starting
a business: getting some answers
by diane van helden
1. What structure (or what entity) should I choose for my business?
Whether to operate your business as a sole proprietorship, a partnership,
a limited liability company, a corporation or other business entity
depends on a number of factors. These include the nature of your business:
do you provide services? are you selling a product? is it a business
that involves some risk to a customer? and whether you are going into
business by yourself or with others, whether you will have employees,
and how you intend to capitalize the business.
If you are unfamiliar with the business structures available, you can
get a good overview by going online to the North Carolina Cooperative
Extension Services site at www.ces.ncsu.edu and checking out its
Small Business Primer on Legal Issues. Each structure is
defined and issues such as formation, liability, and taxes are outlined.
Information is also available from the Small Business Center at your
local community college (in Asheville, A-B Tech).
Before getting started, it would probably be best to confer with a lawyer
and/or an accountant. In all likelihood you will need the services of
both to set up your business and a conference is a good way to learn
what these services will cost.
2. Will
I need a business license?
Again, the answer depends on what your business is, since there is no
general business license in North Carolina. The easiest way to get an
answer is to telephone the N. C. Business License Information Office
(BLIO) at 800-228-8443 (NC only) or 919-807-2166. You will be able to
have a phone conference during which you will describe your business
and receive information about licensing requirements and the state and
local entities to contact concerning the licenses. There is also the
advantage in calling BLIO that, if you rely on the information given
by BLIO and miss a State licensing requirement, you wont be penalized
for having failed to get the license.
You can get more information about BLIO online at the N.C. Secretary
of States web site at www.secretary.state.nc.us. The Secretary
of States site also has a Start Up Checklist and information
on starting a business in North Carolina which you can find by clicking
on the Business License Office. It contains helpful information about
what is required and where to go for assistance from writing a business
plan to taxation.
3. Whats
in a name?
The name for your business should be carefully thought out and researched
if you will be using a name other than your real name. You wont
want to find out after-the-fact that someone else owns the name or is
using it (consider how much the business cards, letterhead, and signs
alone will cost you). Begin your search at the Registers office
in the county(ies) where you will be doing business. While youre
there pick up an Assumed Name Certificate form; youll need it
later once youve decided on a name. Check out the Secretary of
States corporate name index online at www.secretary.state.nc.us
(Corporations division-the index also includes limited liability companies,
limited partnerships, and limited liability partnerships).
Business names are often protected by registering them as a trademark
or service mark at the state or national levels. Telephone The Trademark
Division of the N.C. Secretary of States Office at 919-807-2162
to find out if the business name is registered as a trademark (this
database is not yet available online). The U. S. Patent and Trademark
Office does have the marks registered with them online; go to www.uspto.gov
for the search (the site is very easy to navigate).
Once youve decided on a name, you will need to pull out the Assumed
Name Certificate form and record it back at the county Registers
office. If you have decided that a limited liability company, corporation,
or other entity which requires filing with the Secretary of State, you
will still need to file an Assumed Name Certificate in every county
where you do business.
After 25
years of a litigation and business practice in Austin, Texas,
Diane Van Helden is enjoying her office practice in Madison County.
She and her assistants-two dogs and four cats-enjoy the work from her
home-office on Meadow Ridge just outside Mars Hill.

WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA WOMAN
is a publication of INFINITE CIRCLES, INC.
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