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No oneâââwith the possible exception of finance expertsâââlooks at their equity package and thinks, âYep, makes sense.â
To help clarify, weâve put together a short glossary of terms youâre likely to see in your offer, along with literalâââand more practicalâââdefinitions.
1. Four-year monthly vest
You thought you were getting that fat 0.1% equity stake the moment you signed? Think again, friend. Youâre going to receive it piecemeal, on a regular schedule referred to as a âvesting schedule.â Think of it as your companyâs layaway plan for paying out your equity grant.
Literal Definition: You will receive a fraction of your equity package each month, and if youâre still working there in four years, you will have your entire package.
Practical Definition: Youâre probably not going to earn that full equity package.
People change jobs frequently in techâââmore than 50% of engineers, for example, plan to change jobs in the next year. Even if you donât change jobs, your company still has to survive four more years for you to earn that vest, and in the startup world, that is never a given.
2. One-year cliff
Companies canât just throw away 0.1% pieces of their equity pie. To protect against employees who are just signing up to collect a few monthsâ worth of equity, companies use a âcliff,â which is a buffer at the beginning of an employeeâs tenure when vesting is suspended. (In fact, just did the math, and 0.1% of an average pie crust is roughly 0.0282 inches. Like I said, canât be throwing away that kind of pie.)
Literal Definition: At the end of your first year, you will receive a portion of your equity offer.
Practical Definition: Youâre not getting anything unless you work out in this role.
If inside your first year it becomes clear that youâre not a fit for the roleâââor if the company enters harsher financial timesâââyou may be moving on to your next role without receiving any of your equity package.
3. Options
Owning a fraction of a percent a companyâs overall equity doesnât mean youâre now the boss of 0.2% of the officeâââthough if it did, weâd recommend picking anywhere but that corner with the La Croix fridge. Itâs just bubbly bathwater. Instead, most startups will give equity to you as âoptions.â
Literal Definition: A contract allowing you to buy (or âexerciseâ) your shares of equity at a later date.
Practical Definition: You donât own shares of a company yet. You own the right to buy them later at a set price.
4. Strike price
Part of an options contract is the âstrike price,â which is a predetermined price you pay when you exercise your options. The gap between your strike price and the current valuation of your companyâs shares is called the âspread.â
Literal Definition: The price you agree to pay for your options.
Practical Definition: The lower strike price, the more money you stand to make (maybe).
If your companyâs valuation increases by, say, 3x after you join, then when your equity vests, youâll still have the option of buying your shares at the strike priceâââeven though theyâve become three times as valuable.
5. Nonqualified Stock Options
Because youâre an adult, everything in your life has tax implications. And because youâre (probably not) a CPA, those tax implications might not be clear. The options given to you in your equity grant will be taxed differently depending on what type of option you receive. Two types are most common, and the first is the Nonqualified Stock Option, or NSO.
Literal Definition: When exercising your NSOs, the difference between the strike price of your shares and their current market value is treated as ordinary income, and you pay income tax on it.
Practical Definition: Youâre paying taxes on money you theoretically have.
6. Incentive Stock Options
The other common option is the Incentive Stock Option, or ISO.
Literal Definition: When exercising your ISOs, you donât pay income tax (though it does count towards alternative minimum tax, if that applies to you). Instead, you pay capital gains tax when you sell the shares.
Practical Definition: Youâre paying taxes on money you actually have.
7. Liquidity event
Your equity offer will probably include the phrase âin the event of a liquidity event,â which loosely translates to âif our company is acquired or IPOs.â This is the moment when you get to cash in your equity and build your office dogs the home they deserve.
Literal Definition: When your company converts shares of ownership into cashâââeither via one big purchaser (as in an acquisition) or via a public market (as in an IPO).
Practical Definition: The moment your equity is actually worth something.
8. Accelerated vesting
Fun thought experiment: Youâre two years into a four-year vest, meaning you have about half of your equity grant. Then your company gets acquired. What happens to the rest of your grant?
A. You get the rest of your grant immediately. B. You work at the purchasing company, continuing on your vesting schedule.
C. You forfeit your grant to the tech lords on the purchasing companyâs board.
The answer is, it depends. Your contract should explain what happens to your grant in a liquidity event, and if youâre lucky, youâll have an accelerated vesting clause.
Literal Definition: A sped-up vesting period that allows the rest of your equity grant to vest in a shorter period.
Practical Definition_: You get all of your options in time to turn them into money.
9. Preference stack
When your company is acquired, you might assume you get paid a flat percentage of the acquisition priceâââbut you would be deeply mistaken.
Imagine that when a company is sold, every equity holder gets in a single-file line to receive their payouts. The people with âliquidation preferenceâ line up at the front, where they receive whatever money they were guaranteed, forming the preference stack. The people toward the back (you) take their percentage of whatever is left.
Literal Definition: The amount of money guaranteed to investors and preferred share holders (typically founders or senior leadership).
Practical Definition: All the money that has to be paid out before you get anything.
This is a really important concept for valuing your equity. There have been companies in the past that have been purchased for good multiples, but because of a terrible preference stack, employeesâ equity grants have been rendered worthless. We have a full guide to understanding liquidation preference here.
Equity is a nice-to-have, not something to rely on
Startup equity is a lottery ticketââânot a replacement for salary. You want it because it:
- Aligns your incentives. If you make the company better, your equity is worth more.
- Offers a potential big win. Who doesnât want to be build-my-dog-a-theme-park rich?
- Is an investment you can keep. If you leave your company, you can usually still exercise your vested options.
But you canât rely on it, or treat it as a substitute for the salary in your compensation package. You might be joining a company on its way to a giant exit with a small preference stackâââleading to a massive windfall for you. You could also join the same company only to see its preference stack become a complete goat rodeo in subsequent funding rounds with no possibility of you seeing a return on your equity.
Your goal in negotiating equity isnât to get a guaranteed fortune. Itâs to position yourself for the best shot at a massive bonus years from nowâââwhile negotiating a salary you can still be happy with.
Originally published at angel.co.
Understanding the Terminology in Your Employee Equity Offer was originally published in Hacker Noon on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
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The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not reflect the views of Bitcoin Insider. Every investment and trading move involves risk - this is especially true for cryptocurrencies given their volatility. We strongly advise our readers to conduct their own research when making a decision.