Puppies!
Nothing like taking a short break to play with puppies!
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Puppies!
Nothing like taking a short break to play with puppies!

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
We’ve launched our MVP!
Today, NotiphiMe Inc. is excited to announce our core product is now in limited distribution! Many thanks to all who have helped and supported us along the way.
Now the real work begins and we’re ready to dive in!
Have a burning notification need? Customers clamoring for it? Would you like to have a hand in shaping the product?
If this sounds like you, contact us with a brief explanation of your business need. Beta space is limited and we are looking for clients with similar goals.
Sign up now! [email protected]
www.notiphi.me
Pete Wolk
Clerky franchise tax nightmare
I have to start by saying, I’m not a CPA or a Lawyer, just a startup CEO that freaked out for a couple hours. To be fair, this nightmare is not Clerky specific. No matter how you incorporate, whether its Clerky or someone else, for the first time tax payer the Delaware franchise tax Amount Due is a nightmare!
So, you read everything there is to know about starting a startup. You used Clerky.com and setup a Delaware C Corp, finished the post incorporation step, and applied for your EIN (Employer Identification Number…not needed to complete taxes but you can get it immediately here).
Now you are ready to pay your taxes and if you did incorporate through Clerky.com, and your company physical does not reside in the state of Delaware, they would have set you up with a registered agent with a Delaware address. They gave NotiphiMe The Company Corporation, which is good about sending you reminders that your taxes are due March 1st.
You then went to the Delaware Corporations Information System (DCIS) web site to pay your franchise tax, figured out what your Business Entity File Number was by searching for your company by name, and finally got to the page with what you owe in taxes, and WHAT THE #@$%!!!!
Ok, you know this can’t be right but you’re FREAKING OUT anyway. Then you google around like crazy trying find an explanation and maybe you stumble on these two great sites, startuplawyer.com and capgenius.com and learned about the two different ways to calculate your Delaware franchise tax you get some relief. But your franchise tax bill still says some crazy high amount in the amount due field.
Here’s how to fix it: 1. Enter the amount of shares you’ve issued. If you left everything standard in the Clerky.com forms and followed prevailing startup advice, you may have put aside 20% of your shares for various things and split 80% with cofounders, which in NotiphiMe’s case, leads to 8 million shares issued. 2. Fill in the Gross Assets field. Somewhere, hopefully in a folder you’ve entitled “Minute Book” you’ve been keeping track of what everyone has been spending. Add up all your assets and type the number here. 3. In the Asset Date field, again, if you did not stray from the Clerky.com defaults this field should be the same as End Date of Fiscal Year (#4 in the screenshot below). Convention would have that as the last day of your company’s first tax year. 5. Push the Recalculate Tax button and wait as your Franchise Tax and Total Due Amount fields magically recalculate to the number you were looking for!
Freak out over, go have a beer.
Pete Wolk