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by bluehex
4126 days ago
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Another thing to understand (and this will sound obvious to many of you) is that your options may be worth nothing, even after a multi-million dollar acquisition if there are priority stock holders (the investors) ahead of you in line. As a young and naive engineer I learned of this fact the day the first startup I worked for was acquired. First I read the big number that was to be paid for the company, was ecstatic, and immediately starting doing "x-million times half a percent" in my head followed by a sinking feeling as I read the clause stating that common stock holders would get $0. In retrospect it sounds obvious that if the company sells for less than the money the investors put in, your x percent is worth nothing. But it's easy to get carried away thinking you actually own a percent of the company, and that a sale means a pay day for you. Don't let the first word of acquisition get you too excited, the come down sucks. |
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What annoyed me more than the couple $K I lost from the options was the opportunity cost of not leaving the job earlier. Like all startups, the company paid below average wages (since startups pay a significant proportion of compensation in the form of options) so if I left earlier, I would have gotten a large pay bump from having joined a non-startup that paid a normal salary.