[Music] well thank you so much for the kind introduction um it's really great to meet everyone um i'm jordan i'm one of compound's founders and today i'm going to start by talking to you all about my hatred of personal finance um i helped start compound a few years ago because i didn't understand my personal finances i was trying to work on a startup at the time and all of these personal finance machinations kept getting in the way of my life um and in particular i hated all of this jargon all of these acronyms that were associated with my equity compensation um so like any enterprising ambitious person um i mapped it all out and i was incredibly annoyed by the complication associated with trying to figure out how this equity thing worked um i actually wrote a blog post about it and posted it on hacker news um and it went viral um and thousands and really hundreds of thousands of people read the essay um and thousands of people uh emailed me and said hey jordan i have all of these complicated boring adult tasks can you please help me right so there i was the former software engineer who quickly became an expert at all things equity compensation and i was helping people with their most complicated boring adult tasks um so at a time i kind of asked myself i said why are these people trusting me with their most important information right uh surely there there'd be someone better uh that has solved this before and it turned out that most of the people who can you know help you with your finances tend to look a bit like this um you know they take you golfing um they kind of uh specialize in selling kind of public investment funds but i wanted you know someone who knew the details someone who could get into the weeds and explain things to me in a language that i could understand as a former software engineer i wanted kind of a wealth management product specifically designed for people who work in the technology world and that's what we built at compound um we're an all-in-one financial management solution for startup founders employees investors we work with thousands of clients who who are at all the top companies and our our mission is to help people not have to worry about their finances and instead focus on what they really care about in life which may be building great companies or their families or any of their personal interests um and today we're going to talk about one of my new favorite topics that i've spent the past three years of my life becoming one of the world's foremost experts in which is startup equity compensation um and i like to be really transparent about it um my real goals for this conversation are first and foremost to get you to care about your equity um it's a there's confusing terms it's not particularly fun but i promise you that if you can pay attention for the next you know 30 minutes or so you will leave with an increased odds of achieving your goals in the future so that's number one is making sure you can care about this two is i want to make sure that you're not scared by the key terms so i'm going to go over a few terms i'm not going to get into everything but make sure that you understand the key terms and then three and perhaps most importantly is i'm not just going to scare you and say good luck i'm going to make sure you have opportunities to kind of move forward from here um and um i'm gearing this towards people who are not necessarily experts in the subject yet um but they are kind of just introducing themselves to equity um and are curious smart people and they want to understand how it works so you may have a job offer you may have recently joined a private startup you may have been working at one for a while and investopedia doesn't really solve all your problems you know this talk is really for you i'm more than happy to answer any questions specifically so you feel free to leave them in the chat and max who's also on the team at compound uh we'll surface those to me and if there's anything i don't get to hear a we've written these amazing guides that go into a lot of weeds so you can you can read read uh for a very long time about them or you can email me um and i'll give my email at the end and i'm happy to help you kind of dive into that um uh with our company so um mission one get you to care about it well first of all you've taken the first step you're on this call um here's a quote from someone that we helped a bit ago you know really saving people millions of dollars or you know hundreds of thousands of dollars or tens of thousand dollars a material portion of their net worth by making sure uh they understand their equity so again you're on the call hopefully you're motivated by it you can save 20 to 40 percent of the value of your work by thinking about the taxes right so just doing that alone you're coming to the party this stuff is important it's not fun it's adult stuff but we're going to make it as easy as possible for you so so i hope at this point you somewhat care about it but now i'm going to do something a little tricky i'm going to tell you tax lawyers don't rule the world so there are things you can do but i have to give the disclaimer before we have fun with all the acronyms that tax lawyers don't rule the world the single most important thing you can do nyc is a great place to look for this but the single most important thing you can do is pick the right place to spend your time right and i want everyone here to think about themselves like an investor of their time and they want to return and the return can be money but it can also be fun and learning and impact and prestige and networking all these different things and the most important thing you can do to get the best return on investment is make sure you're picking that right company right because unlike a venture capital firm right you don't get to diversify across dozens or hundreds of startups right you get to pick one or two or five over the course of your career so i really really think it's important to invest in underwriting your company by looking at the people and the team and whatnot because equity at the end of the day right is just like an investment