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Helping Minnesota Businesses Start Right and Stay Strong (tm) |
Business Startup Overview |
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In theory, starting a business is not that difficult; you find a consumer need, and then find a way to fulfill that need. Often, people begin selling goods or services without registering their businesses anywhere. This is not recommended, however. Fifty percent of all businesses shut down within the first two years; and a full ninety percent close within the first ten years. The number one reason for these alarming rates of business shut-downs is that owners do not adequately plan. Failure to plan is also a primary reason for incurring legal liability in business. Use the steps below to get an overview of what you need to plan for in business. Startup Step-by-Step: Click on any of the links below to learn more about the legal issues pertaining to that step in the business planning process.
There are four crucial steps you should consider, if you wish to reduce your exposure to legal trouble:
Buying a business has its advantages; you can start out running instead of walking. This means you're far more likely to make profit when you begin, than if you start a business from scratch. However, there are also disadvantages. When buying into a business, operations aren't necessarily set up the way you would like them to be. You may find certain systems cumbersome and in need of change. You may have employees that you don't find suitable. It's almost impossible to find a business where everything is just as you would have set it up. Further, when you buy a business, you loose the opportunity to know it as intimately as when you've built it from the ground up. This may be a disadvantage when faced with managing the new business. Aside from these practical considerations, there are also a couple legal issues of which you should be aware. First, depending on how the purchase was structured, you may be taking on all the debts and legal liabilities of the business prior to when you purchased the business. Second, you may be buying property in the business that is secured as collateral for a third party. If so, that party may be able to collect on the debt and take the secured property, even if you didn't agree to take on the prior liabilities or debts of the business. You also have to be careful that the transfer of intellectual property rights is done legally. This is a tricky area that absolutely requires an attorney experienced in intellectual property transfers and licenses. Finally, you'll want to make sure that you're buying something of value. Too often, people buy businesses that they could have easily started themselves, or that are not profitable. For this reason, you are strongly urged to hire a CPA experienced in business valuation. Click Here for CPA referrals If you use a business broker, be clear about who the broker represents. Unfortunately, too many brokers claim to represent your interest when in fact they are representing the seller. In reality, too many brokers represent only themselves; they only get paid if they make the sale happen. If you have an attorney representing both parties to a sale, at least you can rest assured the attorney risks loosing his/her law license if there is unfair favoritism of one party over another or if the attorney fails to reveal a conflict of interest.
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