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Digg it UP - Reverse Merger; One of Several Options
Economic Comment on Youngstown, OH either
NASDAQ or AMEX requirements). Although some shells have as few as
35-50 shareholders and currently listed (or can apply for listing on the OTC
Bulletin Board or the NQB Pink Sheets.In Youngstown we saw the city of Boardman growing middle class mixed race area with newer homes and the downtown and adjacent area appeared to be poor black, but not crime ridden, people there were very nice and hard working family folks. If you begin to study and look at the projects around the Youngstown area it is easy to get excited about the future seeing as they are pro-active and smart about economic growth and about their place in the world between Pittsburgh and Akron.The coolest and most aggr (3) Regulation D (504) offering. Under the Securities Act of 1933, any offer to sell securities must either be registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission or meet and exemption. Regulation D provides three exemption from registration requirements, allowing some smaller companies to offer and sell their securities witho Are Your Policies Driving Your Customers Crazy? Small and mid-size companies looking to go public usually think
IPO (Initial Public offering), but find it difficult to get an underwriter to look at them. They go out an engage a consultant that advises them to do a reverse merger and they usually jump into it head first without exploring the options.Are you inadvertently driving your customers crazy with your company policies? Not sure?Well, imagine that a customer who's been with your company for a while with no complaints finally has a reason to contact customer service because of what appears to be a billing error. She assumes the error will be corrected quickly and she'll go on her way.Instead, your customer service rep recites a convoluted procedure she'll need to go through to rectify the issue, much to the customer's astonishment. Th If you have read some of my previous articles you may find this repetitious, but I can’t emphasis enough the importance of selecting a good consultant. A consultant that is working for you and you alone, and does not have an interest in selling you a corporate shell and getting your company trading, so that they can sell their stock and move on to the next victim. What are the options? (1) An initial public offering (ipo) is the absolute best but the most difficult and most expensive but with the financing that is raised it will enable the company to be listed on one of the more visible markets. Such as Nasdaq Small Cap, or American Stock Exchange. And if your company is big enough it may qualify for the Nasdaq National Market System, which would make your company attractive to analyst and institutional investors. (2) A Reverse Merger is for the those small and mid-size companies that are aggressive and will like to grow quickly and find that by being a public company they can achieve those goal sooner. I will give you some of the benefits of being a public company later. In a reverse merger the privately held company purchases a publicly traded company with substantially no assets (a “shell”). The shell issues stock to the owners of the private company. The shell issues sufficient stock, usually 90-95% enough to effectively control the public company. The public company will normally change its name to the private company’s name and elect a new Board of Directors which will appoint the officers. The public corporation will usually have a base of shareholders sufficient to meet the 300 shareholders requirement for eventual admission to quotation on the NASDAQ Small Cap Market or the American Stock Exchange (if the private company’s financial condition substantiates either NASDAQ or AMEX requirements). Although some shells have as few as 35-50 shareholders and currently listed (or can apply for listing on the OTC Bulletin Board or the NQB Pink Sheets. (3) Regulation D (504) offering. Under the Securities Act of 1933, any offer to sell securities must either be registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission or meet and exemption. Regulation D provides three exemption from registration requirements, allowing some smaller companies to offer and sell their securities withou What Do You Do When You Get a Big Purchase Order and Can't Fill it? terest in selling you a corporate shell and getting your company trading, so that they can sell their stock and move on to the next victim.When you get a purchase order and don't have the money to get the inventory or parts to fill the order, what do you do? You factor your receivables, right? Not if you don’t have enough receivables right now. You would get a loan or line of credit, wouldn’t you?What if you don't have enough business history or enough credit or enough assets to get the loan? The next solution might be to use your credit cards.What if this order is too big for your credit cards or you don't have credit card What are the options? (1) An initial public offering (ipo) is the absolute best but the most difficult and most expensive but with the financing that is raised it will enable the company to be listed on one of the more visible markets. Such as Nasdaq Small Cap, or American Stock Exchange. And if your company is big enough it may qualify for the Nasdaq National Market System, which would make your company attractive to analyst and institutional investors. (2) A Reverse Merger is for the those small and mid-size companies that are aggressive and will like to grow quickly and find that by being a public company they can achieve those goal sooner. I will give you some of the benefits of being a public company later. In a reverse merger the privately held company purchases a publicly traded company with substantially no assets (a “shell”). The shell issues stock to the owners of the private company. The shell issues sufficient stock, usually 90-95% enough to effectively control the public company. The public company will normally change its name to the private company’s name and elect a new Board of Directors which will appoint the officers. The public corporation will usually have a base of shareholders sufficient to meet the 300 shareholders requirement for eventual admission to quotation on the NASDAQ Small Cap Market or the American Stock Exchange (if the private company’s financial condition substantiates either NASDAQ or AMEX requirements). Although some shells have as few as 35-50 shareholders and currently listed (or can apply for listing on the OTC Bulletin Board or the NQB Pink Sheets. (3) Regulation D (504) offering. Under the Securities Act of 1933, any offer to sell securities must either be registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission or meet and exemption. Regulation D provides three exemption from registration requirements, allowing some smaller companies to offer and sell their securities witho Sanity Check - Buying A Business hich would make your company attractive to analyst and
