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If I have a consulting business, does it make sense to start another business (new legal entity) if I want to develop and sell a product? What if I have business selling B2B but want to start selling to consumers? Do it all under one umbrella, or not?

Starting another business has expenses associated with it. Are there any advantages to doing it? Under which circumstances would you do it, if ever?

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3 Answers

up vote 14 down vote accepted

I start all my new businesses in my main consulting company.

  • If the product works, I create a dedicated company for it.

  • If it doesn't work, I kill it.

Be aware that in some countries, you can't do everything you want in the same legal entities.

I create a separate company for the following advantages:

  • I can partner with other people

  • It's easier to sell it

  • You separate concerns (easier to manage)

  • You will be more credible (having a company doing too many different things is not a good thing)

  • In case of problem, you main company is protected

The obvious drawback is that it will cost you more than if you shared everything in the same company. That's why it's good to start a business within your main company.

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Why do you create a dedicated company for it? What benefit does it provide to you? – Sumrak Jan 11 '11 at 16:53
For two three reasons: to be able to partner with others, to be able to sell it, and finally to separate concerns. I want to create systems. – user3997 Jan 11 '11 at 17:06
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Agree with Pierre, this is a simple and very effective approach. – Ricardo Jan 11 '11 at 18:15
A fourth and fifth reasons: 4. your main company is safe in case of strong problems in your new business. 5. for credibility, having a company that do sandwiches, software and law consulting is not a company you would work with. – user3997 Jan 11 '11 at 18:21

There are two main reasons to create a business.

The first is investment driven. A business is a legally-based, familiar and trusted way to bind together assets and operations. It exposes costs and revenues. So it allows partnerships, investment, performance-based or equity-shaped reward structures and the rest. None of this is impossible in a single legal entity, but separation will often be the cleanest way to achieve goals of this type.

The second is risk management driven. The most obvious shape this takes is that a limited liability company does what it says on the tin - limits liability. In other words, the cost of failure can be contained. Other related issues are, for instance, enabling the special risks of regulatory oversight and other statutory compliance to be restricted to the sphere of operations that necessitates them. Again, there are other ways to achieve these same ends, but separation of businesses will often be the simplest.

Against this, there are cost implications, and also legal and practical restrictions, mainly relating to the assignment of costs, revenues, assets and liabilities between businesses. But as we're talking about startup contexts, these latter restrictions tend to be less relevant.

What does experience tell me?

I can think of an entrepreneur who lost everything because she wouldn't separate two lines of business into distinct legal entities. At a time of opportunity, the different capital intensities caused problems with the bank and investors, slowing growth. And then when one division was hit hard by economic issues, both were dragged down.

But then in another situation, I saw a joint venture company fail because the new business team never managed to gel, but this only became apparent to the parent companies when the venture had burnt a year of time and half its cash.

So judgement comes into play here. On balance, I suggest making the directional decision as early as possible, but putting it into practice as late as is prudent - typically triggered by some factor such as signs of success or the need to access external financial or human capital.

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Depends. On how you want to position you in the market and on how realted the things are.

My business has 3 different income areas in two totally seaprated business areas.

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But it's still the same business? Have you ever ran into any issues because of that and wished you'd have two separate businesses? – Sumrak Jan 11 '11 at 16:19
No. Two are relatively common, the other is totally different but does not have customers in the classical sense. – NetTecture Jan 11 '11 at 17:08

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