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Archive for the ‘C-Corporation’ Category

New Year May Mean Time to Incorporate

As 2011 gets under way, borrowing among the country’s small businesses is up, unemployment is expected to fall slightly for December, consumer spending is increasing and manufacturing activity is accelerating.

Accordingly, small businesses need to ask themselves a few questions: Is it time to start hiring? Should the marketing budget be expanded? If so, when? Should the company begin a more proactive social media presence? Is it time to get incorporated? If so, does the business need a registered agent service? What about corporation vs. LLC?

If small businesses begin to receive greater access to capital and outside investors – as they are expected to, thanks to initiatives such as the recently enacted Small Business Lending Fund – then it is important for owners to protect their personal assets through a business entity such as an S Corp, LLC, C Corp or other classification.

“The end of the year is a great time to think about the administration of your business,” Charley Moore, founder and CEO of Rocket Lawyer, told Inc. magazine. “Think about your corporate structure and consider if incorporating at this time will give you a new year of different tax treatment, or protect your company as it goes into a new phase.”

Determining what entity suits your small business is dependent on a number of factors including growth rate, investment, size of staff and assets – both liquid and illiquid. Owners should consult legal or filing experts to determine if the time is right to form an LLC or corporation.

Attention Independent Fashion Designers: Strut Your Stuff for a Chance to Win

fashionAre you an aspiring designer itching to make your mark? Well, we have just the thing.

Blazetrak and Nolcha, a leading platform for independent fashion designers, have teamed up to launch a contest that will give one designer a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to participate in Nolcha Fashion Week: New York in February 2011.

Fashion designers are invited to take part in this online competition by submitting up to six photos of your best work through Blazetrak now through Dec. 17, 2010. You will then be officially entered and guaranteed a review by Nolcha’s team of experts. Images can be drawings, models wearing garments and just garments.

According to www.fibre2fashion.com, the winning fashionista will receive: complimentary exhibition space for awesome exposure at the Nolcha Fashion Lounge: New York; a two-hour consultation regarding target, retailers, supply chain, breakeven and scale of the line by Global Purchasing Group; free membership to Afingo.com plus featured spotlight and interview; a complete business formation package by BizFilings.com for you to form an LLC or form a corporation; and a sourcing package that includes premium level membership to Source4Style, including complimentary swatches and sourcing consultation.

The winning fashion designer will debut live on Ustream on Jan. 17, 2011.

So what are you waiting for? Spread the word. Do you know of any other contests like this targeting independent business owners?

Deciding on a Business Entity Classification

Forming a company requires an idea, but once the idea is translated into a legitimate business entity of forming an LLC or incorporating a business, challenges arise and decisions need to be made.

According to the World Bank, the U.S. ranks eighth in the world for ease in registering a new business, behind Australia, New Zealand, Singapore and others, averaging a span of six steps and six days to become legitimate. China and Brazil, on the other hand, impose some of the most challenging bureaucratic obstacles to incorporating a business, with an average 37 and 120 day process in China and Brazil, respectively.

The U.S. business registration process is not the most efficient one, but it is certainly above average. Most entrepreneurs are intimidated by the process of choosing a business entity. Limited liability companies (LLC), corporations and S corporations are a few examples of business entities, but they all serve the basic function of protecting an individual proprietor or owner from legal or financial debts.

“The decision is more complicated than it may seem: What the government leaves in one pocket, it takes from another,” writes Inc. magazine. “So sit down with a lawyer and accountant to weigh the options in light of your individual tax situation.”

Top 5 Things Small Business Owners are Thankful for this Thanksgiving

Around Thanksgiving time last year, my then 5-year-old nephew, Jack, was asked to write down three things he was most thankful for. Here’s what he put in this order:pizza_opt

  1. God
  2. My family
  3. Pizza

I’m with him on the pizza.

OK, so besides pizza, what are small businesses thankful for?

I would have to agree with the five items that www.network.businessofsoftware.org listed, which include:

  1. Internet. The worldwide Web has certainly sprung open a host of doors and windows of opportunity for small businesses. Not to mention, the Internet has helped support small business growth. “The Internet has given entrepreneurs the freedom and the ability to start new businesses with minimum investment with the help of virtual office/team, online communication, online management of resources and business functions, and a lot more,” according to the Business of Software website.
  2. Social Media. Information can now be transmitted and gathered instantly using tools like LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter. Social media also lends the opportunity for small businesses to ignite the popularity of an idea within hours – putting a whole new spin on public relations.
  3. Knowledge-Based Economy. As the Business of Software list points out, “The competition has shifted from being size-based to knowledge-based. More and more small businesses are able to compete with larger companies purely based on knowledge that they can easily share. The Internet has leveled the playing field to such an extent that a single person company can run like a 1,000-employee global organization.”
  4. Global Access. Once again the Internet enables small business owners to access worldwide vendors and customers. As an example, companies like BizFilings, have played a big role in helping small businesses to form a corporation or form an LLC no matter where they are located.
  5. Affordable Services and Technologies. Many small businesses are empowered with services and technologies that cater specifically to their needs at affordable prices. Websites such as www.toolkit.com share tools and expertise with small business owners at no charge.

