tool that verifies checks presented for payment against a list of checks you’ve actually issued. If the details don’t match, the bank flags the check and reaches out before funds are released.

It’s like having a security checkpoint for every check your business issues.

Why Positive Pay Matters Now More Than Ever

Here’s what fraud can really cost your business:

  • $200+ in hard costs just to close a compromised account and reissue checks
  • Lost productivity from dealing with account closures, reissued checks, vendor calls, and legal claims
  • Reputational risk if your vendors or clients are affected by stolen checks
  • Lost funds if you miss the reporting window in your Deposit Agreement

Surety Bank’s Positive Pay solution is designed to reduce those risks before they become losses. Instead of waiting for fraud to strike, it gives business owners a chance to act first.

Real Talk: You Don’t Have Time for Fraud

Most business owners don’t have the luxury of watching every check line item on their bank statement. Positive Pay works in the background—quietly checking, flagging, and helping you intercept fraud before it’s too late.

By offering this service, we’re not just protecting your account—we’re protecting your time, your reputation, and your peace of mind.

Let’s Talk

Check fraud isn’t going away. But your exposure to it can.

If you’re still issuing paper checks, it’s time to ask yourself: How am I protecting my business from check fraud? At Surety Bank, we’re ready to help you find the answer.

Reach out to our Treasury Management team to learn how Positive Pay can fit into your fraud prevention strategy.

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RESOURCES

How Your Company Culture Should Drive Employee Benefits: A Lesson from Manufacturing

A Manufacturing Story: The Right Benefits for the Right Team

At East Coast Precision, a mid-sized manufacturing company in Florida, business was booming. Their team of 75 employees worked hard producing high-quality aerospace components, and their reputation for precision and reliability was unmatched. But as the company grew, its leadership team—Mark, the founder, and Sarah, the operations manager—realized their employee benefits needed a rethink.

The question wasn’t just about what benefits to offer, but why.

East Coast Precision had a unique culture. Their employees valued stability, but they also needed flexibility. Many had families, some were nearing retirement, and a few had been with the company since its early days. Their competitor across town shut down for two weeks every December, giving employees a built-in break. But Mark and Sarah knew that wouldn’t work for them—their production schedule relied on steady output, and some employees preferred to spread their vacation days throughout the year.

Then came the tougher decisions: PTO policies, sick days, and financial benefits. Some employees wanted a 401(k), but others, like newer hires fresh out of trade school, were more concerned about weekly take-home pay than long-term savings. The leadership team had to balance what was best for employees with what kept the business strong.

In the end, they set clear, fair policies:

  • A standard PTO structure that gave employees predictability while allowing some flexibility for emergencies.
  • A 401(k) plan with a company match—valuable for those who wanted it, but not the only benefit available.
  • A hard rule on consistency, but with room for exceptions. When a longtime employee, Miguel, was diagnosed with cancer, they made it clear that his extended time off was an exception, communicated transparently to the rest of the team.

The result? Employees felt valued, turnover dropped, and the company’s production remained steady.

Your Culture, Your Benefits

This lesson applies beyond manufacturing. Whether you run a law firm, a retail store, or a tech startup, the benefits you offer should reflect your company’s values and mission.

  • Set a Clear Standard: Employees need to know what to expect. Whether it’s vacation time, sick leave, or parental leave, consistency creates trust.
  • Make Room for Exceptions When It Matters: While consistency is key, life doesn’t always follow a rulebook. If an employee is battling cancer or facing another major life challenge, it’s okay to make exceptions—just be clear about why.
  • Choose Benefits That Fit Your Team: A 401(k) might be a great fit for a company focused on long-term stability, but maybe a student loan assistance program makes more sense for a younger workforce. There’s no one-size-fits-all approach.
  • Keep Employees Connected to the Mission: Benefits shouldn’t be just another HR checkbox. They should reinforce what your company stands for. If you value work-life balance, your time-off policy should reflect that. If teamwork is a core value, benefits that encourage collaboration—like company-wide retreats or group health programs—might be a better fit.

