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5 Tips For The Aspiring Stay-At-Home Entrepreneur
It seems as though everyone these days has a side hustle on the side of their regular job, but having a successful home-based business comes with challenges of its own. From work/life balance to day-to-day operations of running a business from your home, there are many considerations for the successful entrepreneur: personal, professional, and legal. If you have or are thinking about starting a home-based business, our Small Business Consulting Service can help self-employed sole proprietors get their business off the ground and soaring to new heights! And our Home Based Business Add On may be right for you if you need legal advice and assistance 24/7 from experienced, dedicated attorneys: from reading contracts to making sure you get paid, having a lawyer in your pocket removes stress and lets you focus on what you do best. Learn more about this add-on to your Legal Protection Plan and read on for a few home-based business tips.
Make A Schedule & Stick To It
If it's work time, be working. If you're with your kids, be with your kids and not distracted doing something else for your home-based business. Setting office hours can help you get more done and keep your professional and personal lives separate. Don't answer work or business calls during family time and make sure your family knows when it's your work time... and stick to it!
Take Breaks
You can't run a successful business if you're running on empty, so make sure to set aside time for yourself as well as time for family and time for work. Get to bed early and take naps when you can. Nothing gets accomplished if you're not taking care of yourself.
Keep A Planner
Plan everything: meetings, calls, lunches, date nights, birthday parties, classes, vacations, goals, rest time, play time, and more. Anything and everything can be planned, and making sure you get to everything means making plans every day and sticking to them. Set goals for each day, week, month, and year. Don't think that you have to put dates with your spouse or lunch with your friends off to have a highly successful business; they just need to be planned in advance. You're working hard to be able to spend time with your family and friends!
Delegate Wherever Possible
When your business becomes more successful, consider hiring out some of the things that take up a lot of your time. Consider hiring a cleaning service to come in once or twice per week, set up an online system to make your appointments and meetings for you, or consider hiring an accountant to take over those tasks. As your business becomes more successful, you'll be able to find ways to create more time by delegating out tasks that take up a lot of time.
Networking
Your business will grow faster the more people you know, so building relationships with your clients and others you do business with will be important as your business grows. You may even find that, as you get closer to the people you interact with, that your professional and personal lives can bleed into each other a little here and there; for instance bringing your kids to a casual meeting or other event.
If you have questions about starting or managing a home based business, our Small Business Consulting Services and Home-Based Business add on may be good options for you. Make an appointment to discuss your business needs today!
Differences Between Corporations & LLCs
Deciding between a Corporation and an LLC often comes down to small details when a new small business owner is building a new business. Choosing the right entity for your business means taking a long look at all the considerations.
It is always best to seek the advice of an experienced small business lawyer, consultant, or accountant before you start (and our small business legal subscription plans are the perfect, in-budget solution for small business startups!), but here is a brief overview of the differences between a Corporation and an LLC.
Legal Entity VS Tax Entity
There is a difference between a Legal Entity (an LLC or Corporation) and a Tax Entity (C-Corps and S-Corps VS Sole Proprietorship/Partnership). A tax entity is how the IRS (and some state tax boards) classifies the business. The legal entity is how the courts, the state, and partners view the business. For instance, a corporation (the legal entity) gets a C-Corp or S-Corp tax designation and a tax entity; however, an LLC (the legal entity) gets to decide how it is classified: as a sole proprietorship/partnership or C-Corp for tax purposes, as there is no LLC tax entity. LLCs are then designated, for tax purposes, one of the other tax identities, typically, the tax type that has the most benefits for the business.
Speaking of Taxes...
LLCs have flexibility with their tax designation that corporations don't. A disadvantage of the corporation tax designation is the "double taxation" implication. Corporations' profits are taxed (corporate tax), and then shareholders are taxed on their dividends (individual tax). S-Corp designations allow for flow-through taxation (eliminating the corporate tax), but there are requirements to qualify for this designation, and some requirements may not be ideal for some businesses. Some businesses may have no choice except the C-Corp tax designation and accept the double taxation.
An LLC, regardless of organization and structure, chooses how it wants to be taxed. An LLC is treated like a "pass through" corporation by default (single taxation), but it can choose to be treated like a C-Corp or an S-Corp if it qualifies. While choosing double taxation may seem counter intuitive, but it does make sense in some situations, though this is rarely the case.
The taxation differences between an LLC and an S-Corp are more nuanced, as both offer pass through taxation (no double tax), but the LLC's distribution of profits are then subject to employment taxes, while an S-Corp's dividends are not. Careful planning means that some businesses can avoid the employment taxes by becoming an S-Corp. However, S-Corps require a lot more paperwork which may deter some businesses from choosing this entity type. As always, new business owners should consult with a small business professional - such as an attorney or a consultant - before making this choice for their new business.
Business Ownership
Shareholders are the owners of a corporation, while the owners of an LLC are members, and there are other differences besides just the names. LLCs can distribute their stakes in ownership regardless of the amount of capital a member has put into the business. A C-Corp can achieve the same result by creating a stock class structure while an S-Corp must have a single class of stocks with dividends distributed proportionally to the amount of capital put in by each shareholder. Creating unique classes of stocks means agreeing to the double taxation.
The management structure of an LLC is usually centralized, meaning that any member can act as a manager and the LLC can choose to have no distinction between the LLC owner and the manager. A corporation must have a Board of Directors to handle management responsibilities and corporate officers running the day-to-day operations. Shareholders are considered owners as a class, but are separated from business decisions except to approve major corporate decisions and to elect directors. Individual shareholders may be elected to be directors or appointed to be officers.
Legal Considerations
The corporation designation has been in existence for hundreds of years, meaning that, as the form has matured, the laws for corporations are virtually uniform. Centuries of case law precedent exist to resolve disputes involving corporations, and financial experts can comfortably guide a corporation knowing how the laws will work.
LLCs are relatively new. LLCs began to be recognized in the 1970s, and with characteristics of both corporations and sole proprietorships/partnerships, an LLC is a "newer" type of legal entity. These dual characteristics mean that states may have different laws and regulations in how LLCs are treated.
Though there can be some similarities to how LLCs are treated state-to-state, there are enough differences that some businesses even choose to be an LLC in one state but a corporation in another. Eventually, laws governing LLCs in the United States should become more uniform, but for now, these discrepancies can be enough to be the deciding factor when a new business owner is structuring their new enterprise.
Helping new business owners understand the legal and tax implications of their new business entity is why I started my business consulting firm. I have helped dozens of businesses through the research, documentation, and filing of forms for small businesses and look forward to helping you and your small business, too!
If you want to start getting the paperwork for your startup handled quickly, easily, and conveniently so you can focus on your business, call (208) 755-8335 or email me at debbie@debbieaferguson.com for an appointment today!