"I am not saying you should do this. A potential life hack or employment hack. If you are in a well-paying job and you have the money, you could start and form an LLC and you are technically the ranking member of it, you are the CEO, whatever. The only thing you really have to do is every year pay your license for it. It's about 135 bucks in the state of Florida. I don't know what it is here. And that just keeps it active, okay? Why is that sometimes a good thing? On your resume, let's say you work a nice job and you get laid off. And you look for another job and it takes you six months to get your new job. There's a gap. If you own an LLC and you are the owner of that LLC, technically, you can fill that base with running my own business. Self-employed. Now, the IRS, if you try to pretend like you're making money or doing anything from like a capital standpoint, you're going to f*** yourself. So you just keep that s*** empty. But you're technically self-employed and this is your business. You're a business owner and you're self-employed. I'm not telling you to lie to the company and say that you made revenue. It's none of their business. They can't ask you how much revenue you made and how many hours you worked. They just, yeah, I was running my own business. It wasn't a profitable business. I didn't make any money. I didn't do anything, but I was running it. I'm not saying you should do this. I'm saying an unethical or a potential work around life hack from just the resume standpoint. If you own, if you just start an LLC, I'm not telling you to do anything from a revenue standpoint. But technically on paper, you are a business owner. You own this business. When they ask you, there's no gap. It can be filled by you running your own business. I'm not saying it's going to get you hired, but it's just a little fun thing. That's all."