You have several options in deciding on your corporate structure. There are advantages and disadvantages to each one and you should pick what works best for your situation. Make sure to get legal and financial advice before making your final decision. Different people will expound the virtues and advantages of one form of business and the pitfalls of another. Opinions are personal, but "facts" are "facts". You need to seek out coaches who have done it one way and those who have done it the other. Get all of the case history you can, not in a deck-side conversation, but in detail.
This is the simplest form of business to establish. There is no initial set-up cost; the business can be established online. However, all finances including profits and losses are tied to the coach’s personal income and taxes. All risk and liability is assumed by the coach. This is not an advisable form of business for a coach who plans to grow into a large organization with multiple employees. In fact, in a sole proprietorship or partnership, employees must be independent contractors and meet the requirements associated with independent contractor status. Check with an attorney. It is also more difficult to entice parent volunteers since profits from their effort go to the coach’s personal business rather than to the team general fund.
Type of Business | Sole-proprietorship or partnership | Sub-S or LLC | 501(c)(3) |
Who owns & directs | Single ownership | Can be coach owned |
|
Coaches' Role |
| Coach/owner hires all staff and sets business philosophy |
|
Parents' Role | Volunteer committees-no voice, no governance |
|
|
Advantages |
|
|
|
Disadvantages |
|
|
|