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by pragma_x
737 days ago
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> but when you look at the prices, that was worth $100-$10,000. Why would anyone take all this risk, and lower base salaries for that lottery ticket?! I was in a company when my options were "purchased" from me at the strike price, when the company itself was sold. We never made it to IPO. I've learned to not overvalue options and phantom stock, and just chalk it up to another bonus down the road. The real money is, or already has been, made elsewhere. What really steams my biscuits is when I figured out how the payout was worth less than the unpaid overtime (never more than 50 hours a week), weekend support time, and travel time spent in my years there. |
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To be fair, though, the bad deals the employees see at acquisition aren't necessarily always due to sketchy exploitation bullshit. Sometimes a bad deal for employees is the only one the board can make, with the alternative being bankruptcy and everyone losing their jobs. It does sting that institutional investors and founders will sometimes get a decent return on their investment/time in those cases, while employees get table scraps, though.