Sole proprietor, partnership, LLC, corporation, cooperative, nonprofit
Before you can build wealth, you need to understand one of the most important decisions any business person makes: how to own what they build. The legal structure of a business determines who controls it, who benefits from its profits, who is responsible for its debts, and how it can grow over time.
In Birmingham-Bessemer, you see every form of business ownership walking down the street — the barber who owns his chair and runs his own shop, the family that pools their savings to open a restaurant together, the nonprofit that runs the community food pantry, the cooperative where farmers share equipment and sell their harvest together. Each structure tells a story about how wealth is created and who it stays with.
This unit asks a bigger question beyond the legal definitions: which forms of ownership build community wealth, and which ones just move money out of the neighborhood?
Birmingham-Bessemer's Black community built dozens of cooperatives and mutual-aid businesses in the early 1900s — from insurance societies to burial cooperatives to church-owned real estate. These weren't just businesses. They were strategies for keeping wealth circulating inside the community when mainstream financial institutions refused to serve Black customers. Understanding business ownership structures today means understanding why our ancestors chose them so carefully.
A sole proprietorship is the simplest business structure — one person owns and operates the business, and there is no legal separation between the owner and the business itself. This means the owner keeps all the profits. It also means the owner is personally responsible for all the debts and legal liabilities.
A partnership is like a sole proprietorship shared between two or more people. Partners split profits according to their agreement, share responsibilities, and — in a general partnership — are each personally liable for the full debts of the business, even debts their partner created.
Many Black-owned barber shops, hair salons, food trucks, and lawn care businesses in Bessemer operate as sole proprietorships. The owner is the business. The advantage: complete control. The risk: one lawsuit or bad debt can reach into personal savings. This is why understanding business structure matters before you earn your first dollar.
Key insight: Sole proprietorships are easy to start, but they offer no protection between you and your business. If your business owes money, you owe money. For many entrepreneurs, this is the first reason to consider a different structure as the business grows.
An LLC (Limited Liability Company) is one of the most popular business structures for small and growing businesses because it offers two major advantages: liability protection (your personal assets are separate from the business) and pass-through taxation (profits flow to the owner's personal return, avoiding corporate double-taxation).
An S-Corporation is a more formal structure with stricter IRS rules — no more than 100 shareholders, all must be U.S. citizens or residents, and only one class of stock is allowed. The S-corp's big advantage is in how the owner's income is split: owners can take part of their income as a salary (subject to payroll taxes) and part as a distribution (not subject to self-employment tax), which can save money at higher income levels.
| Feature | Sole Prop | LLC | S-Corp |
|---|---|---|---|
| Personal liability protection | ❌ None | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes |
| Pass-through taxation | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes |
| Complexity to set up | Very simple | Moderate | Complex |
| Ownership limit | 1 person | Unlimited | Max 100 |
| Best for | Starting out | Growing small biz | Profitable small biz |
When a Birmingham entrepreneur takes their catering business from occasional gigs to regular corporate clients, forming an LLC is often the first formal step. It keeps personal savings protected if a client sues, and it signals professionalism to larger customers and banks. Many BBYM-area contractors, consultants, and creative professionals operate as LLCs.
A cooperative (co-op) is a business owned and democratically controlled by its members — whether those members are workers, consumers, or producers. Every member typically has one vote, regardless of how much they've invested. Profits are distributed back to members in proportion to their participation, not their ownership stake.
This is one of the most powerful models for community wealth-building because the people who use the business also own it. A grocery co-op keeps food dollars inside the neighborhood. A worker co-op means employees share in the profits they create. A housing co-op gives residents ownership stakes in their own homes.
The cooperative model is the most direct application of the Community Wealth Loop — when a co-op member shops at the co-op, their spending generates profits that return to them as a patronage dividend. The dollar circulates inside the community instead of leaving it. This is exactly how Black Wall Street worked: dollars passed from hand to hand within the community seven to nineteen times before leaving. Today's average dollar in many underinvested communities leaves within six hours.
A nonprofit organization is a legal entity organized for a purpose other than making profits for owners. Instead of distributing earnings to shareholders, a nonprofit reinvests its surplus back into its mission. Nonprofits can earn revenue — and they must in order to sustain themselves — but that revenue must serve the stated charitable, educational, religious, or social purpose.
The most common nonprofit designation in the U.S. is 501(c)(3) — the IRS classification that grants tax exemption and allows donors to deduct their contributions. BBYM operates as a 501(c)(3). So do most churches, HBCUs, community foundations, and social service organizations.
Birmingham-Bessemer Youth Ministries (BBYM) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit. The Black Church — as an institution — holds more charitable property and community financial infrastructure than any other organization in African-American history. HBCUs like Miles College in Fairfield operate as nonprofits. Understanding nonprofit structure is understanding how community institutions that don't extract profit can still generate enormous community wealth.
Your community is a live classroom for business structure. Every type of ownership we've studied exists within a few miles of where you live and go to school. Learning to read what you see is a core skill of the Swanson Academy.
Your assignment: Walk or drive through your neighborhood this week and identify one business of each type. Notice who owns it, who benefits from its profits, and whether those dollars stay in the community or leave it. Reading a neighborhood like a balance sheet starts with seeing what's already there.
This is perhaps the most important concept in the entire Swanson Academy curriculum, and it starts here in Unit 1.1:
Employment is selling your time. Ownership is owning the system that generates value from other people's time.
When you have a job, you earn income — and income is not wealth. When you own a business, you can build equity, generate passive income, and create something that can be sold or passed to the next generation. The racial wealth gap in America is not primarily an income gap. It is an ownership gap.
| Employment | Ownership |
|---|---|
| Earn wages or salary | Build equity in an asset |
| Income stops when you stop working | Business can generate income while you sleep |
| No stake in the value you create | You capture a share of the value you create |
| Can be replaced or laid off | You control the decision to sell or transfer |
| Harder to pass wealth to next generation | Business can be inherited or sold as an asset |
Dr. Reginald Swanson understood that the communities he served needed more than good jobs — they needed ownership stakes in institutions that would outlast any single career. The Swanson Initiative, the Reginald Swanson Heritage Fund, and this Academy are built on that conviction. Income without ownership is labor. Capital without ownership is debt. Graduates of this academy know the difference — and they know what to do about it.
Click a term on the left, then its matching definition on the right.
Answer five questions about your business idea and this tool will score each ownership structure against your situation — and explain why. This is your first step toward thinking like a business owner, not just an employee.
This calculator is a learning tool, not legal advice. Before you register any business in Alabama, speak with a business attorney or visit the Alabama Secretary of State's office. Many community organizations in Jefferson County offer free or low-cost business formation assistance.