right you can invest your time anywhere you can also invest your money anywhere and equity is just one one of those places so um with that i know it's a bit of a long preamble with that uh we're gonna dive into equity um and you may have read some about it before when i first heard about equity i i saw a lot of these sort of images it's this like weird amorphous thing some people say it may be a lottery ticket some people say that you know it's worth nothing um you can impact it but you also can't really complain to your friends about it because no one really feels sorry for you that you you got these lottery tickets that you could potentially impact so it's this weird thing that you don't know how to necessarily represent on your balance sheet or you know really digest that night when you're thinking about your personal wealth and the best part is most startups as nice as they are you know when they give you your offer letter you get something like this it's like 1 000 options right and i'm like what does this mean right i'm like i got 1 000 options in some startup that i hope is going to be successful but what does this mean and um the reality is the startups are not evil people they probably actually don't understand how this stuff works that well either so really it is up to you and is your responsibility to figure out some of the key information associated with your equity right and i say this with a great deal of confidence and we'll send this out but it is your responsibility to do this oftentimes people are like oh am i going to be offending them am i rude to them no no this is an asset that you are acquiring and is your right to figure out this information um and you should work hard to figure this out figure out this information over time so we're going to cover a lot of the key details we'll go through a few examples um but like i said if you want me to dive into particular areas feel free to ask um and we'll be able to dive in from there so the first uh uh thing to start with is what type of equity you may have exposure to and as you work at startups it's very likely that you'll get multiple types of equity over time the two broad buckets to start with though are grants and stock options so grants often called restricted stock units or rsus are often given to people at later stage companies companies with more than 100 employees broadly options uh or stock options they're not shares right so grants give you the shares of the company stock options give you the right to purchase shares in your company right so grants give you the the grant the shares directly stock options give you the right to purchase the shares and um for both granted stock options uh but we'll focus primarily on stock options for the next few slides um you actually don't receive all the equity right when you join your company right so instead to incentivize you to stay at your company you will be provided what's called a vesting schedule and the vesting schedule says exactly over what time period you're able to purchase your shares right so at what point in the in your stay at the company um can you purchase your equity um and generally it says something like a one-year cliff meaning you have to wait a year before you can buy anything and then it will vest over some period of time right and that's that's what's called the vesting schedule now okay you've got an option it gives you the right to purchase the thing you can do it over some period of time the natural question for me is like well what can i purchase it at and that is what's called the strike price so the strike price is generally stipulated at the time you were issued your equity right it's not when you signed your offer letter it's actually when you're issued your equity and that strike price here we go it gets fun now the strike price is equal to the 409 a valuation at the time you joined the company right because private companies don't have a public valuation so they do something called a 409 a valuation every year around every financing event where they hire some law firm or accounting firm to audit their financial history and come up with the valuation and um it is a uh the strike price in negotiable term or is it legally bounded to the 409 409a um it is uh they have to issue it at the 409 a valuation now the 409a is something that they do like i said on on a regular basis um but uh it can go up or down over the company's life cycle so there's no guarantee that it will continue going up over time and to draw this out just to really reinforce this when you join your company you're given your option at the strike price the strike price stays static over time but hopefully the 409 a and the valuation for the company continue to rise of course this is not guaranteed and it's probably very likely that your company doesn't go up into the right forever um and there's a world where your option becomes valueless but in the positive state for the world um you you begin to have a difference between the strike price and your latest valuation and this difference is known as the bargain element and this difference is what enables you to eventually buy low and sell high which means that the option has value but it's not as straightforward because a your company might not succeed so when you buy your option low there's a chance that it's actually not worth anything and your investment goes to zero so it's a risky investment two when you buy your option or exercise your option they call it or buy your shares when you do that you may have to hold on to the equity for a long period of time because even if the company one day succeeds it's very likely that it will take many many years before it is now called liquid or you're able to sell it so that's the second hard part and then the third hard part where it gets especially fun um is there are tax implications for exercising your stock options so when you make a decision like this right the company is illiquid so you're paying money at the strike price to exercise your options you may also owe taxes before you have any liquidity and that is where there can be a lot of confusion um because the taxes depend