In to hear from your employer on this.No, for now I'll sell to customers that I get. Eventually if the store would be okay with it, I'd sell through the store.
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In to hear from your employer on this.No, for now I'll sell to customers that I get. Eventually if the store would be okay with it, I'd sell through the store.
They already know. I've talked to the about it. I mostly advertise at my second job, and not the gun store one, since there are less people who come in there compared to my other job. But it's fine with them. And hopefully one day I could sell through the store too.In to hear from your employer on this.
Well, I'm still in to hear from your employer. Get them to drop in on this thread.They already know. I've talked to the about it. I mostly advertise at my second job, and not the gun store one, since there are less people who come in there compared to my other job. But it's fine with them. And hopefully one day I could sell through the store too.
That was not the context in which he used the word. Period.Principal would also work, depending on its intended use in the sentence.
If, for instance, he was referring to himself as a principal in the operation of the company.
Hopefully one of these days I can get myself an FFL. Just gotta work hard
Yeah, I know it won't be an easy thing to maintain. But it would be nice to have an FFL one day."Getting an FFL" is not difficult. Handling all the paperwork (and the business liabilities that it creates) is a risk that you have to want to assume. It's not like an achievement award in a video game.
There's absolutely no "hard work" involved in getting an FFL. Just time, money, and paperwork.Hopefully one of these days I can get myself an FFL. Just gotta work hard
I've been an officer in a gun club for 12 years.I am aware that could happen. And as the business grows I will take steps to make sure I am protect myself. Till then I will make it insanely clear as to which rifle uses which caliber.
OP, all of this is correct. Your ambition is admirable, but completely unrealistic.There's absolutely no "hard work" involved in getting an FFL. Just time, money, and paperwork.
Look, I gave you a bit of hard time in the $400 Altoids thread, but I'm not going to troll you here. Just give you some pretty serious advice. You've already had two pretty well respected members of this community, both of whom are certified armorers, tell you that they would take you under their wing to learn a thing or two. Take them up on it!
Everything you are suggesting in this thread could get you and by extenions your family in some hot water. You don't have an FFL. You don't a have a business license. Becoming an LLC won't make any difference. If this truly is an attempt to supplement income, it couldn't be a worse decision. The AR market is circling the drain and - no disrespect - you even mentioning what you are going to produce in the same breath as Daniel Defense is laughable. You're already working two jobs. Don't make it any harder on yourself. Nobody in this community is going to pay you $1200 for an AR you built on your kitchen table when they can get a rack grade Colt or LMT for the same price.
You have the ODT in your corner. We like you...and some of us are gently implying that you're not as squared away as you think. Take the advice, hit upcmshoot or
Hood886 and pump the brakes on BrownHawk2A or whatever it is.