|
|
|
|
|
by dkrich
4368 days ago
|
|
Thank you- somewhere it became lore that filing in Delaware is a necessary step to running a successful business. Most businesses that are cited as examples didn't start in Delaware, but did so after they had much to lose and on the advice of their highly-paid counsels. If you have $1k in revenue, congrats, that's a great accomplishment, but with all due respect, nobody is going to file suit against a group of college students with $1k in cash. |
|
From my limited experience as a founder, forming a C corp early has made some things easier. The time we had to convert a California C corp to a Delaware C corp became messy and I imagine converting a {whatever state} LLC to a Delaware C corp also has the potential for being messy.
The conversion cost us a lot of money to have done right when instead taking boilerplate docs and simply forming in Delaware first would have been much easier.
Angels and incubators will generally want you to be a C corp first or convert ASAP, too (which is a valid option but I feel like there are other more important things to be spending cycles and money on). Raising money without worrying about converting your corporate structure is a pretty big reason to just do it as a C corp from the start.