on the type of equity you own and within stock options there's different types of stock options which we can go into uh and within grants um there's different types of vesting events that could occur and the taxes occur uh depending on the timing and type of exercises that you're doing so when you're exercising you want to think about exactly when you're exercising and timing it in a way that you're able to cover the tax obligations as well so there's two main reasons or incentives for exercising your options earlier rather than later the first is going back to that bargain element that that difference between the strike price and the 409 a that we talked about the smaller that gap is the less you'll probably owe in taxes right so if you wait to exercise your options and the company does really really well right and you um didn't exercise your options well now you're in a great spot right your company is doing super super well and you are now holding options that are worth a lot more money but you will now have to pay taxes on that entire spread right so it becomes more costly to exercise your options that that's the first challenge around exercising now you may not be able and we'll dive into what happens if you were to not exercise your options if you're to leave your company but it puts you in a tricky position the second reason to exercise your options is that uh you're taxed at both the exercise event so when you decide to exercise but also the sale event and the way you're taxed depends on the difference between the time you exercise and the time you sell so if you are more than one year between exercising and selling and there's some more nuance but broadly let's speak um then you will get long-term capital gains in the united states for that asset but if you are less than one year between exercising and selling you will only get short-term capital gains um or ordinary income taxes so there's about a 15 to 13 difference between those two depending on the given tax year that you may incur based off of the timing of your exercise i know this is a little bit complicated uh we'll we'll get into more details in a second now you may be thinking okay so i'm i'm thinking about exercising i just got an offer what could my equity be worth in the future now the reality is it's impossible to predict exactly what your equity will be worth in the future and if any founder or you know hiring manager is telling you they know exactly what what the future value will be they are not evil people necessarily but they are not telling the truth entirely because the reality is is no one knows um there are different ways to approximate what things may be worth but at the end of the day we're looking at some fairly simple math and we're guessing exactly what the valuation could be in the future um what i recommend doing is trying to think about a uh are there any competitors or public competitors or comps of the company that you're looking at and then b what goes well in the success case and how much value does that have um and then see what what happens if the company does poorly like very poorly and what's the outcome in that regard for you one of the numbers you're going to want to look at to avoid this whole i own 1 000 options in this amorphous thing i don't really understand is trying to get to what's called the fully deluded shares outstanding that's the total number number of shares across investors warrants grants employees that the company has and that way if you can get that number you can then divide the number of options or number of grants you have by that number to get roughly your percentage ownership of the company without that you won't be able to know exactly what potential value you may have right so you need to understand the denominator in order for the numerator to really make sense as you think about the value of your equity now another thing that trips people up often is that there's this term called dilution so every time your company raises more money right they issue more shares to the world because they're welcoming in new investors your percentage ownership will go lower right because the denominator is increasing and your numerators staying the same so oftentimes people get upset about this they're like oh no like we're you know we're deluding ourselves my equity is less but my reaction to that is often one that which you should pay attention to really is the total value not just the percentage ownership you have because it's very likely that the reason your your founders and your team are raising more money is because they're increasing the value of your equity overall um and as a result you shouldn't look at a dilution as this like terrible thing often it's a vehicle for increasing the value of the equity that you hold so i did want to make a defense of the startup for one second okay we're almost there so the next thing i wanted to briefly touch on um was a topic called the post termination exercise window and again this is a concept that if you're getting an offer right now or you work at a startup figure out what your post termination exercise window is termination is kind of a scary word but uh if you find yourself in your company parting ways either you quit or you're let go or various other reasons you only have a limited amount of time to exercise your options that's because you have something called a post-termination exercise window so let's imagine you've been working at a company for three years and you decide to leave for whatever reason and you haven't exercised any of your options yet let yet all of your vested options mean the options you've earned uh you will have up until the post termination exercise window to exercise them before they expire right so the standard window is 90 days but some companies extend their exercise window beyond 90 days to something like three years or five years something much longer there are some tax implications to extending the window and we can talk about that if anyone's interested but you should be aware of that because it buys you a lot more optionality if you have more time to decide whether or not you want to exercise