I believe that you're asking about a DBA Name (DBA = Doing Business As). Though you may incorporate or begin a business using a name like 'Ted's Warf and Fishing Tackle, LLC', having your clients write that on every check would suck. You register a DBA for the company (Ted's Tackle) and you can accept checks and conduct other business using that name.
A "doing business as" allows a company to use another name to conduct business. Also known as an "assumed business name" and a "fictitious business name," a business may use a name other than the name it was formed under by following the DBA filing steps set by the local government responsible for the area the DBA is for.
When the title of your business includes the "real and true" title of every owner, then it's not necessary to use or register an assumed business title. A genuine and true title describes your name, middle initial or title, and surname.
Another name for assumed name is pseudonymous
Business license, assumed business name certificate, tax resale number. Plus your location, rent/utilities/phone. And some cars to sell.
Go to your County Court House. The clerk will check for you. Usually, if you have a business name registered and someone else in that state tries to use it you will get a letter to inform you. If you haven't registered your business - fill out an "assumed business name" form and they will check to make sure no one is using it.
An assumed name is an alias, especially one adopted in order to deceive people.
The name of Michael Jackson's assumed son was Omer Bhatti.
No. A sole proprietorship means that the owner of the business does not have an entity that limits some potential liabilities. A sole proprietor is conducting business in his own name (or possibly under an assumed name, which does not add any protection).
Incognito.
That depends on city and county, the business ownership type (LLC, corporation sole proprieter, etc) and if there is a professional license required (barber, veterinarian, etc).And. . .Unless your name and your business name are the same (i.e., John Doe and John Doe) you are required to have an "assumed name" certificate filed with your County Clerk. Also, most businesses require a sales tax permit.
If I'm reading your question correctly, Your asking: If Business#1 has the Dealers license, can Business #2 use Business #1's Dealers License?The answer would be Yes if you meet your State's DBA(Doing Business As) Filing Requirements.Your business' legal name is required on all government forms and applications, including your application for employer tax IDs, licenses and permits. However, if you want to open a shop or sell your products under a different name, then you may have to file a "fictitious name" registration form with your government agency.A fictitious name (or assumed name, trade name, or DBA name) is a business name that is different than your business' personal name, the names of your partners or the officially registered name of your LLC or corporation.
His last name is simpson