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by ditonal
4120 days ago
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Are you invited to board meetings? If not, considering yourself a "potential owner" when you're not invited to the meetings where owners decide things means you are very confused about things. There's a reason why when a company goes public, the quarterly minutes at board meetings become public as well, because you aren't really an owner if you're excluded from even learning about the biggest of decisions. What you should do depends heavily on whether you have common or preferred shares. If you have the options to buy common shares, which you probably do, they're worthless so don't even bother exercising them, the people who are invited to the board meetings have all sorts of routes they can take so that your options will become meaningless, so to spend the money to exercise and pay the capital gains on them is madness. My advice is to recognize that you have a sunk cost (look up sunk cost fallacy) and jump ship. Keep applying to companies like Google, Facebook, Amazon, Microsoft, and other larger companies until one makes you an offer, and those companies will give you real compensation packages and stock plans that you will be able to easily turn into American dollars in a year. |
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Well gosh, I don't think there's any need to get nasty about it. I may be naive but give me a break. When I refer to ownership I'm obviously simply referring to being a shareholder. No, I am not invited to board meetings, but as far as I know, neither is anybody else who's not exec staff. Is this unusual?
The options are on common shares. Can you elaborate on schemes in which common shares are made to become worthless? I have been explicitly told that there are no liquidation preference multipliers on the preferred shares, and the valuation is well above where that would matter. So what sorts of shenanigans would make my shares worth less? Please be specific if you don't mind. It may be a dumb question, but just telling me I'm dumb isn't really getting the point across.
Regarding going to {GOOG,FB,AMZN,MSFT}, I've actually already been through a couple of those and experienced the "real compensation packages and stock plans" and got a couple pretty respectable windfalls out of them, but I've decided the tradeoffs aren't worth it. Job satisfaction absolutely can't be beat where I am, and that's worth a lot to me. That doesn't mean I don't wonder what my n% is actually worth and how specifically that works.