Originally posted by: compuwiz1
After reading, as well as fully understanding this thread and your intents, it has become clear to me, that you are looking for a way to cheat the system and some people. That is disgusting. Your motivations are quite clear. Your company has no money, and you want to use others. Just fold the damn company, if it's that broke. :|
Wrong on so many levels.
To the OP: yes, it's legal. It becomes illegal when you either insist that they do things, and have bad consequences when they don't - or, when you make promises to your volunteers that you don't keep. If you say you're going to hire somebody later if they volunteer enough, and then you don't, THAT is going to get you into trouble.
If people offer to help, and you accept their offer, that's fine. As long as they always have the option of walking away, or saying no to what you ask them to do, you're legally okay. That's called friendship.
You can also do things like buy them dinner, or drinks etc to say thank you - but you have to be careful about calling that a business dinner for tax purposes, talk to your accountant about what is and isn't okay.
Most of us who have started up businesses needed volunteer help to get off the ground. Think of how many people have their parents lend a hand, or have the wife do the books or whatever. Friends are wonderful. They help you when you need them, and then when they need a hand, you pitch in. So, a good rule of thumb is to only accept as much help as you are willing to "pay back" in return.
However, it's a good way to lose a friend if the friend is assuming that they'll get a job later or something - and you figure they're just helping. You have to think of it from their point of view. This is a tricky management issues, you have to know what's in their heads. It's MUCH easier to manage people when you pay them.
Good luck on your new business. Do you have a SBA office near you, or SCORE? They are good people to talk to about business startups. They'd answer this kind of question for you, and they generally know what they're talking about. At least in my experience.