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Instead of relying on venture-led secondary sales, Column uses 25% of its annual earnings to conduct its own tender offers. This provides regular liquidity to employees, enhances retention, and aligns the team long-term without the dilution from new funding rounds.
ElevenLabs raised a $100M round entirely for employee secondaries. The CEO's rationale is that by allowing early team members to de-risk and realize financial gains, it solidifies their commitment to the company's multi-year mission rather than creating pressure for a quick exit.
The most powerful incentive for increasing employee ownership is to make founder exits to their employees tax-free. This aligns financial self-interest with a social good, making it more profitable for a founder to sell to their team than to private equity.
A founder who hoped to one day sell his company to employees was advised to start now. Implementing an Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP) early aligns the team with the long-term mission, shares the burdens of entrepreneurship, and builds a sustainable, purpose-driven culture from the beginning.
Private companies like SpaceX neutralize the talent-attraction power of public company RSUs by running regular, predictable tender offers. This provides employees with consistent liquidity, making private stock nearly as compelling as its public counterpart, but without the market volatility.
To conserve cash, especially in a downturn, founders can pay key employees 10-30% below market rate in salary. The key is to compensate for this deficit by offering double or triple the industry standard in equity. This strategy attracts top talent aligned with long-term success while keeping the company's cash burn rate low.
Vested works directly with employees because startups find small, one-off secondary transactions burdensome due to legal fees and cap table complexity. However, this dynamic inverts at scale. Once Vested facilitates millions in transactions for a single company's stock, the startup has a strong incentive to partner on a formal liquidity program.
For a high-skill service business, the biggest barrier to scaling is finding autonomous, high-quality employees. To retain this crucial talent and prevent them from leaving to start a competing business, founders should offer an equity stake that vests over a long period (e.g., 5-6 years), aligning their incentives with the company's long-term growth.
Vested neutralizes non-delivery risk, a major concern in private markets. By funding exercises, they ensure the employee retains a majority of their stock, aligning incentives. Small deal sizes ($50k-$100k) make it economically irrational for an employee to default and ruin their reputation, leading to a 100% delivery rate.
Top private companies like SpaceX run regular tender offers, allowing employees to sell vested stock. This provides predictable liquidity, effectively competing with the quarterly RSU payouts offered by public tech giants without the market volatility.
A service company's primary asset is its people. To prevent your best talent from leaving and becoming competitors, you must give them significant equity. This transforms their mindset from employee to owner, aligning their interests with the firm's long-term success and growth.