3 Critical Factors To Consider Before Incorporating Your Startup
Incorporating your business can offer your start-up a great deal of legitimacy in the marketplace. It also offers significant liability protections while leaving you extensive room to raise funds from shareholders and grow. However, it’s not a decision to be made lightly. Here are several things you should be thinking about before you incorporate.
Paperwork Issues
If you don’t have a plan for the paperwork you could be in real trouble. Incorporating requires you to file Articles of Incorporation. There are dozens of other formalities to observe as well. Get any one of them wrong and the company could become vulnerable allowing an outside entity to “pierce the corporate veil.” This would strip the protections that keep you and your shareholders' legally separate from the corporation and paving the way for you to be held personally liable.
An incorporation service can be really helpful here. Worldwide Incorporators, for example, files legal documents for clients' corporations all of the time, freeing you to focus on serving your customers instead of managing the nitty gritty details.
Tax/Legal Issues
Corporate tax issues become complex because the corporation will owe state taxes in the states where the company operates plus federal taxes. In addition, the corporation may owe taxes on income, additionally you may owe taxes as a shareholder on income you’ve personally derived from the corporation.
It’s a very good idea to consult an accountant or an attorney before you begin so that you don’t make costly mistakes after you’ve already incorporated that keep you from enjoying the best from your business. For a great article about the biggest legal mistakes that startups make CLICK HERE.
Losing Control
When you incorporate you may no longer have total control over your business. You usually have to hire a board of directors who get to have more of a say, sometimes, than you do. Steve Jobs, for example, was fired by the Board of Directors of his own company!
However, incorporating in some states allows you to maintain much more control, as there are far fewer rules about decision makers. In Delaware, for example, you are permitted name yourself the sole director and board member.