What other services and products are you thankful for? We’d love to hear from you!

Oh, and Happy Thanksgiving!

Corporation or LLC?

Perhaps the most common advice a new small business owner hears is to incorporate. There are advantages as well as complications. But even if you decide to go ahead with incorporation, that’s only the first of many choices you’ll need to make. The next step is deciding whether to form a corporation or a limited liability company, or LLC.

The two are similar in many ways. Both are legally a bit like individuals. It’s as if you’ve given birth – suddenly there’s this new entity with rights of its own. Like that new baby, the new entity is NOT equivalent to you, and you’ll get yourself in hot water if you pretend otherwise. Even if you are the only employee, writing a check for Billy’s braces out of the company account is just like writing it out of your next door neighbor’s checkbook.

So long as you are in compliance with state law, both types offer full limited liability to all of the owners of the business in every state. But neither a corporation nor an LLC will protect you in the event of your own malpractice or malfeasance. In both cases, you’ll want business insurance to protect yourself.

Neither will take on your own personal debts—nice try—but in most states and industries, both will protect your personal assets in cases such as legal malfeasance by an employee.

So if they’re similar in all those ways, how are they different? Most of it comes down to the way they’re treated at tax time.

An LLC is a pass-through type of business. Profits and losses of the organization go straight through to the owners. Business income equals personal income, so the owner pays the tax on his or her personal return, and it’s taxed at the individual rate.

Corporations are separate businesses entities with profits and losses taxable to themselves, not to the owners. As a result, corporations are taxed at the corporate rate.

LLCs are generally simpler in structure and in reporting requirements, but in some circumstances, proprietors can earn a substantially increased tax bill through the addition of the self-employment tax, currently at a painful 15.3 percent.

In some situations, corporations can bring their own tax headaches. As mentioned above, the corporation is taxed on its profits, but the owner is also taxed on any dividends and salary from the company. It’s a double tax, and it can seriously cut into the real dollars earned in the end.

This is the beginning, not the end, of a branching tree of decisions. Your attorney or tax accountant can help you find the right path to making your entrepreneurial dream a reality.

See additonal info in our Learning center on both:
Starting an LLC
Starting a corporation

LLC vs. Corporation: Which One Do I Choose?

Are you wondering if you should form an LLC or a Corporation, but just aren’t sure what the similarities or differences are? For an in-depth review of your specific business you should consult with a tax advisor or lawyer, but this article should offer a high-level overview to help you get started.

LLCs and Corporations have basically 4 similarities and 4 primary differences. Keeping these in mind should at least point you to the path you want to explore further for your particular business.

The four similarities are: 

  1. Both types offer limited liability protection for owners.
  2. Both an LLC and a Corporation are separate legal entities created by a state filing.
  3. Both have few ownership restrictions, such as the number of owners or whether they are U.S. residents. The owners don’t even have to be individuals.
  4. Finally, stock ownership can be divided into numerous classes.

Pretty basic really, but very important none-the-less.

There are four primary differences:

1.) Taxation. With a C Corporation, all profits are taxed at the corporate level. That means they face double taxation when any profits are distributed to shareholders, because shareholders must report all dividends on their personal tax returns. S Corporations are pass-through tax entities and taxed more like an LLC.

LLCs are typically pass-through tax entities. In other words, while they do complete a business tax return, the profit or loss of the business is passed through to the owners’ personal tax returns, where it is reported and any necessary tax is paid – or refunded - at the individual level. 

2.) Formalities. Corporations in general, face more extensive internal formalities including adopting bylaws, issuing stock, holding meetings of directors and shareholders, and keeping the minutes of these meetings in the corporate records.

LLCs, however, are not subject to the same internal formalities. But they are encouraged to adopt an operating agreement, issue membership shares, hold and document meetings, and properly document all major decisions of the company. 

3.) Transferability of interest. A shareholder of a C Corporation typically is not required to get approval from other shareholders before selling stock. The stock of an S Corporation is also freely transferable, as long as IRS ownership restrictions are met.

The membership interest (ownership) of an LLC typically is not transferable. A member of an LLC generally must receive approval from the other members before ownership can be sold.

4.) Management structure. An LLC can be managed by members or managers. If an LLC is run by a manager, then the management structure more closely resembles that of a corporation, since the members will not be involved in the daily business decisions of the company.

Corporations have directors and officers. The board of directors oversees and directs the affairs of the corporation and has responsibility for major decisions. The directors elect officers to manage day-to-day operations.

There are of course additional differences when we sift down into the nitty-gritty details of each, but at a high level these basics should begin to point out which entity type appeals to you more, or sounds like it meets your needs more than another. From here it’s best to do some deeper research on your own, or contact an accountant or lawyer with a list of questions.