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Many small business owners understand the benefit of incorporating, but they don't realize how easy it is to lose their "corporate status" if they get sued or end up in bankruptcy. This is dangerous because then the court can come after their PERSONAL assets (like their house, car, savings, etc)!Today, I will review a little bit of why incorporating is so important for small business owners, and then tell you five simple steps you can follow to protect your personal assets, even if your business gets sued or goes through bankruptcy.It makes sense to incorporate for a couple of reasons. First, because it protects you from personal liability, and second, because it offers you some great tax advantages. For today, we're going to just focus on the personal liability part.When you incorporate, your business becomes like another person. This other person has it's own bank account, it can own things like property, and it can take risks. Even if that "other person" (your business) goes completely bankrupt or gets sued, YOU are safe (assuming you do everything correctly).This is important because many new businesses fail, but you as the entrepreneur don't want to fail. You want to pick yourself back up and start your NEXT business which will be even more successful. Failure is a necessary way to learn, so we want it to be as painless as possible.When everything works like it should, then yes, you PERSONALLY are protected. But there are certain situations where your corporate status doesn't help you out, and every business owner should be aware of them!You see, setting up a company gives you so much protection from liability, that unethical people in the past have tried to take advantage of it. They have created "shell corporations", or businesses just for the purpose of liability protection, to help them get away with various crimes.Of course, the law had to be modified to weed out these people and make sure they were appropriately prosecuted. But in the process, the requirements for honest small business owners became TOUGHER. Some extra steps are now required to make sure your corporate status stays intact.By the way, whenever a court decides to waive the corporate protection and actually prosecute the owners behind the company PERSONALLY, they call it "piercing the corporate veil". (Lawyers always like to come up with fancy names for things.)Following are the top five ways to protect you personal assets then starting a business. Make sure you do these correctly, and you can be sure that even if your business experiences a colossal failure, or gets sued out of existence, at least your personal assets are safe and you can start over.
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Brian Armstrong is the author of Breaking Free, and is an authority on How to Start a Business Learn how to incorporate the easy way and protect your assets in his FREE Online Course Click Now!
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