Taking A Look At The Business Incorporation Benefits


by Craig Thornburrow - Date: 2007-07-30 - Word Count: 447 Share This!

Any one who has seen the abbreviations "inc" or "llc" will realize that most businesses are incorporated. However, what most people are in the dark about is the reasons why so many businesses seek incorporation or why incorporation is so valuable. There are numerous reasons as to why a company will incorporate, all of which are designed to help protect the owner from an onslaught of liability that can result from operating as such. No matter what type of company a person may own, there will be no escaping the dangers of liability.

When a business is incorporated, it becomes owned by entities of people known as shareholders. Each individual shareholder owns a certain amount of the equity of the company. Some may own equal shares, some may own majority shares, other may own minority shares, but when combined they comprise the totality of ownership of the business. When it comes to certain business decisions, the majority of the shareholder's agreement need to be procured before moving forward.

Also, when a company is incorporated, the shareholders are protected from the dangers of personal liability if any legal action is taken against the company. No business is worth risking one's personal wealth, savings and property so to become involved in any business that is not incorporated, even on a very minor level, is to take a great risk. Yet, many individual business owners still insist on keeping their business a sole proprietorship.

When seeking incorporation, it is essentially perpetually prolonging its existence. That is, it will survive long after its owners. A firm that has been incorporated will become a legal entity that can continue onwards as its ownership will be determined by shares; and these shares can be transferred to another person who can operate the company.

While some people may ask "Why should I care what happens to the business after I die?" Well, if the owner is concerned only about the business health while he is alive, then he should definitely seek incorporation as it would be incredibly difficult to raise private equity capital or find any partners if these parties realized that the company could dissolve at the whim of a sole proprietor.

In order to expand and be successful, it can not exist within a vacuum. The easiest way to remain in a vacuum would be to operate as a sole proprietorship. Taking a business and placing it under the banner of incorporation will properly handle the elimination of limitations of growth.

Ultimately, it is up to the individual to decide whether business incorporation is right for the company. However, all individuals must understand that to ignore the benefits of incorporating a company is to take a huge risk.

Related Tags: business incorporation, incorporation, incorporate business

Craig Thornburrow is an acknowledged expert in his field. You can get more free advice on offshore incorporation and business incorporation at www.incorporationchoice.com

Your Article Search Directory : Find in Articles

© The article above is copyrighted by it's author. You're allowed to distribute this work according to the Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs license.
 

Recent articles in this category:



Most viewed articles in this category: