Forming an LLC
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@eddiejennings said in Forming an LLC:
I decided on Eddie Jennings Services, LLC. Now I get to contact the Secretary of State's office (Georgia) on Tuesday, since (despite being less than 80 characters and me typing it 100% correctly on the web page) my confirmation E-mail for my name reservation reads "Eddie Jennings Services," rather than "Eddie Jennings Services, LLC" (yes, Eddie Jennings Services comma).
I'm not the only one with an injection attack radar yelling loudly in my head am I?
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@travisdh1 said in Forming an LLC:
@eddiejennings said in Forming an LLC:
I decided on Eddie Jennings Services, LLC. Now I get to contact the Secretary of State's office (Georgia) on Tuesday, since (despite being less than 80 characters and me typing it 100% correctly on the web page) my confirmation E-mail for my name reservation reads "Eddie Jennings Services," rather than "Eddie Jennings Services, LLC" (yes, Eddie Jennings Services comma).
I'm not the only one with an injection attack radar yelling loudly in my head am I?
I completed their "Report a Problem" form. Oh well. This will get solved one way or another. I simply wasn't expecting the name reservation process to be as much of a source of stress.
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A LLC is, historically, newer form of business entity, which for tax purposes can elect to be taxed as many different ways. If a single member, by default it will be taxed as a disregarded entity (sole proprietorship). If multiple members, by default a partnership, or if elected, a S-corp or C-corp. While being a state entity, a LLC is not a corporation, but has many similar liability statutory protections, just like a corporation, but generally has less of the formalities as a corporation. If naming has conflicts, in most states you can do a nontaxable reorganization to change names, etc.
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@spiral said in Forming an LLC:
A LLC is, historically, newer form of business entity,
It's not just newer historically, it's still newer today
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That is correct. LLC's still do not have much judicial history in the courts to know how certain facts and circumstances will play out in court.
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And for Delaware LLC, they have a $250 annual fee for LLCs, but many states have much less fees or only one first time initial fee of $50, such as for Missouri.
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Corporations in comparison, have annual registrations, corporate minutes, and other corporate formalities to comply with, in order to keep the business entity intact without the state doing an administrative dissolution, because of failure to comply.
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So, in general, you have state entities, and elected tax treatments, for which the LLC, a state business entity, is the chameleon, which has the flexibility to be elected to be taxed in such a way that best suits the facts and circumstances.
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In addition, not sure if applicable, but "Series LLCs", are even a newer form of LLCs, which have even more functionality, but less statutory history, however, probably not applicable in this case, but used more commonly in multiple rental property unit situations.
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@spiral said in Forming an LLC:
Corporations in comparison, have annual registrations, corporate minutes, and other corporate formalities to comply with, in order to keep the business entity intact without the state doing an administrative dissolution, because of failure to comply.
LLC has some, too, but not very much.
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@travisdh1 said in Forming an LLC:
@eddiejennings said in Forming an LLC:
I decided on Eddie Jennings Services, LLC. Now I get to contact the Secretary of State's office (Georgia) on Tuesday, since (despite being less than 80 characters and me typing it 100% correctly on the web page) my confirmation E-mail for my name reservation reads "Eddie Jennings Services," rather than "Eddie Jennings Services, LLC" (yes, Eddie Jennings Services comma).
I'm not the only one with an injection attack radar yelling loudly in my head am I?
Apparently removing the LLC part was expected behavior (not sure why that would be the case). TL;DR = According to the Secretary of State rep, all is fine.
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I used a lawyer to from mine about 4 years ago. I know some people have said to do it yourself, but this is a lot like IT. You might be able to do it yourself, but
a. isn't your time better spent on your main business,
b. do you recommend that people learn how to do complicated IT stuff for a one time project or hire a pro that does hundreds of them a year?
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@mike-davis said in Forming an LLC:
I used a lawyer to from mine about 4 years ago. I know some people have said to do it yourself, but this is a lot like IT. You might be able to do it yourself, but
a. isn't your time better spent on your main business,
b. do you recommend that people learn how to do complicated IT stuff for a one time project or hire a pro that does hundreds of them a year?