Further Insight: Lessons from Expandable Video Series

For a deeper dive into how company culture and leadership impact employee benefits, check out this episode of The Expandable video series:
▶️ watch here

This video highlights the importance of strong leadership in shaping workplace culture, ensuring that employees are supported while keeping the organization’s mission at the forefront. The same principles apply when designing benefits—leaders must make choices that align with their company’s values while balancing business needs.

Finding the Right Balance

Ultimately, employee benefits should be a reflection of your company’s identity. They should serve your employees while keeping the business strong and able to serve its customers. Whether that means closing for two weeks each year or offering flexible PTO, the key is to make intentional choices—ones that align with your mission and show employees that they matter.

At Surety Bank, we understand that businesses thrive when they build strong relationships—both with their customers and their teams. When you design benefits that truly fit your company culture, you create a workplace where employees feel valued, engaged, and ready to do their best work.

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RESOURCES

Suspicious Activity Report Best Practices for MSBs

As an MSB, you are probably aware that you have to file a suspicious activity report (SAR) if you detect any kind of facts that point to suspicious financial activity. This is a necessary requirement that can either create a layer of work that detracts from your focus of growth or can become an integral part of your business and fuel growth.

Similar to a Currency Transaction Report (CTR), a SAR reports the information of the customer in question but then gives as much information about the actual suspicious activity found by your team.

Depending on the activity, some customers can fly under the radar if your team isn’t trained to spot subtle actions that add up over time or point to some larger issue. Unlike a CTR, suspicious activity is not always as noticeable. Having a team that is defaulting to a mindset of watching for suspicious activity versus trying to catch things that have already happened is a good start to making this a priority.

Here is a good example of the not so obvious suspicious activity:

Frank Smith comes into your business and asks for 12 money orders in the amount of $1000.00 each. The cash Frank hands over consists of mostly large bills. When you ask him for additional information to complete your CTR he gets defensive and is wondering why you are asking him so many questions. He asks you how much money he can deposit without having to provide additional information. He gets irritated and decides to cancel the transaction and take all his cash back.

https://www.fincen.gov/resources/statutes-regulations/...

This is an example of structuring.

Structuring is the breaking up of transactions for the purpose of evading the Bank Secrecy Act reporting and record keeping requirements and, if appropriate thresholds are met, should be reported as a suspicious transaction under 31 C.F.R. § 103.18.

Why should you make your SAR a priority?

Besides the obvious negative results that will come at some point, making your SAR process a priority puts you in the driver’s seat in your business. You are choosing to stay on top of something that will inevitably blow up if not paid significant attention.

By making this a priority you are also choosing to say no to certain less than desirable customers who might actually be a good source of revenue. As an MSB, at times you can be incentivized to ignore some types of suspicious activity. The trade off between servicing and not reporting customers who bring you revenue or not servicing those customers, is a decision that will keep you in business for many years and allow you to sleep soundly at night. Just remember that one bad customer can put you out of business.

How to properly approach SAR filing:

Use compliance as your competitive advantage. We see MSBs go out of business all the time because they aren’t prioritizing the efforts that make up the fundamentals of their business.

Have a set process for how your team identifies and reports suspicious activity. Build this into your culture. Hiring people who want to help you run a business that’s above board and giving them a solid process, means you don’t have to manage them as closely and can still get the same result.

Reach out to our BSA team through our website at mysuretybank.com/msb for more information or connect with directly our CEO by email: rjames@surety.bank

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RESOURCES

Forget Growth for Growth’s Sake: Scale Your Company with Purpose

Forget Growth for Growth’s Sake. Scale Your Company With Purpose! 

Every business owner dreams of growth—the big contracts, the expanding team, the larger facility. Growth is exciting, but what happens when it outpaces your ability to sustain it? For small to mid-sized business owners, the challenge isn’t just getting bigger—it’s growing profitably. Scale too quickly, and you could find yourself losing control of your business. Scale too cautiously, and you risk stagnation. So, how do you strike the right balance?

