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by tptacek
4923 days ago
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But it works both ways; there will be people who you like who decide not to stick with you. You want to minimize the number of outsiders who hold shares in your company. If you don't grok this, you need to talk to more experienced people; this has to be one of the top horror story themes in startupland. Also, stop kidding yourself. Evaluating startup team members is very hard. You probably have a longer ramp-up than you think you do, during which you have very little ability to evaluate people; also, there is a huge class of bad hire that starts strong and decays rapidly. There are all sorts of ways you can motivate yourself to evaluate new hires quickly. Use salary or sign-on bonuses instead of vesting. Messing around with your company ownership to accomplish such a simple tactical goal says something about how seriously you take ownership; it's probably not something you want to be saying out loud. |
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Its better to be considerate and balanced. The cliff only exists to protect against bad hiring decisions, 6 months is plenty enough time to figure out that someone is a bad fit.
You are correct about shares not being a very good tool for motivating people. Your suggestions about salary or sign-on bonuses are actually worse because that takes away from the working capital.