Chapter 1
Incorporating Your Business
In This Chapter
Structuring the business to attract capital
Taking stock of the corporate legal structure
Issuing and managing stock shares
The obvious reason for investing in a business rather than putting your money in a safer type of investment is the potential for greater rewards. Note the word potential. As an owner of a business, you're entitled to your fair share of its profit, as are the other owners. At the same time, you're subject to the risk that it could go down the tubes, taking your money with it.
Ignore the risks for a moment and look at just the rosy side of the picture: Suppose the doohickeys that your business sells become the hottest products of the year. Sales are booming, and you start looking at buying a five-bedroom mansion with an ocean view. Don't make that down payment just yet — you may not get as big a piece of the profit pie as you're expecting. Some claims to that profit may rank higher than yours, and you may not see any profit after all these claims are satisfied, because the way the profit is divided among owners depends on the business's legal structure. This chapter shows how legal structure determines your ...
Get Accounting All-in-One For Dummies now with the O’Reilly learning platform.
O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.