The Growth Trap: A Cautionary Tale

Imagine you own a manufacturing company, and a massive order comes in. It’s a dream deal—10,000 units instead of the usual 1,000. You scramble to increase production, hiring new employees, ordering more materials, even taking on debt to finance the expansion. But a few months later, you realize you’re barely breaking even. The new employees aren’t fully trained yet, production costs have skyrocketed, and cash flow is tight. Your profit margins, which seemed healthy before, are now razor-thin. Worse, your suppliers have increased their prices due to the larger volume, but you didn’t adjust your pricing in time. You’re now operating at a loss, despite the influx of new business.

This scenario is all too common. Growth, if not managed wisely, can erode profits instead of increasing them. The key? Strategic scaling.

Profitability First, Expansion Second

In the early days, you might not be profitable, and that’s okay. Many businesses start in the red, investing in marketing, product development, and hiring. However, you must ensure you’re not losing money per product. If each unit costs $12 to make and you sell it for $10, no amount of scaling will save you—you’re just multiplying losses.

Similarly, new employees take time to become profitable. Hiring is an investment in growth, but it often takes months before an employee generates more revenue than they cost. Business owners must anticipate this ramp-up period and avoid over-hiring too soon.

Where to Focus Your Growth

Not all growth is created equal. The most efficient areas of expansion are those where costs scale more slowly than revenue. Prioritize these strategies:

  • Leverage existing customers – It’s often cheaper and easier to expand business with current clients than to acquire new ones. Upselling, cross-selling, and building long-term relationships can provide more reliable revenue.

  • Double down on profitable products – Identify which products or services have the best margins and focus your growth efforts there. If one product is highly profitable and in demand, scaling its production efficiently can drive sustainable revenue.
  • Use data-driven decisions – Let financial and operational metrics guide your expansion strategy. Growth decisions should be based on performance indicators, not just ambition.

  • Improve operational efficiency – Streamlining processes and cutting waste can make it easier to scale profitably. Investing in automation, refining supply chains, and optimizing production workflows can enhance margins even as volume increases.

Controlled Growth vs. Losing Control

Growth is exhilarating, but it must be controlled. Many business owners get so caught up in expansion that they give up too much equity, bringing in investors who eventually take control. Others overextend, running out of cash when things don’t go as planned.

Instead, keep growth sustainable:

  • Fund expansion wisely – Reinvest profits when possible, rather than relying too heavily on debt or outside investors.

  • Pace yourself – Don’t rush to fulfill a huge order if it means straining resources beyond capacity. Scaling too quickly without the right infrastructure can lead to operational failures and reputational damage.

  • Protect your ownership stake – Too much outside investment can leave you as a minority shareholder in your own company. Consider alternative funding strategies, such as strategic partnerships or revenue-based financing, to maintain control.

Avoid Growth for Growth’s Sake

It’s easy to get caught up in vanity metrics—chasing higher sales, expanding into new markets, or acquiring more customers—without asking whether that growth actually benefits the business. But growth is not a goal in itself; it should be a means to an end. Every expansion initiative should answer a fundamental question: Will this make my business stronger in the long run? If the answer isn’t clear, it may be a sign to reassess.

Strategic growth means planning ahead. Before you leap, have a roadmap. Set clear, measurable goals, such as: “We aim to increase production by 50% over the next 18 months, which should yield a 20% revenue increase while maintaining a 15% profit margin.” This approach ensures that growth aligns with financial health, rather than just inflating top-line revenue while squeezing profits.

Smart business owners don’t just chase expansion; they balance growth with profitability. They scale strategically, ensuring each step forward is sustainable, and never lose sight of their core business strengths. With a steady hand, you can grow your company without losing control of it—and that’s the real measure of success.

