Government Requirements Kit
Corporate Bylaws Go to topics
Bylaws are the foundation for your corporation - the operating guidelines.

If you have outside investors, we strongly urge that you talk with an attorney to discuss your particular business and the legal protections you and they may need.

Sample Bylaws Click here for sample bylaws provided by startupkits.com.
What to do:
Initial incorporator
Unlike articles of incorporation, bylaws can be changed to fit your needs - as long as the changes do not violate your state's law. The person who initially ratifies these bylaws is called the initial incorporator. The initial incorporator is generally the person who signed the Articles of Incorporation. The initial incorporator must decide (subject to later Board of Director confirmation):
  1. Where your principal office will be.
  2. How many directors your corporation will have.
  3. When and where your annual shareholder meetings will be held.
After these three decisions are made, the initial incorporator can prepare the bylaws. You can obtain bylaws online for under $10, you can use an incorporation book (at your library or bookstore), visit your county law library, write them yourself, or see an attorney. Bylaws contain the operating procedure for governing your corporation and include the information described below. You can amend your bylaws at any time by a majority vote of the shareholders.

The initial incorporator should also complete the Action by Incorporator minutes to authorize the initial directors and your bylaws. This document is included with the First Board of Directors Meeting information.

Number of directors Directors can be anyone from within or outside the company. Some corporations include outside directors such as attorneys, tax advisors, or other business advisors. Outside means they do not own stock. Other corporations just have "inside directors".

State law usually requires corporations with:

1 shareholder must elect 1 or more directors
2 shareholders must elect 2 or more directors
3 shareholders must elect 3 or more directors
What bylaws need to contain Bylaws usually contain the following information:
Office Says where your principal office will be.
Board of Directors You will have ______(insert number) members on your Board of Directors. Describes how long your Directors will serve (one year), who will conduct Board meetings, and what constitutes a quorum (a majority of authorized directors). One person has one vote on the Board of Directors.
Corporate officers Describes three officers apopointed by the Board: President, Secretary and Chief Financial Officer. A Chairman of the Board and Vice Presidents can also be elected. One person can hold more than one office. But since stock certificates require the signatures of the President and the Secretary, as a security precaution, the same person should not hold both offices simultaneously, unless there is only one corporate director.
Shareholder meetings Describes when shareholder meetings will be held, how shareholders will be notified, what constitutes a quorum for shareholder decision (a majority of shares entitled to vote) and how votes are to be cast (ballots are not required). Shareholders can cast one vote for every share that they own.
Authorized signature The Board must decide who can sign on behalf of the corporation.
Issuing stock Describes how to transfer, exchange or replace stock certificates.
Corporate records The corporation must keep books and records, which shareholders and directors have a right to see. Annual reports aren't necessary.
Governing law States that the governing law is (your state).
Calculate what makes a quorum To determine what constitutes a quorum, use these numbers in your bylaws:

Board of Directors Meeting: ____people (insert 1/2 number of board members)
Shareholders meeting: representatives for ______ shares (insert 1/2 number of shares issued)

These numbers may change if the number of directors or number of outstanding shares change.

Questions? Contact your attorney.
 
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