your options right and many times people are in positions where they're at their company and they want to leave but they can't afford to exercise their stock options and as a result they're doing a job that they don't like for many many years and it's a very sad thing for the world and very much wasted potential so look out for this and really ask your company why they chose whatever they chose and factor that into your overall decision making jordan what happens if a company doesn't disclose information such as the number of fully diluted shares outstanding that was a question we got from the audience yeah thanks for that and i saw the other ones too so we'll dive into it so um the reality is there's no law yet uh that they legally have to do this um generally my approach in any in any negotiation like this is to really um first of all list out your own priorities right this is one input across many potential inputs for your job and i don't want you to put yourself in a position where you're over negotiating one item when you really need a job so that you know next month you can afford rent so first of all always start with your own priorities but then second my approach would be one of very much curiosity why wouldn't they tell you the fully deluded shares of sending right and i would genuinely ask the hiring manager what is the reason right and um uh of all the things we mentioned i would say fully deleted shares outstanding is not the top of the list so we can go through kind of where to prioritize and what to kind of stick on but i would say that a lot of times these hiring managers and founders are just listening to their lawyers um but they don't actually spend the time to like really understand the implications of sharing this information or asking about this information or etc so my suggested strategy in that regard is to really come at it with curiosity and try to understand it maybe they have a really good reason i don't know the really good reason having talked to many many lawyers in many companies about this but perhaps there is one out there and i'd be curious as well um one of the other questions max that i think was there was about the tax implications of the longer window um so uh one thing we didn't cover is there are two types of stock options uh there are more but the two primary ones are called incentive stock options isos and non-qualified stock options nsos and we have some great uh essays on this that that also make it really clear but um they have different tax implications so isos when you exercise them they don't owe ordinary income tax they owe something called the alternative minimum tax amt it's a different type of tax calculation and nsos when you exercise them they owe ordinary income tax so they're different types of tax applications when you get an extended exercise window let's say it's three years so the standard is 90 days let's say your company is like i'm amazing we're gonna make it three years for you after 90 days your isos will automatically convert into nsos or they'll automatically be treated as nsos so on day 93 you decide to exercise your options they will no longer be treated as isos they will only be treated as nsos not necessarily a bad thing depends on your overall situation but it's a difference in tax treatment hopefully that makes some sense and then jordan in terms of each company do they have various termination windows where one company has 90 days another company at 10 years yeah so there are companies um there's a great list on the internet and and we're working on one as well uh to promote companies that do offer extended exercise windows um but uh it does vary it is a per company decision um and i think as a trend we are seeing more companies offer extended exercise windows um but uh to defend the company it does require a lot more operational support right because you have all of your ex employees now that you're communicating with and you're having to maintain their equity records so there's a little bit of work there but this is just an example where you should think about incentives between the candidate or the employee and the company they're not always perfectly aligned awesome i'm gonna keep going but then max if you could round up any questions feel free to um we'll dive into those we'll have a lot of time for this um so i wanted to be clear you know these are what i believe the most important topics you know to to get from your from your um employer especially during the offer stage but even if you haven't when you're working at the company again my suggestion is to take this in a very much a curiosity uh approach in that these are not bad people right this isn't like you against them although there is some of that as a negotiation this is far more like hey i'm trying to figure out my financial situation i talked to i talked to jordan he told me i needed this information you know blame me or blame someone in your life and he told me i needed this information to in order for me to do my taxes right when you go buy a house they let you inspect the house right but and i want to do this um and uh it's important to kind of get that information now again i'm going to underline tax lawyers don't rule the world the most important thing you can do in my view is work on the company that makes you the most excited for whatever reason that is but that is really important now i understand that y'all are not like signing up to be finance phds or running your own personal treasury department shameless plug for us but we've automated all this so we can model all of your taxes for free we have like a free net worth dashboard modeling tool etc um it's important to kind of weigh the pros and cons because the reality is there's no right answer so our goal and i think whatever advisor you work with goal should really be to help you figure out what can go well but then also what can go really wrong and as we're seeing nowadays the reality is is that startups don't always go up into the right and they have to make hard decisions and that not everything is going to be fairytale and with companies forever so it's important to be critical