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RESOURCES

Forget Growth for Growth’s Sake: Scale Your Company with Purpose

Forget Growth for Growth’s Sake. Scale Your Company With Purpose! 

Every business owner dreams of growth—the big contracts, the expanding team, the larger facility. Growth is exciting, but what happens when it outpaces your ability to sustain it? For small to mid-sized business owners, the challenge isn’t just getting bigger—it’s growing profitably. Scale too quickly, and you could find yourself losing control of your business. Scale too cautiously, and you risk stagnation. So, how do you strike the right balance?

The Growth Trap: A Cautionary Tale

Imagine you own a manufacturing company, and a massive order comes in. It’s a dream deal—10,000 units instead of the usual 1,000. You scramble to increase production, hiring new employees, ordering more materials, even taking on debt to finance the expansion. But a few months later, you realize you’re barely breaking even. The new employees aren’t fully trained yet, production costs have skyrocketed, and cash flow is tight. Your profit margins, which seemed healthy before, are now razor-thin. Worse, your suppliers have increased their prices due to the larger volume, but you didn’t adjust your pricing in time. You’re now operating at a loss, despite the influx of new business.

This scenario is all too common. Growth, if not managed wisely, can erode profits instead of increasing them. The key? Strategic scaling.

Profitability First, Expansion Second

In the early days, you might not be profitable, and that’s okay. Many businesses start in the red, investing in marketing, product development, and hiring. However, you must ensure you’re not losing money per product. If each unit costs $12 to make and you sell it for $10, no amount of scaling will save you—you’re just multiplying losses.

Similarly, new employees take time to become profitable. Hiring is an investment in growth, but it often takes months before an employee generates more revenue than they cost. Business owners must anticipate this ramp-up period and avoid over-hiring too soon.

Where to Focus Your Growth

Not all growth is created equal. The most efficient areas of expansion are those where costs scale more slowly than revenue. Prioritize these strategies:

  • Leverage existing customers – It’s often cheaper and easier to expand business with current clients than to acquire new ones. Upselling, cross-selling, and building long-term relationships can provide more reliable revenue.

  • Double down on profitable products – Identify which products or services have the best margins and focus your growth efforts there. If one product is highly profitable and in demand, scaling its production efficiently can drive sustainable revenue.
  • Use data-driven decisions – Let financial and operational metrics guide your expansion strategy. Growth decisions should be based on performance indicators, not just ambition.

  • Improve operational efficiency – Streamlining processes and cutting waste can make it easier to scale profitably. Investing in automation, refining supply chains, and optimizing production workflows can enhance margins even as volume increases.

Controlled Growth vs. Losing Control

Growth is exhilarating, but it must be controlled. Many business owners get so caught up in expansion that they give up too much equity, bringing in investors who eventually take control. Others overextend, running out of cash when things don’t go as planned.

Instead, keep growth sustainable:

  • Fund expansion wisely – Reinvest profits when possible, rather than relying too heavily on debt or outside investors.

  • Pace yourself – Don’t rush to fulfill a huge order if it means straining resources beyond capacity. Scaling too quickly without the right infrastructure can lead to operational failures and reputational damage.

  • Protect your ownership stake – Too much outside investment can leave you as a minority shareholder in your own company. Consider alternative funding strategies, such as strategic partnerships or revenue-based financing, to maintain control.

Avoid Growth for Growth’s Sake

It’s easy to get caught up in vanity metrics—chasing higher sales, expanding into new markets, or acquiring more customers—without asking whether that growth actually benefits the business. But growth is not a goal in itself; it should be a means to an end. Every expansion initiative should answer a fundamental question: Will this make my business stronger in the long run? If the answer isn’t clear, it may be a sign to reassess.

Strategic growth means planning ahead. Before you leap, have a roadmap. Set clear, measurable goals, such as: “We aim to increase production by 50% over the next 18 months, which should yield a 20% revenue increase while maintaining a 15% profit margin.” This approach ensures that growth aligns with financial health, rather than just inflating top-line revenue while squeezing profits.

