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FITTIN · IP ASSETSHow it worksWhat you getFAQ

Your idea is now an asset.
Now mint the tokenized security it backs.

A filed provisional is an asset. T1 mints the security you hold — units of the company that owns it. Your own company owns your IP; 10,000,000 units are minted to your name in a durable register — private today, and already in the standard form a future pooled listing stage would require.

Idea
·Report
·Provisional filed
·Tokenized security
·Investor-ready
·Pool listing
·Trading

What's in it for you — in plain words

No finance background needed. Here is why founders do this:

💼
Your idea becomes something you own
Right now your idea is words and a filing. After this path it's a company you own 100%, holding your patent-pending invention — recorded by the state, at USPTO, and in a register. Real, provable, yours.
🍰
Share slices without giving up the pie
10,000,000 units mean you can one day — once an investor-readiness stage is properly in place — bring in a partner or investor with a precise slice: 5%, not "half my idea". Until then, they stay entirely in your hands.
Ready when opportunity knocks
Investors and buyers expect a clean standard structure. Yours will already be in the standard form they recognize — built to cut diligence from months of cleanup to days of review.
🎫
A founding place in the pool
If a pooled cohort toward a regulated venue opens, founding members are first in the queue and share one document review — designed to cost a fraction of a solo listing. Optional, never required; no dates, prices or outcomes are promised.

Plain honesty: none of this promises your idea will make money — value always depends on the idea itself. This step makes your ownership real, provable and ready.

Start with your idea — free →

What you get for $499

Everything below is generated from your own documents and answers — you review, sign and file; the result is 100% yours.

🏛
Your own LLC
Formation worksheet with the exact answer for every state field — you file, the company is 100% yours
📜
Operating Agreement
With the Tokenized Units article: the electronic register is the company's canonical ownership record
🔗
IP into the company
Contribution & Assignment of your provisional — plus free USPTO recording for a public chain of title
📊
Valuation memo
Evidence-based, from your own report and public benchmarks — the basis of your capital contribution
🪙
10,000,000 units
Your company's shares, LLC-style — all of them minted to your name in the FITTIN IP Security Register, the durable book of record
📋
Token Terms v1.0
Standardized, compliance-standard-compatible terms — designed to be compatible with a future pooled cohort (optional; not yet open)
🏆
Certificate of Tokenized Units
Your commemorative certificate + your register extract — kept durably in your Data Room, exportable on request

How it works — five steps, one sitting each

1 · Unlock — $499, card or PayPal. One flat fee, no subscriptions.
2 · Company details — pick your state (we recommend by cost), name your company. Your inventor details are already prefilled from your filing.
3 · Mint pack — six documents generated in about a minute: formation worksheet, Operating Agreement, IP assignment, valuation memo, Token Terms, checklist.
4 · File & anchor — file the LLC on the state portal (~$100–$110 state fee), grab your free EIN, record the assignment at USPTO (free). We hand-hold every field.
5 · Tokenized — enter your state file number: 10,000,000 units mint to your name, your certificate is issued, the asset lands in your Data Room.
FOUNDING MEMBER The pooled path

Every T1 company is built on the same versioned templates and lives in the same register. If enough founding members accumulate, the cohort can approach a regulated venue TOGETHER — through the venue's own regulated rails, one document review shared across the pool. FITTIN organizes the standardized paperwork; trading and placement stay with regulated venues and their intermediaries. A pooled review is designed to cost a fraction of a solo listing, founding members first in the queue. Optional at every step; no dates, prices or outcomes are promised.

⚖️ What the $499 does NOT include — so there are no surprises
· The state LLC filing fee ($100 Wyoming / $110 Delaware) — you pay it directly to the state; EIN and USPTO assignment recording are free.
· No investors, no listing, no token sale — T1 makes your security exist and makes it program-ready; investor-readiness and pooled listing are later, optional stages.
· No legal, tax or investment advice — the documents are standardized self-help templates you review and sign.
· Do not offer or sell your units to anyone yet — they are private, unregistered securities until an exemption stage is in place.

Questions founders ask

Is this legal without lawyers and brokers?

Forming your own company and holding 100% of its units yourself is the textbook private, non-public transaction — the kind the Securities Act exempts from registration (§4(a)(2)): no public offering, no broker, and no one else you're selling to. A company may keep its own register: transfer-agent registration is generally required only for securities registered under Exchange Act Section 12, far beyond a private single-member LLC. This is general information, not legal advice — a licensed attorney can confirm how it applies to you.

What exactly are the 10,000,000 units?

IN PLAIN WORDS: think of your company as a pie. The pie is cut into 10,000,000 equal slices, and each slice is called a unit. Whoever holds the slices owns the company — and the company owns your IP. Today every single slice is yours: 10,000,000 units = 100%. Cutting the pie into many small slices doesn't change how much pie you have — it just makes it easy to share precisely later, if you ever choose to. IF YOU KNOW STARTUPS: units are LLC membership interests — the LLC equivalent of shares. 10,000,000 mirrors the standard 10M-authorized-shares convention: whole-number cap-table math (2.5% = exactly 250,000 units), sensible per-unit pricing at early valuations, and a clean 1:1 mirror when units are tokenized on-chain at the program stage. The count is cosmetic; the ownership percentage is what matters.

What exactly is the asset, and what is the security?

Three layers, cleanly separated. The ASSET is your patent-pending IP — its value is what the valuation memo models. The SECURITY is the 10,000,000 units of your company — the instrument you hold. TOKENIZED is the form of the record: standardized, compliance-standard-compatible register entries. The SEC's own framing applies: a tokenized security is still a security — and this structure is among the most straightforward: direct membership units in your own company on the company's canonical register (not a third-party receipt for a security, not a swap). That is also why the no-sales rule matters.

Why is the register off-chain? Where is the blockchain?

The canonical record of the leading tokenization platforms is the transfer-agent book — the token is a mirror of it. Your Token Terms already capture the identity and restriction data those permissioned standards rely on (they verify signed identity attestations on-chain; the underlying personal data stays off-chain), so when your company joins a program stage, minting the on-chain mirror is a mechanical step — no re-papering.

How does the pooled listing path work?

Every T1 company uses the same versioned templates. Sharing one standardized legal structure across a cohort is designed to cut the setup and legal-template cost that a solo issuer pays alone — the biggest fixed cost of going it alone. (Per-company checks a venue or transfer agent must do are still per company.) Founding members are first in the queue if the pool stage opens. No dates, prices or outcomes are promised.

Wyoming or Delaware?

Wyoming: about $100 to file and about $60/year — the low-cost choice for a solo founder. Delaware: $110 to file (per the state's official fee schedule) and a flat $300/year annual tax — the investor-classic choice. The wizard highlights the common choice for each situation — the decision is yours; both work in the program.

What if I stop after T1?

Everything is yours and stays yours: the LLC, the signed documents, the recorded assignment. The register entry is exportable on request — there is no lock-in. The program is an option, not an obligation.

Start with your idea — free →

FITTIN prepares standardized self-help documents and maintains a book-entry register as a service provider; you review, sign and file everything yourself. FITTIN is not a law firm, not a broker-dealer, and not a registered transfer agent; nothing here is legal, tax or investment advice — and nothing here is an offer or sale of securities. Your units are private, unregistered securities: do not offer or sell them before an investor-readiness stage is properly in place.