You're making a veritable crap-ton of assumptions here. Happy to talk about specific concerns, but not if you're going in to this with guns blazing looking for a witch to burn.
I'm curious how it works from a technical standpoint. If they invest, do they not own shares of the company, and then during the sale the shares are sold, did they just gift the shares back to you personally? Does that have tax implications?
Investment vehicle was a SAFE. They basically cancelled the SAFE as part of the deal. We've had carryover losses for years, so from a tax perspective, there was no hit on either side.
Now that you mention it, you're right, maybe some of that extra $300k went to the employees? I don't know because I wasn't in the room. I'm curious how much money employees got, and why $3.7 million was enough when $2.9 wasn't.
As for $3.7 vs $2.9...that was basically the number that, to oversimplify, would roughly give the outcome I wanted for "retirement" when it comes to investment interest over the next 50 years.
Basically, it's the number I felt comfortable with to not instantly feel like I needed to get back to work in a few years.
> We aren’t spending Silicon Valley-amounts on salaries, but we’re certainly not on the low end. From the perspective wanting my team to love where they work and not have to worry about money, I’m very happy with the salaries everyone gets.
For a few years before I sold my small (UK) company, our employment contracts had a bonus clause in. It guaranteed a bonus payout from a pool of 5% of any future sale, based on a multiple of years service (up to 5) and salary at the time of sale.
We sold for a similar sum and the bonuses were pretty small by SV standards - a bit more than £20,000 for a few, down to a few £00 for people who had just joined (maybe 50% annual salary for a few).
Me & my partner had a fishy earnout clause over 12 months, but I got us pleasantly fired after 3. Half the staff got made redundant after 6, which I don't believe was a surprise to any of them. Nobody buys a business for its cosy culture, or sells one expecting it to stay.
I think it's right for founders to be up-front about the likelihood and consequences of an exit, which is why we put it in our employment contract. But IMO more than 10% would be very generous for these ordinary private buyouts at 4-5× profit - no rocket ship valuations. At least that's clearer and more certain (and less tax efficient) than the kinds of games people play with options & rounds of funding.
UK tech companies, salaries & employee expectations are a whole different world from what's discussed here. Maybe Baremetrics was closer to that world than SV.
(In another life I wish I'd looked into what our old customers Torchbox did last year which is form an employee-owned trust and sell to that - https://torchbox.com/blog/not-selling-up/ )
$80k for how many years of work? Unless it’s one, I’m with the parent. I’m sure it’s all legal and ‘equitable’ according to the terms, but that’s peanuts of a return for somewhere between 4 and 7 years of work (based off a typical vesting schedule).
We don’t currently know what their salaries are, but it’s pretty common for startup salaries to be 50-60% of normal salaries. The rest is typically LLC stock grants. It’s done this way with the promise of “when we sell” those stock holders will make bank. $80k isn’t ‘bank’. Especially if Baremetrics was following the startup-standard salaries.
Anyone taking a startup job on a 50-60% of a normal salary without several percent of the shares is doing themselves a massive disfavour.
Most of my startup jobs have paid market rate. The shares and options have compensated for the risk, not a lower salary.
I'm sure some accept lower salaries, and certainly the salaries won't be comparable with the very top end of the market, but most people don't work in the top end of the market.
A startup that tried talking me into a massive cut without offering me basically founder-level share amounts would be an instant red flag.
All indications are that they were operating on a profit basis, not a growth basis, so I think it's a poor assumption that anybody was being paid a half-salary. As the post states, they're keeping their same compensation going forward, and all are choosing to stay, suggesting it's very satisfactory, and has been all along.
It's peanuts, but it's also REALITY. Few people get big windfalls working for startups as employees or even founders, but maybe you get a little bonus on top of your salary if there's an exit.
Few employees may get a windfall in reality, but it doesn’t make it easier to see (nor does it justify the founder’s choices).
Those employees are just as responsible for the company’s success as the founder is; it sucks to see them get shafted while the founder walks away with “fuck you” money.
Agreed, which is why it's good that this stuff is being shared. It's a datapoint to consider for those of us as we make career choices. But let's face it, if we are not founders, then we are just "the help".
None of his employees were there that long from what I can tell. The initial employees got laid off I think 4 years ago and were probably there 1-3 years (who knows if any bought out their equity). Current employees were there 1-3 years. Only two current engineers from what I can tell. It also depends on how much salary they were paid as many people will take cash over equity.
Most startup employees don't even get 80K. My last "exit" as an early employee was barely 20K. I doubt my current startup will be any better. I look at this as a "bonus" and not anything that was expected. The average startup employee will be lucky to get non-zero.
If you want "returns", you're better off getting a stable, higher paying job and investing the excess in public markets. You have diversification and liquidity.
So was the founder. SV level salary, per their words.
And, as I've said elsewhere, startup salaries are rarely on par with the industry average. Working at a startup is typically sold as "you'll be paid less, but if we sell you'll get a payout to make up for it".
It is pretty simple though, either they negotiated some stock based component to their compensation when they started and would be getting payout, or they didn't and they have been fully compensated by their salary.
I got an incredible place to work for over 5 years, for an amazing company, and an even more amazing boss. I got paid well for it, and I also got a nice payout when the company sold. Don't worry about the employees :)