Smart business owners don’t just chase expansion; they balance growth with profitability. They scale strategically, ensuring each step forward is sustainable, and never lose sight of their core business strengths. With a steady hand, you can grow your company without losing control of it—and that’s the real measure of success.

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How Smart Commercial Construction Businesses Master Cash Flow

Cash flow is the lifeblood of any business. Whether you're managing a commercial construction firm or running a retail operation, understanding how money moves in and out of your business is key to long-term success. Poor cash flow management can leave businesses scrambling to cover expenses, even when profits look good on paper.

A recent episode of the Expandable Series discussed this in detail, but here are some fundamental cash flow principles, using commercial construction as an example, that apply to businesses across all industries.

1. Understand Your Cash Outflows

In commercial construction, significant cash outlays are required upfront for raw materials, permits, and labor. These costs must be covered well before payments from clients arrive. Similarly, in retail, manufacturers need to purchase inventory long before customers make a purchase.

A business must have enough cash on hand to cover these expenses. Without it, operations may stall, delaying projects and impacting profitability. Understanding your cash needs ahead of time ensures smoother financial management.

Example: Imagine a mid-sized construction firm, Apex Builders, takes on a new commercial office project. Before the first payment arrives, they must pay for steel beams, concrete, and skilled labor. Without proper cash reserves or a well-structured payment schedule, Apex Builders could struggle to cover these costs, potentially halting the project and damaging their reputation.

2. Time Your Cash Inflows Strategically

Revenue in commercial construction typically comes from milestone payments throughout a project or upon completion. However, these payments can be delayed due to contract terms, client approvals, or unexpected issues.

For any business, it’s essential to analyze how long it takes to convert expenses into revenue. Are you waiting 30, 60, or even 90 days to get paid? If so, your business must be structured to withstand these gaps. Ensuring that your contract terms align with your cash flow needs can prevent unnecessary financial strain.

Example: Apex Builders structures their contracts to ensure payments are received at key milestones—such as after the foundation is laid, after framing is completed, and upon final inspection. By planning these payment intervals, they reduce financial stress and ensure they always have working capital.

3. Build a Cash Buffer

One of the best strategies for managing cash flow is to build a buffer that accounts for timing discrepancies. In construction, this means having enough reserves to cover payroll and material costs while waiting for payments. The same principle applies to any business with delayed payments.

This buffer should be built into your pricing. Instead of operating on razor-thin margins, factor in potential delays and unexpected costs when setting your rates. This ensures financial stability even during slower payment periods.

Example: Apex Builders includes a 10% contingency in their project bids, ensuring that if a client delays payment or unexpected costs arise, they have the liquidity to keep operations running smoothly.

4. Plan for Payroll and Fixed Expenses

Payroll is a non-negotiable expense in any business. Employees expect timely paychecks, and failure to meet payroll obligations can lead to operational disruptions and even legal consequences.

Since payroll and other fixed expenses (like rent, utilities, and insurance) don’t change based on revenue fluctuations, they must be accounted for in advance. Forecasting these expenses over the next quarter will help ensure you always have the necessary funds available.

Example: Apex Builders schedules payments from previous projects to help cover payroll during slow months, ensuring that employees are always paid on time.

5. Look Ahead to the Next Quarter

Successful businesses don’t just think about today’s cash flow—they plan for the next quarter and beyond. What projects are in the pipeline? When will revenue from those projects be realized? What expenses need to be covered in the meantime?

By forecasting cash flow and preparing for potential shortfalls, businesses can make informed decisions about when to invest, when to hold back, and when to seek additional financing options to bridge any gaps.

Example: Apex Builders maintain a rolling cash flow projection, helping them anticipate slow periods and ensuring they never take on more projects than they can financially support at one time.

