Mistake #1: Mixing Business and Personal Investments
One of the costliest investing mistakes you can make as a young entrepreneur is failing to draw a clear line between business and personal investments. For instance, you might start a venture with personal savings, fail to set up a business account, and then later use the revenue you get to pay for personal expenses. Or, when running a company, you decide to use your personal credit cards to buy inventory. Mixing business and personal investments and finances makes it harder to calculate how much revenue your venture is getting. You might mistakenly assume your company is doing well when it’s making losses and you’re propping it up with your own money. Moreover, if anything happens and your venture gets sued, courts may resort to “piercing the corporate veil” and seize your assets if you frequently treat the business like a personal bank account. Avoid this issue and its consequences by:- Setting up separate checking and credit accounts for your business from the get-go
- Paying yourself a salary instead of dipping into business funds whenever you please
- Deciding how much of your own money you’re willing to invest in the venture
- Consider every cent you put into your business from your personal kitty as either a loan or an equity investment