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by brianwawok
3254 days ago
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Converting LLC to S/C corp is not hard though! Your entire chain of evidence was about two founders who had very different commitment levels, and had trouble converting. Of course they had trouble converting. They also would have had trouble diluting for investment if you did not dilute 50/50. There was an underlying problem there, and the corp conversion was the rip the bandaid off moment. It had to happen, and the sooner it happened the better! Unless you know day 1 you are going to get investment (like, that is your entire goal of your business - say you already have ycom ready to invest), I still contest you should almost always start LLC. If say you putz around and bootstrap for a year, your taxes and accounting and everything else will be SO MUCH EASIER for the first year. Then sure, if you light on fire and need investments from traditional VCs, cool you can convert. What % of random startups founded on hacker news get to the point of VC investment? My gut would tell me 10% or less, but no idea how to measure this. |
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But when do you bring on employees? ie non-partners. I hugely recommend giving them equity options and now you have to convert, which is more costly than being a C corp from the start.
Also your 10% figure isn't close. investment comes from family, angels, and VCs. Probably over 50% get some type, and now your tax returns and theirs just got much more complex. As does future investment.
If you can afford to start as a C corp, it's often worthwhile.