um what i want to remind people around is that you are an investor right so vcs hire you know analysts for however good the analysts are they hire analysts to underwrite companies they invest in right and they make hundreds of investments potentially a year right you don't have any analysts right and you also only get to invest in one company at a time for the most part um so treat this like an investment decision you can very well join a company and not exercise your options i may ask you why not uh and if it's because you don't believe in the company perhaps we can help you find a better company um but the reality is is that it is a risky investment decision and you should consider it a risky investment decision because you can put your money in crypto you can you can put your money in the market you can put it in cash you can invest in yourself like there's a lot of ways to allocate your resources this is one of many investment decisions you can make so i i encourage you to do this kind of global optimization across your finances so this is my my presentation um happy to dive into any questions now please do challenge me on the law i love reading the tax code uh turns out there actually is a tax code kind of like you know engineering code there is a tax code you can read it yourself it's free on the internet um so there is a lot of information there for anyone who wants to check it out um and if you sign up for compound you put the yc event we'll expedite you off the waitlist as well they made me say that all right now let's uh dive into some questions if there aren't yeah i have a handful of questions jordan um is the equity amount ever something you would negotiate how do you think about um generally approaching a negotiation and finding the right amount based on your job and role awesome question so everything is negotiable uh in life i've learned um you don't want to take that too far but equity is definitely a negotiable piece um uh it depends on the company that you're negotiating against let's say or with um but generally speaking uh you will be able to negotiate i would say the approach i would take if you're trying to get a job at compound and we are hiring but if you're trying to get a job at compound um is i would go to jordan myself and i'd say you know what man i really believe in your company like i'm so optimistic in the long term i i want to you know really really invest in the long term of compound i need more equity upside right i need more exposure to the kind of i want to be at the ipo day so that i'm on the stage with you like let's get some equity together and and realizing that equity is a risky thing right and realizing that but i think taking the approach of the long-term view and pushing in that direction is what i i found works quite well uh for people in terms of how to understand if your offers fair how would you what information would you use today to do that yeah so there's not a great resource um because and this is the big because the uh each company is different right and um in a lot of ways you're making it you have an investment opportunity in that company so i tend to advise people to test the market for themselves right because you are a constant but all the companies are different so go figure out how much you're worth across various companies and that's one way to have a market assessment for your own uh personal finances um this is a problem i want to deeply solve though and give you all more leverage so uh if you have id i have some ideas but there's not a great resource today for individuals to be able to figure out exactly what they could be worth on the market i would one thing i would say though a lot of people never do this but i would highly encourage it is if you asked uh the employer and you said hey like how did you come up with my offer right so most startups have no idea second of all if they say well we use this compensation benchmarking thing and i'm like you know you're the 75th percentile my response is like yo i'm not 75th percentile i have one life i'm trying my hardest like i'm 99 percent higher some version of that um but you know i really think like really bet on yourself and uh try to kind of figure out exactly their methodology because at the end of the day i'll tell you this you don't win for a lot of these startups you don't win by being grossly overpaid in an incredibly unfair way so that they can't hire any more talent right so you don't want that either because this equity is only valuable if the company is successful right you want to find a fair compromise that works for both sides so that both people are excited because what would happen if you negotiate for way way way too much equity um well maybe you're going to underperform and they're going to let you go because you're this massive piece on their balance sheet right or maybe they're not able to hire the people they need to help make your equity successful so it really needs to be a two-way negotiation where both sides went and then just focusing on the questions that are a little bit broader before diving into the specific questions could you explain a little bit more about rsus versus options and in which circumstance maybe options would be better than rsus great question so there's not a better um there are differences from a tax perspective and from a liquidity perspective so for restricted stock units rsus um you don't have to exercise them so that is a benefit but uh you and this is where it gets a little complicated you have something called a double trigger rsu so instead of paying taxes as the rsu's best right because you're earning an asset you'd think you'd owe taxes on that asset as the best instead they use something called a double trigger so they delay the taxes you owe on the vesting for the rsu's until a liquidity date in the future right that's called double trigger rsu investing the problem with that is that you are not allowed to participate in any and this is another question i think in any liquidity events or company sponsor tender offers if you have double trigger rsus so the options give you more optionality to acquire shares