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Provides Do-it-Yourself CDs and Forms and also Complete Packages to Organize and Create a Limited Liability Company, Including all Papers and Documents Necessary to File and Register Your Company Within Your Own Operating Area. No Business too Big or too Small, from Large to Medium Companies, Mom and Pop Shops to Single-Owner Enterprises. You Owe it to Yourself to Protect Your Business and Personal Assets | |||||||||||
If You Do Business You Need a Fully-Functioning, Registered and Operating LLC for Protection Against Law Suits | |||||||||||
FREE WEBPAGE DESIGN AND HOSTING | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Minimum LLC Do-it-Yourself CDs for a Corporation Secretary of State Office in Each State Free Offer for Home Based Business Booklet | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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LLC Information | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
DON'T SETTLE FOR LESS: The State requirement to register the name of a Limited Liability Company (LLC) provides you with the right to use that business name—it does not cover the requirements of actually forming a company with the full protection and rights a Limited Liability Company is meant to provide. We provide full packages with everything you need, and full LLC Do-it-Yourself Kits. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
CHOOSING A COMPANY NAME. There are several things to consider when choosing a name, such as privacy, appeal, disclosure, advertising, and future change. For a guideline on name consideration, see our suggested information. FOUR TYPES OF LLCs: Not all LLCs are created equal. Some Formation People consider a simple State filing sufficient to the forming of an LLC. While the State filing does meet minimum State requirements, there is more to an LLC than registering the application with the State. MINIMUM LLC: For a minimal filing fee, varying from about $50 in some states to as much as $500 in other states, you can secure a company name and the right to do business in that State. SIMPLE LLC: In addition to the filing fee and registration with the State, this LLC includes a complete set of Articles which outline the manner in which the Company was organized. This is important if the Company is ever challenged in tax audits or court hearings. FULL FUNCTIONING LLC: This includes the filing and registration, the complete set of Articles, and also a complete Operating Agreement. If the company is ever challenged in audits or by the court, the method in which the company may be run is very important. Without such an Agreement signed by the member(s), the State can dictate how the company should be run--and if you are not in compliance, heavy penalties may be assessed. COMPLETE OPERATING LLC: This includes the filing, registration, Set of Articles, Operating Agreement, and all Exhibits, Appendices, List of Officers Forms, Financial Forms, Authentication of Records, Acceptances, Formation Minutes and Minutes Forms, Authorizations, Resolutions Recordings, Promissory Notes, Buy/Sell Agreements, Capital Contributions, and all necessary and important papers that an operating LLC must have on file. 4 WAYS TO FORM AN LLC: Forming a Limited Liability Company is a simple matter: DO IT YOURSELF: You can go to your State's Department of Corporations and register an LLC and pay the filing fee. This gives you the Minimum LLC shown above. PURCHASE FORMS OR CDs: You can purchase forms for filing and developing limited Articles and a limited Operating Agreement, either on hard copy or CD from a local business office supply store. This will, in most cases, provide you with a Simple LLC as shown above. HIRE A FORMATION COMPANY: There are numerous formation companies and experts on the internet, charging from around $100 to $1000s of dollars to form an LLC for you. What you typically get is a set of pages where you have to fill in the blanks, and often are limited in scope. And obviously, you get what you pay for. USE OUR SERVICES: See the many advantages you get in scope and cost by using our programs. Our packages are complete in every way and provide extensive protections and authorizations to run a business your way and not the State's way. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
UNDERSTANDING: To have a fully operating Limited Liability Company that meets all-important requirements of the Limited Liability Company Code in all 50 States, a lot more information needs to be included in such things as the Articles of Organization (authorization to form the company) and the Operating Agreement (the authorization and requirements to run the company). Below are listed the normal items and information included in the Articles of Organization and a very necessary Operating Agreement of an LLC. If you do not have your own Operating Agreement, you will be subject to rules you may not want, and the State can tell you how to run your business. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Operating Agreement 1. Name of LLC, Conditions of formation, and Names of initial members | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
1. Name of LLC | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Formation Minutes For an LLC to be formed beyond a simple State registration, a formal meeting must be held between the initial members (even if it is only one person) and certain decisions made. The decisions listed in these minutes may later be needed to defend the Company against an attack, litigation or formal audit. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Regular Minutes Regular Minutes need to be kept by any formalized entity, such as an LLC or Corporation. These minutes, though simple in nature, need so show approval of actions and expenditures through resolutions Series LLC Seven states: Delaware, Illinois, Iowa, Nevada, Oklahoma, Tenessee and Utah provide a unique, if yet unproven, Series LLC approach to limiting asset liability and providing asset protection. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Operating Agreement If you are running your business without an operating agreement (By-Laws for a Corporation), you have no plan to fall back on if the entity is attacked or audited. In such cases, the State can tell you how to operate your business, which may not be as you intended | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
DISCLAIMER: The information provided on this site is for informational purposes only and is NOT to be relied upon as legal advice. This service is not a substitute for the advice of an attorney and we encourage users to have all documents created on our site reviewed by an attorney. No attorney-client relationship is established by use of our online forms system and the user is not to rely upon any information found anywhere on our site. THESE FORMS AND ENTITIES ARE SOLD ON AN "AS IS" BASIS WITH NO WARRANTIES OR GUARANTIES. If you wish personal assistance in deciding whether the document or entity found on our site is right for you or desire representations and warranties upon the legality of the document you are purchasing in the jurisdiction you will be using it, contact an attorney licensed to practice law in your state | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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