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Choose the legal form of your business. Once you decide to start your business, you must decide what type of ownership the business will have. There are 3 types of ownership that you can choose from. Forms of Business Ownership. The Sole Proprietorship Partnership Corporation.
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Choose the legal form of your business Once you decide to start your business, you must decide what type of ownership the business will have. There are 3 types of ownership that you can choose from.
Forms of Business Ownership • The Sole Proprietorship • Partnership • Corporation
Sole Proprietorship • Owned by 1 person • This person is the boss • This person is liable for everything • The most common form of ownership • Difficult to raise money • You are the only one contributing • The owners private assets are at stake
Partnership • 2 or more people partnering together to own a business • The liability is spread amongst the partners • The business is considered a partnership until someone leaves the business • Each partner brings different skills and assets to the business
Very little government regulation • Easy to form • Legally reliable for the errors of your partners • Partnerships can lead to disagreements and end bitterly
Partnership Agreement When 2 or more partners go into business, they usually sign a partnership agreement. The purpose of the agreement is to legally bind all partners to their rights and responsibilities of the business
A typical agreement covers the following: • Name of the partnership • Names of partners • Types and values of their investments • Responsibilities of each person • Accounting methods to be used • Rights of each partner • Division of profits and losses • Salaries of each partner • Duration of the partnership • Conditions of dissolving the partnership • Distribution of the assets if dissolved • How to deal with the death of a partner
The Corporation • A special form of business • The owners are not liable, the corporation is. • Owners are called shareholders • A corporation can be private or public • Thousands of employees • Thousands of shareholders (owners) • Can easily raise lots of $$$$$ through sale of shares to investors
Disadvantages • Difficult to set up • Plenty of legality when incorporating • Expensive to set up • Much government regulation • Much more paperwork • Taxed twice
Your turn! • You have a friend(s) in class who is/are interested in forming a partnership with you. • Create a partnership agreement with your classmate(s) • Complete all 12 sections of a typical partnership agreement • Use the internet to help you find an example of a typical partnership agreement • http://www.smallbusinessnotes.com • Have fun!!