outright that aren't you know covered with this weird tax double trigger tax treatment but rsus aren't um the other thing is that our stock options are generally given to people earlier on in the company's lifecycle so they tend to give you kind of more exposure to the company but rsus and options are not really like a negotiable thing companies aren't like one-off giving options to people and then one-off giving rsu's to people it's far more of a company-wide administrative change to move between options and rsu so you shouldn't really be able to negotiate it unless you're like also an advisor to the company or some version of that and then in terms of seeking liquidity before an ipo how can employees today think about selling maybe two investors in an upcoming round or navigate that process great question so you know one of the downsides of working at a private company is that there's not a liquid public market for your shares right so some companies offer regular liquidity events spacex is one company that's known for that um and they they will buy back your shares on an on a regular basis so every quarter or you know a couple times a year now the problem with that is that they dictate the price right so it may not be a price that you want to sell for and it's only you know a couple times a year so you have to really make a decision every so often most private startups don't do this um and they don't do it not because they're bad people they don't do it because there's not a market for them it turns out that these are risky startup investments and most of the time these companies fail right so there's not always going to be a liquid market for all of these different options now that being said there are brokers and exchanges that specialize in secondary markets um you could explore them you'll probably get linkedin messages from people uh trying to buy your equity as your company gets harder we do offer a service where we help people navigate those different options so they get the best price and they don't have to talk to 10 brokers but um i encourage you to like explore what's out there um if you are looking for liquidity in your company happy to chat about that with you um i will say uh each company has its own rules around if you're allowed to sell when you're allowed to sell how much you're allowed to sell so it does depend on the company that you work out as well um because they do control the asset and then is the 409 and other information publicly available or do you need to ask the startup for that information or is it even in a cap table management software great question so um when you join the company there's think about the timeline between getting an offer to signing the offer to joining the company to your options being issued to you that time period could be like multiple months right so in your offer letter it's actually not going to tell you the strike price often depending on the size of the company because the strike price remember is the is according to the latest foreign evaluation so a lot of startups what they do is they batch their options they issue them like around every board meeting because every time they issue options they need to get it ratified by the board so every quarter or whatnot they are issuing options and they're using the latest foreign evaluation at that time so what i recommend people do is when you're when you're um when you are getting an offer you don't you can't ask for the like what the evaluation is going to be for the shares because they don't know right they don't know when the next board meeting is maybe they don't know exactly when you're gonna get your strike price what they can tell you though is what the latest strike price is so like what the last four in an evaluation was and you can also ask them it's this is kind of you know where you're gonna bring out your winking face or some version of that but you can ask them do you expect another 409 evaluation to be happening soon or are you fundraising anytime soon remember every year they have to do a 409 evaluation legally and anytime there's a fundraising event they also will do a for a foreign evaluation so the reason you want to do this and this is where sometimes people get quite upset is imagine you sign the offer the company raises a monster around tomorrow um and then you join the company and your strike price is way higher or you've been diluted a lot so the actual percentage of ownership you have is a lot higher so you don't actually get you know what you were promised and that's honestly an opportunity for leverage and negotiation for you um but uh it does happen pretty often and it's no one's fault it's just a lack of clarity sometimes in the communication and then jordan i'm just going to call on a couple people who wanted to ask the questions live uh luis i think you have one question about compound generally yeah i was just curious to hear kind of the story behind it how it got started what the vision is what the plan is moving forward um i can give context as to why i'm asking but just keep it general right yeah i'd just love to hear more about it yeah well i'm i'm materially self-promotional so we've written all about it we can share you the link there um but our goal is really just to build the thing we've always wanted i probably come off a little selfish i just hate talking to like people who golf all the time when i'm helping with my finances so our goal is to like help people um with their finances um really specifically all these startup specific needs so things like exercising options investing your money away from an ipo um borrowing money all of that sort of stuff but happy to tell you more about it we've we've written it about it at length as well and i just passed along a link um as well and jack i think you have one more question yeah thank you so much um and thanks for the presentation uh both you has been really helpful um my question is just digging a bit more into the you know companies which allow you to sell your options pre-ipo i'm kind of curious um how common is it for a company to go all the way to ipo without allowing liquidity for for