The Bottom Line

Cash flow management isn’t just about tracking numbers—it’s about planning ahead, building flexibility into your pricing, and ensuring your business can withstand the natural ebbs and flows of financial cycles. Whether you’re in commercial construction, retail, or any other industry, mastering cash flow is essential for long-term success. Surety Bank is here to help businesses navigate these challenges with financial solutions designed to keep operations running smoothly.

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RESOURCES

Online Banking: How to Stay Secure

As more banking moves online, security has become just as important as convenience. Whether you’re checking a personal account or managing company finances, your computer habits play a critical role in keeping your information safe. A few consistent practices can greatly reduce your risk of fraud and protect sensitive data.

Keep Your Computer Free from Malware

Malware can capture keystrokes, steal login credentials, and access personal files without you realizing it. To stay protected:

  • Install reputable antivirus and anti-malware software
  • Enable real-time protection
  • Run regular scans
  • Keep security tools updated (paid versions often provide stronger protection and support)

Use Strong Security Features

Make full use of the security tools your devices and bank provide:

  • Enable Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) for extra protection beyond a password
  • Keep your firewall active to block unauthorized access
  • Update your operating system and browser regularly (set updates to run automatically if possible)

Always Log Out After Banking

Closing your browser window isn’t enough to end your session.

  • Always log out completely
  • This is especially important on public or shared computers, which may store session data if you don’t log out

Clear Your Browser Data Regularly

Browsers can store sensitive information like login pages or cached credentials. To protect yourself:

  • Clear your cache and cookies regularly
  • Avoid saving banking passwords in your browser—use a secure password manager instead
  • Do not share your credentials with anyone
  • On shared devices, use Private or Incognito Mode

Avoid Clicking on Suspicious Links

Phishing emails and fraudulent pop-ups can trick you into giving away banking information. Watch for:

  • Emails urging “urgent action” with links
  • Unexpected attachments from unknown senders
  • Pop-ups asking for banking credentials

Best practice: Always access your bank by typing the official web address directly into your browser, never through email or ad links.

For Business Clients

Businesses face higher risks, so proactive steps are essential:

  • Secure all employee devices
  • Set role-based access controls and permissions
  • Conduct regular cybersecurity training
  • If you suspect suspicious activity, contact your bank immediately

Staying Proactive

Online banking can be safe and reliable when paired with good cybersecurity habits. By:

  • Keeping your systems clean
  • Using strong security features
  • Staying alert to suspicious activity

…you can protect both your finances and your peace of mind.

The key is consistency. Security isn’t a one-time task—it’s a set of habits built into your everyday banking routine. Taking these steps ensures your accounts remain secure, your sensitive information stays private, and you can manage your finances confidently, whether personally or for your business.

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Community

Skydive DeLand: A Legacy of Innovation, Community, and Global Impact

For many residents of DeLand, the airport on the north side of town feels like a world of its own. Planes climb into the sky daily. Parachutes bloom overhead. Visitors arrive from across the globe. What many may not realize is that Skydive DeLand is not only a local attraction. It is one of the most influential skydiving centers in the world.

A History That Shaped the Sport

Skydive DeLand began operations in 1982, taking over a location that had already seen continuous skydiving activity since 1958. From its earliest days, the company was led by competitors at the highest level of the sport. Both founders were National Champions, and one went on to achieve the title of World Champion in four-person team competition.

That competitive ambition changed the sport.

To pursue world-class performance, the founders enhanced the way teams trained. They invested in aircraft, facilities, personnel, and infrastructure that allowed for intensive, structured team training. At the time, very few drop zones operated seven days a week. Skydive DeLand quickly became a full-time operation, open year-round.

As teams discovered the level of support and consistency available in DeLand, they began traveling here from all over the world. What started as a training philosophy became a global destination.

For many years, Skydive DeLand was recognized as the most active skydiving center in the world.

Building the Skydiving Capital of the World

As training programs expanded, so did the industry surrounding them. Equipment manufacturers began relocating to DeLand in order to test new parachute designs and innovations in real-world conditions.

