Factors To Consider Before Setting Up Any Business
While it is not impossible, it is difficult to create substantial wealth from a salary income alone.
However, it may be possible to do so if you have alternative sources of income, popularly known as passive income.
Passive income is that income which you earn without active participation in the cash generation activity.
Broadly speaking, passive income means letting your money to work for you while you work elsewhere to earn a salary.
This means you use your salary to start a business which can generate a regular income for you.
Perhaps
this is the same way that your current employers started their
business, that is, using capital derived from their past salaries to
generate even more returns to strengthen their net worth.
It
is even possible that their participation in the business is minimal
with only a few of them involved directly in its day to day running,
instead hiring directors to oversee the operation and the affairs of the
company on their behalf.
Their passive income comes
after all statutory deductions are made as the company declares its
financial performance perhaps at the end of the year.
Many employees realised the need to create passive sources of
income in 2008 when the impact of the global recession started to be
felt by many households.
Around this time, many
companies begun to cut down on their operational costs through lay-offs
among other measures and soon the employment crisis hit the headlines.
This caught many salary-dependent workers by surprise.
But
there were some lucky ones. These were the employees who had started
their income-earning ventures before the onset of economic crisis.
Business risks
According
to market analysts, it was quite interesting that the Small and Medium
Enterprises were less affected by the recession in terms of job cuts as
compared to established companies that exercised massive job cuts.
But this does not mean that the small businesses were spared by the recession.
Many
of the small businesses collapsed due to lack of effective risk
mechanisms as they were vulnerable to almost all kinds of business
risks.
Something that stood peculiar was that a great
proportion of these investments were sole proprietor businesses started
by individual income earners as ventures for passive income.
As
a result, the effects of recession in terms of increased liabilities
from creditors due insolvency were felt directly by the sole owners.
Since
they had little protection from business liabilities, the owners had no
option but to sell or auction their personal assets to offset the
liabilities.
This means that they had not considered protecting their personal investments from business liabilities.
While
such businesses are established to generate additional incomes to
strengthen personal net worths, they also have a double effect of
eroding the same completely through liabilities if no measures are put
in place to separate business from personal assets.
If
you are planning to set up a business, an important starting point would
be to consider the legal structure of your envisaged business.
This may ultimately safeguard your personal assets from business liabilities.
Unfortunately,
most upcoming entrepreneurs today want to start sole proprietorship
businesses the easy way, often rushing through the registration process.
Despite all the advantages of a sole proprietorship,
its structure poses great threat to the owner’s personal assets due to
its unlimited liability.
For instance, supposing you establish a sole proprietor business that offers courier services to deliver parcels to households.
It is possible that you may encounter a delay or interruption in the course of delivery.
Let us assume that some parcels even get damaged in accident during the process.
As
a result, the customers decide to sue your business for damages
amounting to millions of shillings, a figure that surpasses the business
net worth.
As a sole proprietor, your personal assets are at stake if your customers win the law suit and are awarded damages.
You will be personally be responsible both in the law suits as well as in paying for the damages.
You will have no veil to protect you even from creditors who may sue you for liabilities.
This
makes a strong case against establishing a sole proprietorship business
in this day and era when business risks are so numerous, of course,
unless prior plans are made to cover for business liabilities.
Regardless
of the benefits that come with the ease of registration, there are
other business structures that protect owners from vulnerability to lose
associated with business liabilities.
These include limited partnerships, private limited liability structure and public limited structures.
In
private limited companies, shareholders are protected by law from law
suits or liabilities associated with the business entity.
The
shareholders or owners personal assets are treated separately from the
business assets as they are considered as separate legal entities.
As
you consider your passive income plan, you should also be aware that a
limited liability structure could further boost your image to potential
investors willing to inject additional capital to take your business to
another step of growth.
This is unlikely in a sole proprietorship structure, where most investors might shy away from injecting their capital.
COPYRIGHT Business Daily Africa
COPYRIGHT Business Daily Africa
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