all their normal employees because i hear of uh sometimes companies will allow it but only for very early people or execs i hear all sorts of different things about um just how common it is to allow that and i have talked with other friends at later stage startups who say yeah it's very normal that they just allow you to sell once you're at some certain stage in the development so if you could speak a bit about the norms or uh just how common this is uh that'd be really great question interesting for us yeah great question thanks jack and one kind of nuance there you actually can't sell options right so you could only sell options that you've exercised the reason this matters i know i'm nitpicking i am that type of person the reason this matters is because if you are in a situation where you can sell but you haven't exercised any of your options you will then be forced to exercise and sell your options at the same time it's what called it a public company a cashless exercise this isn't terrible but what ends up happening is if you remember the delta between the time you exercise in the time you sell is less than one year right so you owe ordinary income tax which is not as good of a tax treatment at the time of exercise so anyways that is just one kind of nuance to point out um as far as comment how common it is well i'll tell you if you ask a series a founder and you say yo are you well don't say yo but if you say hey are you going to um issue equity to liquidity to our employees most of the time i think they have no idea what they're talking about because they run a series a company and they've never been at series d so you could you can kind of get an idea for their philosophy but they may not understand the implications of giving out liquidity in the coming years so i would if you're interested in that stage company it's very hard for them to predict the future because they don't really know the nuance around it i will say generally speaking as companies grow to series d e and beyond and obviously those are somewhat arbitrary benchmarks but um we are seeing more and more of them offer liquidity there are more and more startups helping startups offer liquidity um but the nuance check that you point out is why do people only offer it to early employees the reason is because if you join a startup and then you sell most of your equity one year in then the purpose of the equity compensation right the incentive stock options which are to incentivize you to stay at your company don't really work as well so whether or not it's fair we can kind of debate but that's what the startup believes is hey like we still want to have an incentive for you to stay so even when they do offer liquidity programs it's generally speaking only for something like five to twenty percent of your company of your of your equity it's not going to be your whole tranche and i think i saw a question earlier you can um you can exercise one percent of your of your options you can exercise all of them you don't need to uh uh you don't need to do you you can do whatever traunch you want you can do a certain percentage every month we can help you kind of model out like what if you do them monthly as they invest you know there's a lot of different uh things you can do one of the questions that i think i see there um is around early exercising um so we're about to enter extra fun land for people uh early exercising is a concept where your company is a really important one your company when when you join they give you the ability to purchase all of your stock options to exercise all of your stock options before they best right so if you're interested stock options you can buy all of your shares before they vest and in the perfect world right when you if you do this up front then your options will be issued at the strike price right and you will have a 409 evaluation the latest four in an evaluation and if you do this all up front right and i can go back to this chart right so if you do this all up front and you're here right that bargain element is going to be what it's going to be zero right because the foreign air the strike price are the exact same so what that allows you to do is file something called an 83b election where you go to the government you say hey i love you government i am going to pre-pay all my taxes up front for my exercising and my options now you don't tell them but hey there's no taxes owed so it's you know it's a good deal for you but um you pre-pay all the taxes up front of which is zero or it's less than what it will be in the future and you are locking in that bargain element so early exercising allows you to do that so you have that preferential tax treatment so you won't owe any taxes potentially at the time of exercise now the nuance here is if you were to leave your company so let's say you're at your company for three years you early exercise meaning you bought all four years up front but you leave after year three the company will buy back your shares from you at the price you exercise them for so they will just purchase them back for you unless they went bankrupt in which case you're out of luck but they will buy them back from me does that kind of make sense hopefully any other questions max i know we have a few minutes um let's see is there any things that you've seen that are the most important takeaways um or i would say like both ends of the spectrum like the things someone absolutely should know um and the biggest optimizations for example we got the question like what's the most unique way you've seen someone use their equity um yeah i'm kind of boring you have a lot of opportunities to innovate in your life right and you have super powers you may be an engineer designer marketer business person that's where you innovate this boring stuff don't innovate right just do the boring things for the most part like you're going to take plenty of risk with yourself so yes you can maybe save by setting up like a grant or retained annuity trust and like moving to delaware and not having any and nothing against delaware but like you could do all of these different things but my my encouragement