I just started a new W2 position as Lead Structural Engineer at ESI Inc. while running Load Bearing Empire - 6 AI-powered businesses under my main LLC. The onboarding process got interesting fast.
Here's what happens when HR meets entrepreneurship.
The paperwork maze
Standard W2 onboarding is straightforward. Fill out your I-9, W4, direct deposit forms. Done in 30 minutes.
Add 6 active LLCs and it becomes a disclosure minefield.
My employment agreement had this clause:
"Employee shall not engage in any business activities that conflict with Company interests or duties."
I spent 2 hours documenting each business to prove zero conflict with structural engineering:
Luchin Real Estate & Investments LLC (Parent)
├── Property management automation
├── AI phone answering service
├── Document processing service
├── Lead generation platform
├── Real estate CRM
└── Investment analysis tools
None compete with pipe rack design or foundation analysis. But you have to prove it upfront.
Tax complexity hits different
Here's where it gets fun. My 2023 tax situation:
- W2 income: $89,000
- LLC business income: $47,000
- Quarterly estimated taxes: $3,200
- Business expenses: $12,000
- Home office deduction: $1,500
Now I'm juggling both again. My accountant charges $2,400/year just to sort through the mess.
The new W2 changes my quarterly estimated tax calculations immediately. I had to recalculate within 2 weeks of starting.
Time blocking becomes critical
40 hours per week for ESI. 25 hours per week for the LLCs.
My schedule looks like this:
Monday-Friday 8AM-5PM: Structural engineering
Monday-Friday 6PM-8PM: LLC operations
Saturday 8AM-12PM: Development work
Sunday 2PM-5PM: Financial review
You cannot wing this. Block your time or watch everything burn.
The infrastructure advantage
Running my own tech stack saves me here. Everything runs on one $240/month Vultr VPS:
- Asterisk PBX for business calls
- VAPI agents handling customer service
- Supabase for all databases
- LangGraph orchestrating workflows
No SaaS subscriptions bleeding me dry. When you own your infrastructure, scaling doesn't murder your margins.
My AI phone system processes 200+ calls per month automatically. That's 8 hours I don't spend on customer service while at my day job.
Legal structure matters
I structured everything under one parent LLC for good reason:
Luchin Real Estate & Investments LLC owns:
- All business bank accounts
- The VPS and infrastructure
- Equipment and software licenses
- Real estate investments
This creates clean separation from my W2 employment. ESI pays Domonique Luchin the individual. The LLCs are separate legal entities.
One EIN for taxes. One operating agreement. One registered agent fee ($125/year in Georgia).
Cash flow reality check
Month 1 numbers with the new W2:
W2 take-home (after taxes/benefits): $4,200
LLC net profit: $2,800
Total monthly cash: $7,000
Fixed business expenses: $890
Personal expenses: $3,200
Investment contributions: $1,500
Cash remaining: $1,410
The W2 provides stability. The LLCs provide upside. You need both when you're building.
What surprised me
Banking got weird fast. I have 3 business accounts now. My bank wanted to understand why a structural engineer owns AI service companies. Took 2 meetings and documentation to sort out.
Insurance overlaps. My W2 health insurance covers me. But I needed separate E&O insurance for the LLCs. My agent had never seen this combination before.
Networking confusion. Industry events don't know how to categorize me. Am I the engineer or the tech entrepreneur? I'm both.
The real talk
Running 6 businesses while working full-time is not glamorous. It's spreadsheets at 10PM. It's taking customer calls during lunch breaks. It's explaining to your date why you check revenue numbers on Saturday morning.
But it works if you:
- Automate everything possible
- Own your infrastructure
- Structure legally from day one
- Track every dollar obsessively
Your next move
Pick one. Either commit to climbing the corporate ladder or start building your own thing. Doing both halfway gets you nowhere.
If you're going to do both, document everything. Your future self will thank you when tax season arrives.
What's your biggest challenge balancing W2 work with side businesses? Drop a comment below.
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