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by meowmeowmoo
1420 days ago
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Everyone feels this way. It feels like such a market inefficiency (which a company could arbitrage to get top talent). But the fact that this inefficiency never goes away makes me think I’m missing something. I usually just chalk it up to the majority of engineers not understanding the basics of startup equity (or expected value and failure risk… idk). Regardless, the end result seems to be that there’s an adequate supply of labor. So much so that the pressure which would correct this inefficiency is sufficiently mitigated. It makes no sense from a risk/reward perspective that an “founding” engineer is making 1/100th of a founder. They both have the same level of risk. |
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I think there are a few things that explain the phenomena:
1. You're asking rich and powerful people to give up control. Everyone hates giving up control, but my experience is that people accustomed to control hate it more.
2. It's not familiar, which means it feels risky.
3. It objectively lowers total payout in the best and worst case scenarios for power, and it's not actually clear the E(V) for the capital class goes up. It might, but no one knows apriori, and it's expensive to test.
This mix of low information, a small number of potential actors, and feelings of anxiety around uncertainty and loss of control is a pretty potent mix for inefficiencies like this to persist IMO.