Today, more than 20 skydiving-related companies operate in the DeLand area. Together, they form the largest parachute equipment manufacturing cluster in the world. Skydive DeLand serves as the anchor for that ecosystem.

Manufacturers rely on the consistent jump activity to test new canopies and equipment designs. Similar to how automotive companies rely on test tracks, skydiving manufacturers rely on active drop zones.

The result is that DeLand became known internationally as the Skydiving Capital of the World. Travelers from Europe, South America, and across the United States continue to visit year after year, particularly during the late winter and spring seasons when weather conditions are ideal.

A Community Within a Community

Beyond competitions and equipment development, Skydive DeLand has fostered a global community.

Teams train here for weeks or months at a time. Large events have attracted hundreds of participants. National championships have been hosted here. At any given time, visitors may be staying in local hotels, RVs, or short-term rentals.

That international presence supports tourism, local hospitality, and small businesses throughout DeLand. A past industry census estimated more than 600 jobs connected directly or indirectly to the skydiving and equipment manufacturing sector.

During economic downturns, when other industries struggled, Skydive DeLand remained strong. Tandem jumps and recreational experiences continued to attract visitors. Equipment manufacturing remained active. That stability helped support the broader local economy during difficult periods.

The people who make up the skydiving community are also deeply engaged locally. Many longtime jumpers and industry professionals participate in other civic and community activities throughout DeLand. For those who retire from jumping, many continue to invest their energy in the town they have come to call home.

The Loss of a Founder

In 2025, the Skydive DeLand community experienced a devastating loss.

Bob Hallett, one of the two original founders and the majority shareholder of the company, passed away unexpectedly following a traffic accident on his way to work. He had been with the company since its early days and remained actively involved in daily operations.

Bob was not only a business leader but a central figure in the skydiving community. His vision and commitment helped shape Skydive DeLand into the global leader it became. His passing deeply affected employees, jumpers, manufacturers, and longtime friends across the industry.

For a company that has operated as both a workplace and a close-knit community, the loss was profound. Yet the legacy he helped build continues in the culture, the operations, and the global impact of the organization.

A Global Reputation With Local Roots

One story reflects just how far Skydive DeLand’s reach extends. A local Stetson professor once attended a conference in Taiwan and turned on the television in his hotel room. There was a feature about Skydive DeLand. He returned home surprised to discover that an internationally recognized skydiving center operated just minutes from where he lived.

That story captures something unique about Skydive DeLand. It has put DeLand on the world map, even if some residents are not fully aware of what happens at the airport each day.

Visitors are welcome to observe jumps from the viewing areas or enjoy the adjacent restaurant deck. Others choose to experience a tandem jump. Some begin lifelong careers in the sport. Whether someone comes to watch or to participate, Skydive DeLand remains open and active every day.

For more information, visit SkyDiveDeLand.com to learn about tandem experiences, training programs, and upcoming events.

Skydive DeLand is more than a drop zone. It is a global training center, an innovation hub, and a long-standing contributor to the DeLand community. Its history reflects ambition, resilience, and a deep commitment to both sport and town.

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From Family Dream to Community Staple: The Story of Chef Nora and Golden Meals

In the heart of downtown, amidst the vibrant pulse of local eateries and community events, there’s a name that keeps coming up: Chef Nora. If you’ve dined at De La Vega, you’ve likely experienced her artistry on a plate. But beyond the signature flavors and culinary finesse, there's a deeper, richer story — one of family, perseverance, and community love. And now, with her latest venture, Golden Meals, Chef Nora is cooking up something even more personal.

From New Mexico to New Beginnings

Chef Nora’s journey into the restaurant world began two decades ago when she and her family — her parents, brother, and sister — moved from New Mexico to Florida. They left behind everything familiar on the word of a family friend who saw promise in a vacant restaurant spot downtown.

