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by goofygrin
6449 days ago
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Well I'm actually full time on my "day job" and part to full time on the startup (being ADD helps a bit LOL). But this is basically the plan. Equity doesn't really mean anything unless the business sells, but when the business gets to the point where it can support founders drawing decent salaries then that'll be happening. He knows what I make now and what it would take to shift my focus and it's all within reason. |
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if you are the main technical person who has built the product, you should have at least 20% of the equity, if not split 50/50 with your co-founder (that would be fair). if one of you put more money or time into it, the numbers can be adjusted appropriately.
the best construct for dealing with equity also happens to be vesting. you don't need to "grow" your share as time goes on, it just naturally "grows" the longer you stay, but you've agreed upon the total amount from the beginning and it's committed to you.
i've gone into business with friends several times. it's not that you can't pull it off (i have) or that you don't get into disagreements about compensation/equity (we have) -- it's just not worth the potential strain on the relationship to leave it an open question, as opposed to agreeing early on.