by xayide on 2/7/09, 5:12 PM with 2 comments
I've been tossing around a couple of ideas for side businesses that I could try out while holding on to my day job, and then see where they go from there. I'm turning over the ideas of selling herbal supplements (not a la Tim Ferriss, I swear), and/or selling consulting services as a patient advocate.
I understand that 95% of a start-up is just getting off your butt and doing it, but I find that I stall when I think about possible legal issues. What if someone with a severe ragweed allergy goes into anaphylactic shock over chamomile contamination? What if somebody gets the idea that I should pay their $100,000 chemotherapy debt because the health insurance company won't, despite my best efforts?
Incorporating sounds like putting the cart ahead of the horse, but I don't want to put my personal assets at too much risk unnecessarily.
What steps would you suggest to shield my business and my family from liability?
by newy on 2/8/09, 6:39 AM
Seriously :) You basically detailed one of the primary reasons why folks incorporate. Not quite following your analysis of how that is "putting the cart ahead of the house"...
by raquo on 2/7/09, 11:05 PM