With only a bit of restaurant experience between them, they leapt into entrepreneurship. “It wasn’t just a job,” Nora recalls. “I had already worked in restaurants. I realized what I really wanted was to have my own.” The family rallied around her dream — a move that not only shaped their livelihoods but also laid the groundwork for something bigger than any one of them could have imagined.

The Birth and Evolution of De La Vega

Their first venture was De La Vega — a name that not only carried their family heritage but symbolized their growing identity in the community. “We started with Tex-Mex,” Nora explained, “but quickly realized there were too many of those already. So we pivoted to something unique: Latin fusion with a tapas concept.”

It was a family effort from the start. Nora spearheaded the menu, crafting recipes with creativity and care, while her brother took on the general manager role. “It was our school,” she says. “Everything we’ve learned in the past 20 years, we learned by doing.”

Today, De La Vega is more than a restaurant — it’s a beloved local fixture. With loyal customers, an ever-evolving menu, and a consistent focus on flavor, it’s the kind of place that gets recommended again and again.

Honoring Her Father: The Spark Behind Golden Meals

The concept for Golden Meals was born not in a commercial kitchen, but in Nora’s own home. “My dad was living in the senior apartments, and I used to make meals for him — healthy, ready to eat, so he didn’t have to cook.” After he passed away three years ago, Nora found herself talking to his neighbors — many of whom had similar needs. The idea began to take shape: a meal service designed to support seniors, promote wellness, and most importantly, taste amazing.

But what started as a personal project in memory of her father has grown into something with far wider impact.

Golden Meals: Nourishment for All

While initially conceived as a service for seniors, Golden Meals quickly found a broader audience. “Everyone needs healthy food — busy moms, students, professionals,” Nora notes. “We realized this wasn’t just about one group. It’s for anyone who wants quick, affordable, and nutritious meals.”

When a deli inside a local natural market became available, the opportunity felt serendipitous. “Everything was ready — the kitchen, the space. We just had to bring the concept and the heart.”

Golden Meals officially opened its doors four months ago, operating weekdays from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. It functions as both a grab-and-go cafe and a meal delivery service, offering flexible access for people with packed schedules or limited mobility. And yes — delivery is currently free.

A Menu Without Borders

Unlike De La Vega’s Latin fusion focus, Golden Meals is all about clean, fresh ingredients and variety. “We’re not tied to any one cuisine here. We can offer pasta, Asian dishes, vegan options — whatever inspires us and serves our community.”

Everything is made in-house, from scratch. Think: vibrant green beans sautéed with garlic and olive oil, sweet potatoes roasted to perfection, and macaroni salad that’s light but packed with flavor. Sodium and sugar are kept low; flavor is boosted with herbs and spices, not additives.

“We don’t want ‘healthy’ to mean boring,” Nora laughs. “You can eat well and still love every bite.”

The Name That Says It All

Why the name Golden Meals? It’s a tribute to Nora’s father and the community he was part of. “It started with the idea of serving those in their golden years,” she says. “But now it means meals that are golden in quality, golden in purpose. Meals that make you feel good.”

The Challenges That Forged Her Path

Nora doesn’t shy away from talking about the hurdles. “The recession in 2008 hit us hard,” she remembers. “We had to get creative - package deals, specials, anything to bring people in.” Then came the hurricanes, five in their first year in Florida. And of course, COVID lockdown.

“That was one of the toughest. We had no staff. It was just me, my brother, my nephew, my niece. We were cooking, cleaning, delivering — everything. But we made it. That’s what matters.”

For other small business owners, she offers a simple but powerful reminder: “You just keep going. You pivot, you adapt, you lean on your family and your community. And you never lose sight of why you started.”

Where to Find Golden Meals

📍 Located inside the Natural Market
🕚 Open Monday–Friday, 11 AM to 3 PM
📱 Order online or through the Golden Meals app
🚚 Free delivery available for local orders

Whether you're a parent looking for healthier alternatives, a student in need of quick fuel, or a senior seeking convenient meals that actually taste good — Golden Meals has something on the menu for you.

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