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How To Size Employee Ownership Share Plans At Startups

What should employee ownership be in your startup? Do you know how the math works?

It’s not very logical to pick a number out of the hat and say my ESOP is 15%. Why is it 15%? Ideally you ESOP is enough to get you from one round to the other. The logical way to size your ESOP is quite basic when you think about it. You raise x dollars, you assign y to hiring and z to things like marketing. The amount you assign to hiring dictates how many people you can hire and therefore the size of the pool you need. Let’s work through that math in two steps.

Watch The Video On Employee Ownership Sizing

Number Of Staff To Hire

Math Heuristic To Determine Your Required Employee Ownership Pool Size

This math only works at a high level and doesn’t deal with reality, which is always more complicated and elicits a response of ‘it depends.’ The math is sort of fine at seed stage where we assume you are building out the product, doing some marketing and finding product market fit.

It doesn’t meet your needs when you are at Series A and expected to do some more radical hiring and scaling. Your VP and director level people are going to have their own ideas about how much stock they want to own, particularly if you can’t pay them market rate. The earlier on you try and can take on senior game changers, the more it is going to cost you. I mean, a COO type at early stage is going to want at least 5% in my experience, if not more.

So when you are running the math and plan on not hiring more junior people, but some killers, you might well end up doubling or indeed tripling the 5.5% in the example to 10-15% quite fast. But you apply the equity equation and figure out if that maximises value for you. You need to map this out in a hiring plan.


[This post by Alexander Jarvis first appeared on AlexanderJarvis.com and has been reproduced with permission.]

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