Not diy, LegalZoom. Does this sort of simple thing more often than any lawyer could.
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I'm not in the typical business situation. This is an LLC for my side projects, so I'm not as concerned with the time spent. Also, it seems to make sense to file the Articles of Organization myself (saves on fees) since that document is truly a simple one -- at least for Georgia. Later, if I want to create an Organization Agreement between my LLC and I (since this will be single-member LLC), I would employ the service of an attorney, as the complexity of said document is beyond the reasonable scope of DIY.
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@eddiejennings said in Forming an LLC:
I'm not in the typical business situation. This is an LLC for my side projects...
That's actually VERY typical.
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@scottalanmiller said in Forming an LLC:
@eddiejennings said in Forming an LLC:
I'm not in the typical business situation. This is an LLC for my side projects...
That's actually VERY typical.
True. I mean atypical in the sense that the extra time it takes me to do this, isn't of great consequence to me (from @Mike-Davis 's comment).
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@eddiejennings said in Forming an LLC:
True. I mean atypical in the sense that the extra time it takes me to do this, isn't of great consequence to me (from @Mike-Davis 's comment).
I get where you're at. For me I was doing side work when my day job slowed down to 32 hours a week. Looking back at first I tried to do my own web site. I don't have a creative bone in my body and at a certain point, I realized every hour I spent on the site was just making it suck slightly less. I would have been much better off putting my time in to other things.
On the legal side, you set up the LLC to protect yourself legally. If you ever did have an issue, would you call up a lawer at zoomlegal to defend you? Would you call up a local lawyer that would look at your cookie cutter LLC and say this is worthless because of this technicality? I wasn't comfortable with the first option so I went with a local lawyer.
I will say this for zoom legal: Doing a dry run seeing what questions they ask you helps you minimize the time you spend with a local lawyer, which in turn saves money - so there is some benefit to starting down that path.
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@mike-davis said in Forming an LLC:
@eddiejennings said in Forming an LLC:
True. I mean atypical in the sense that the extra time it takes me to do this, isn't of great consequence to me (from @Mike-Davis 's comment).
I get where you're at. For me I was doing side work when my day job slowed down to 32 hours a week. Looking back at first I tried to do my own web site. I don't have a creative bone in my body and at a certain point, I realized every hour I spent on the site was just making it suck slightly less. I would have been much better off putting my time in to other things.
On the legal side, you set up the LLC to protect yourself legally. If you ever did have an issue, would you call up a lawer at zoomlegal to defend you? Would you call up a local lawyer that would look at your cookie cutter LLC and say this is worthless because of this technicality? I wasn't comfortable with the first option so I went with a local lawyer.
I will say this for zoom legal: Doing a dry run seeing what questions they ask you helps you minimize the time you spend with a local lawyer, which in turn saves money - so there is some benefit to starting down that path.
I see your point. From what I've gathered having a poorly worded (or non-existent) operating agreement is the source of most woes, rather than the Articles of Organization itself. I'd certainly seek the help of the former, and would probably be able to pay for some of the time, with the money saved by filing the latter myself.
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@mike-davis said in Forming an LLC:
On the legal side, you set up the LLC to protect yourself legally. If you ever did have an issue, would you call up a lawer at zoomlegal to defend you? Would you call up a local lawyer that would look at your cookie cutter LLC and say this is worthless because of this technicality? I wasn't comfortable with the first option so I went with a local lawyer.
I'd say the opposite. Cookie cutter and battle tested is exactly what you want. Your local lawyer has maybe done this three times and never defended it in court and has no resources for dealing with this. This is LegalZoom's bread and butter. Their cookie cutter solution has been tested over and over again, reviewed and reviewed and they have big resources to make sure it works because unlike your local guy that has no reputation to lose, LegalZoom has hundreds of millions of dollars on the line if their contracts aren't the best.
Not that a local lawyer won't be competent, but unless you are a legal consultant, it's a huge cost and risk that there is no need to take. What value would they offer to offset their risks?