Corporate Establishment
EBS Corporate Establishment is a twofold process:
1. The first process is the Corporate Legal Structure of the business which has legal and tax implications and should be given consideration prior to incorporating the business.
Establishment of the Corporate Legal Structure
Sole Proprietorship
A sole proprietorship is the most basic type of business to establish. You alone own the company and are responsible for its assets and liabilities. Learn more about the sole proprietor structure.
Limited Liability Company
An LLC is designed to provide the limited liability features of a corporation and the tax efficiencies and operational flexibility of a partnership. Learn more about how LLCs are structured.
Cooperative
People form cooperatives to meet a collective need or to provide a service that benefits all member-owners. Learn more about how cooperatives are structured.
Corporation
A corporation is more complex and generally suggested for larger, established companies with multiple employees. Learn more about how Corporations are structured.
Partnership
There are several different types of partnerships, which depend on the nature of the arrangement and partner responsibility for the business. Learn more about how these are structured.
S Corporation
An S corporation is similar to a C corporation but you are taxed only on the personal level. Learn more about how S corporations are structured.
Corporate Legal Establishment consists of the following services:
- Incorporate Business/Bylaws
- Business Location
- Corporate Phone/Fax System
- Website Design
- Corporate Email
- IRS Company Registration
- State Registration
- Dun & Bradstreet (DUNS) Registration
- City + County Licenses
- Bank Account Setup State Licenses
- Business Bank Account
- Merchant Account Setup
- Trade Mark
- Online Listing
- Directory Listing Combo
- Corporate Accounts
2. The second process is Business Establishment
A business establishment is defined as a location where business is conducted, goods are made or stored or processed or where services are rendered. It may include a commercial and/or institutional land use. It is generally a site where the main objective is the receipt or generation of a financial return in exchange for goods or services.
Regardless to the size of the company, operations can be critical to its success. Business operations typically include four key areas:
- Location: Where you do business – physically and online
- Equipment: The tools you need to get the job done
- Labor: The human side of business operations
- Process: The way you get business done, including your systems for quality control and improvement
The importance of each of these areas depends on the nature of your company. For example, physical location is critical to a retail outlet that lives or dies by walk-in customers, while physical location may not matter a bit to an Internet-based company – unless the business depends on highly skilled talent or the kinds of resources that cluster in places.
When in the Start-up of a company, a description of plans for each of the four key operational areas is essential
Established companies, a detail plan of what operational changes are necessary to achieve the new goals and objectives and plan to implement and fund an expansion of operations is necessary.
Business Establishment consist of the following services:
- Business Location
- Corporate Phone
- Fax System
- Corporate Email
- Web Site
- Merchant Accounts
- Vendor Accounts