What Cannabis Founders Get Wrong Before They Ever Open Their Doors

We’ve seen cannabis founders bring passion, great products, and market insight, only to later pay far more to fix a structural mistake than it would have cost to prevent. Ambition is rewarded in this industry, but urgency can never replace preparation.

To illustrate why prevention is critical, consider operational areas such as legal, HR, compliance, and insurance. In each, familiar pitfalls tend to appear at every phase. The pattern is clear: companies that scale successfully are those that prioritized strong infrastructure from the outset.

Structure Is Not Bureaucracy. It Is A Strategy.

The most underestimated cannabis decision is how you organize from the start, especially with federal illegality. In New York, we see operators struggling to separate licenses consolidated under one entity, complicated by OCM’s refusal to allow transfers. Structuring everything under one roof prevents cleanly separating licenses, a foundational error with no simple fix.

For cannabis companies, the structural principles that protect you are:

  • Keep license-holding entities as isolated as possible
  • Hold property, equipment, and IP in separate structures
  • Model your financials as if 280E applies in full, and hold reserves accordingly

280E remains fully in effect. Litigation is challenging its application based on anticipated rescheduling, but currently it applies to Schedule 1 and 2 substances. Until that changes, align operations accordingly.

Suehiko Ono
“Fast is definitely not less expensive. You go into this very enthusiastic and starry-eyed, with this feeling of complete urgency, and you simply cannot build something durable that way.” Suehiko Ono, Cannabis Law Attorney, Cogent Law

Your First Employee Triggers More Oversight Than You Think

Once a cannabis business hires its first W-2 employee, more than 120 regulatory bodies turn their attention to it. Operators from traditional industries often mistakenly believe the rules are similar, but cannabis businesses face unique compliance challenges.

  • Simultaneous scrutiny from the Department of Labor, IRS, and EEOC
  • State-specific employment laws that vary by jurisdiction and sometimes by county
  • Off-duty cannabis use protections that can make standard zero-tolerance drug policies a direct legal liability if not written correctly
  • Handbook requirements written directly into state cannabis regulations, covering training, on-site consumption, and sampling policies

The handbook exposes liability if not done right. A generic or outdated template signed at onboarding is a liability waiting to be discovered. Every cannabis employee handbook must be legally reviewed and state-specific.

Emily Wolfley
“People are your most important asset. But if the HR infrastructure is not in place from day one, people can also become your biggest liability.” Emily Wolfley, Business Consultant, Green Leaf Business Solutions

The Gap Between Paper and Practice

Bridging from people management to compliance, the gap between written procedures and everyday practice often widens in cannabis enterprises. Having an SOP and following an SOP are two different things.

We walked through cannabis facilities where tracking tags were sitting loose on the floor next to plants rather than attached to them, while the operator pointed confidently to a binder of procedures that said otherwise. The documentation existed. The compliance did not.

Compliance is effective only when built into daily operations, not shelved after onboarding. This means regular training updates, systems to track training deadlines, and strong accountability, even with friends or family.

Foundation Elements Every Cannabis Operator Needs Before Opening

  • Isolated license-holding entity structure with separate assets
  • Legally reviewed employee handbook with cannabis-specific provisions
  • Cannabis-compliant payroll and HR system
  • Insurance reviewed and understood, not just carried
  • Chart of accounts and financial model accounting for 280E
  • Ongoing compliance training program, not a one-time onboarding event

Insurance Is Not a Checkbox. It Is a Business Continuity Tool.

After addressing compliance, risk management becomes a focus, particularly insurance. For those in the cannabis industry, insurance should not be regarded simply as a requirement but as an essential tool for business continuity.

Treating insurance as just another state-required formality exposes cannabis operators to unforeseen risks. Recovery is far slower in cannabis due to licensing and regulatory delays, and policies not tailored to the business may not cover key risks, especially during periods of price compression.

The carriers that have been in medical cannabis since 2013 and 2014 have built underwriting frameworks based on real historical data. What they want to see is exactly what legal and HR professionals also want to see: clear documentation, compliant SOPs, trained staff, and a realistic growth plan.

Operators who come in with those things get better coverage at better rates. Key person coverage is also consistently underused. Many founders build early operations around one or two essential people and have no plan for what happens if one of them is gone.

Bryan Mosser
“Anytime you can tie in legal, compliance, and insurance, and we are all rowing in the same direction, that is helpful for everyone.” Bryan Mosser, Executive Vice President and Chief Revenue Officer, Carma Insurance

What the Regulatory Horizon Actually Means for Operators

Rescheduling is more likely than not, but likely is not certain, and certain does not mean immediate. For operators thinking ahead, here is what the regulatory horizon actually looks like:

  • Rescheduling moves cannabis into an FDA and DEA framework, creating new obligations around GMP standards, traceability, and product documentation
  • Operators who have already built those systems are positioned for that transition; those who have not will face it as a disruption
  • Banking access has meaningfully improved, with credit unions and community banks offering market-rate credit facilities, but national banks are not there yet
  • De-scheduling accelerates full banking access; companies with clean financials and compliant operations will capture it first

Stepping back to view the larger landscape, the broader opportunity in cannabis today belongs to those who do things correctly, not just quickly.

Early-stage operators often faced high costs while regulatory litigation delayed market entry. Disciplined companies remain resilient in the face of market oversupply and fluctuating wholesale prices.

Jared Schwass
“The cost to unwind a mistake is significantly higher than the cost to prevent it. I want to say ten, twenty times more. Get the legal foundation squared from the beginning.” Jared Schwass, Cannabis Law Attorney, Cogent Law

The Bottom Line

The cost of unwinding a mistake in cannabis is not proportional to the cost of the mistake. A structuring error caught at formation takes a phone call to fix. The same error caught at a transaction, a license transfer, or an IRS audit costs multiples more, and some errors cannot be fixed at all.

Do not sign anything without a legal review. Treat your people infrastructure the same way you treat your license. Talk to your broker before you need to file a claim. That is how a cannabis company becomes one worth owning.

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