institutional investors.In the business broker community there is a review process that helps a buyer determine if a business purchase makes sense or not. This check can be done by a Fortune 500 company where everything is figured down to the penny and takes 1000 hours of research or it can be done by a small main street shop buyer who figures it out in 1 hour. Each item in this review process requires a decision. This decision can be based on extensive research or just on a reasonable guess.The beauty of this process is; how (2) A Reverse Merger is for the those small and mid-size companies that are aggressive and will like to grow quickly and find that by being a public company they can achieve those goal sooner. I will give you some of the benefits of being a public company later. In a reverse merger the privately held company purchases a publicly traded company with substantially no assets (a “shell”). The shell issues stock to the owners of the private company. The shell issues sufficient stock, usually 90-95% enough to effectively control the public company. The public company will normally change its name to the private company’s name and elect a new Board of Directors which will appoint the officers. The public corporation will usually have a base of shareholders sufficient to meet the 300 shareholders requirement for eventual admission to quotation on the NASDAQ Small Cap Market or the American Stock Exchange (if the private company’s financial condition substantiates either NASDAQ or AMEX requirements). Although some shells have as few as 35-50 shareholders and currently listed (or can apply for listing on the OTC Bulletin Board or the NQB Pink Sheets. (3) Regulation D (504) offering. Under the Securities Act of 1933, any offer to sell securities must either be registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission or meet and exemption. Regulation D provides three exemption from registration requirements, allowing some smaller companies to offer and sell their securities witho Get All That Your Words Are Worth With Article Submissions company. The shell issues sufficient stock,
usually 90-95% enough to effectively control the public company.Article directories have been around for years, offering content and information for webmasters, ezine writers and email newsletters. The benefits of submitting your writing to article directories are easy enough to understand:1. You trade on your credibility as an expert – and increase it at the same time. When you write a short, informative piece about your business, your author’s biography gives you credibility – you know what you’re talking about because it’s what you do for a living. When your art The public company will normally change its name to the private company’s name and elect a new Board of Directors which will appoint the officers. The public corporation will usually have a base of shareholders sufficient to meet the 300 shareholders requirement for eventual admission to quotation on the NASDAQ Small Cap Market or the American Stock Exchange (if the private company’s financial condition substantiates either NASDAQ or AMEX requirements). Although some shells have as few as 35-50 shareholders and currently listed (or can apply for listing on the OTC Bulletin Board or the NQB Pink Sheets. (3) Regulation D (504) offering. Under the Securities Act of 1933, any offer to sell securities must either be registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission or meet and exemption. Regulation D provides three exemption from registration requirements, allowing some smaller companies to offer and sell their securities witho Types of Shredders either
NASDAQ or AMEX requirements). Although some shells have as few as
35-50 shareholders and currently listed (or can apply for listing on the OTC
Bulletin Board or the NQB Pink Sheets.A shredder is a machine that chops up unwanted materials into small pieces. Common types of shredders include paper shredders, file shredders and chip shredders. Shredders can cut tissue paper, computer printouts, floppy disks, compact disks, plastics, wood planks and any other material. Shredders are commonly used for recycling purposes, waste reduction and creating packing material.Paper shredders cut sheets of paper into small pieces. Paper shredders are mainly used to protect business or personal i (3) Regulation D (504) offering. Under the Securities Act of 1933, any offer to sell securities must either be registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission or meet and exemption. Regulation D provides three exemption from registration requirements, allowing some smaller companies to offer and sell their securities without having to register the securities with the SEC. While companies using a Regulation D exemption do not have to register their securities and usually do not have to file reports with the SEC. They must file what is known as form D. Under Regulation D (504) you are allowed to raise up to $1,000,000.00 In a twelve month period. Some of the characteristics of Regulation D are: Securities can be sold to an unlimited number of persons. General solicitation or advertising can be used to market this securities. These securities are freely traded and not “restricted” which investors can sell their securities in the open market without registration. This securities are not exempt from the Securities Act of 1933 anti fraud provision. Benefit of going public: Your access to capital will increase, since you can contact more potential investors. Your company may become more widely known. You can obtain financing more easily in the future if investor interest in your company grows. Controlling shareholders such as the company’s officers or directors, may have a ready market for their shares at retirement. Your company may be able to attract and retain more highly qualified personnel if it can offer stock options, bonuses or other incentive with a known market value. Company can use stock for acquisition purposes.
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