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by gumby
1523 days ago
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This is one of the most minor concern I can imagine for a startup. >I am all in favor of sharing ownership with those who shared the risk and the burden, but the governing laws weren’t written weren’t written for this, so it needs to be taken account in the specific agreements. These issues almost never happen and the process for giving employees equity interest is well developed. The standard SPAs always have ROFO clauses and such. There's no need to innovate -- any Vally law firm's standard docs have everything needed. In the US shareholders of private companies have pretty limited inspection rights: basically public filings and board minutes etc (usually the latter say things like "the CEO presented the last quarter's performance and a discussion ensued"). Preferred investors negotiate more detailed inspection rights. In 30+ years of running startups in the Bay Area I have never seen any of the things you describe happen (not just my own companies -- never seen them happen). OTOH, at the second company sold (first one I founded) the front desk receptionist made enough to pay off her mortgage and fully fund her retirement. That's the way things should work. Spend your energy on the upside. |
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But it could also have been used by a single vengeful employee to effectively stop or delay that restructuring, which would have been bad for everyone.
All I said was that there was nuance. A good lawyer in the relevant jurisdiction would know what it is.