Three Companies, One Pattern: A Track Record in Corporate Services

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Most people who call themselves entrepreneurs have built one company. Adam Gottbetter helped build several in the same sector, helped sell two, and then chose to re-enter that sector. Not because an earlier exit disappointed, but because the market had reset enough to be worth entering again.

The foundation is a legal career, but not a conventional one. Adam ran what he describes as a deal shop: a practice that combined a law firm and investment bank under one roof. He took equity positions alongside the founders he worked with, often standing side by side with them to help build the vision rather than simply advising from across a conference table. That kind of direct exposure to how businesses are built and capitalized from the inside reveals things that pure advisory work does not. It also reveals what’s missing.

Vcorp Services (2003)

Adam helped conceive and develop the company alongside Shai Stern and Seth Farbman, who had earlier built and sold Vintage Filings, an EDGAR filing firm, to PR Newswire. The insight behind Vcorp was specific: the same formula of lower pricing and higher service that had upended the EDGAR filing business could be applied to corporate formation. The professionals who needed formation and registered-agent services most were being served by companies built for consumers. Vcorp was built for them, backed by an entrepreneur CEO, and grew to tens of thousands of clients before being acquired by Wolters Kluwer in October 2016.

Vcheck Global (2012)

The background-check industry was built around HR departments screening employees. Checkbox verification. It confirmed someone existed but said nothing about whether the deal they were asking you to fund would hold. Adam had been a customer of a predecessor background company and saw the same formula applying again: better pricing, better service, built for a different client. Vcheck Global was co-founded in 2012 with Shai Stern and an entrepreneur CEO, targeting private equity funds, lenders, and investment banks who needed investment-grade due diligence reports rather than HR screening tools. The company grew to serve major financial institutions and received a strategic investment from Sunstone Partners in 2021.

vState Filings (2024)

In 2024, Adam and his partners, including Stern and Seth Farbman, returned to corporate formation with vState Filings. The same formula was straightforward: compete on price and better service, back an entrepreneurial CEO, and share the institutional knowledge of what the client actually needs. The regulatory environment had shifted, creating new compliance complexities around entity formation and beneficial ownership reporting that the established players had not addressed. The team with more direct experience in this sector than anyone stepped back in. Spotting a market once is a skill. Recognizing when one you already know has reset enough to re-enter is harder to teach.

Get in Touch  The team behind vState Filings has spent more than two decades building, scaling, and exiting in corporate compliance and formation. Visit vStateFilings.com to learn more or request a consultation.

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