to people is just in general keep it simple there's like people out there in the world that dedicated their lives for some reason to being experts at these things they're weird they're like me and you should try to find the ones you trust whoever they are so ask them lots of questions be kind of annoying to them and then delegate things to them and then check their work and kind of work with them over time that that'd be my bias as far as something more applied that's not a cop-out answer my encouragement to folks is really first of all care about it second of all get the key terms you need plug them into some sort of calculator build it yourself use ours whatever um and then be left with what's the best case scenario what's the worst case scenario and make sure you build a strategy where you're happy in both of those worlds too often i see people say oh hey i'm about to exercise all these options but even if the company becomes the next airbnb yc didn't pay me to say that but even if they come the next airbnb um you know i'm still not happy then it's like well what are you doing with your time um so i really encourage people to to look at both kind of ends of the spectrum over time then a couple more questions came in but on a high level could you talk quickly about stock option financing and options to acquire liquidity to exercise your your options yeah so one of the scenarios here is that you you may not have the money so you may be like okay jordan i'd love to exercise everything like of course it's better from a tax perspective there's all these things we didn't talk about all of them max will send some essays like there's something called qsbs the qualified small business stock tax exemption you save 10 million dollars in tax free capital gains which is like great if it applies to you and there's some nuance around it but you may be like great but jordan i have no money and i'm like then don't exercise your option the only other thing you can do is go get a loan from someone to exercise the cheapest is if your family for some reason is an extra you know hundreds of thousand dollars laying around first introduce them to me and then you can you know get a loan from them um but secondly um there are like funds out there that will give you a loan to exercise your options they're called non-recourse loans or private financing contracts um they are tricky so my encouragement would be to talk to someone who can help you navigate them again plug first off we help you do that but find a lawyer who specializes in this sort of stuff they are very tricky contracts they can sometimes be very expensive uh the actual loans and not worth it um so i would highly i'd be skeptical going into any of those but they can work especially if your options are about to expire then if you're at a company and you've been working there for a year and there could be an upcoming fundraising event how do you think about dilution getting a refresher grant yeah so dilution like i said is a thing that happens um it's not all bad people are always like oh my god i was deluded and i'm like well your company just made more about you know more valuation higher prices etc so it's not all bad um in general my view is is you should totally negotiate and try to get more equity and more exposure over time you can definitely show your math and say hey you know my i was deluded x remember that the founder that you're talking to was also deluded the exact same proportion as you so they do feel a little bit of the pain even though they own more of the overall company um but yeah some companies have a refresher grant program so if you're looking at later stage businesses they employ people whose full-time job it is is to think about compensation practices my suggestion for all of you is to become friends with those people when you join the company and become friends with the finance people as well because they're going to know when the next foreign evaluation is going to be they're going to know how the leveling program works they're going to know exactly how refreshers work over time so these are all things you can do to kind of figure that out if that makes sense i have a question that is not directly related to equity but it could be uh what roles are you hiring for and how can someone get a job at compound there you go so we are hiring um across the board right now we are hiring software engineers especially um i'd say uh send us an email uh you can send me an email directly jordan at withcompound.com and i'll funnel you to the right people just to make it easy also happy to just be useful to anyone if they're looking for a job can also connect them um but to others um but the thing we really care about with people is we really care about quality and craft um and the thing we always talk about is there are certain types of people when they go to a restaurant like they notice the fork is like super heavy and they're like comment on it those are the types of people who work at compound like they care about the forks uh at rest you know our terms of service page is really pretty not by accident so that's that's what we're looking for uh we care deeply about writing and quality and going to the weed so um that's a little bit about compound then robert i think you have a question yeah sure i was just curious about the norms around creating a compensation package for co-founders so say you offer 15 of the company is there a vesting period um any advice would be great awesome question so i think yc has actually some great content on like co-founder relationships in general they talk a little bit about kind of splitting equity across people there's definitely different philosophies around it i won't opine there's no best one i would definitely think though you know how do you and your co-founder kind of overlay with each other i would say um as far as vesting though the biggest thing right the purpose of compensation remember a business is a ball of risk there's all these different things you can do to de-risk it over time you can raise money you can like build product you can talk to your customer all these different things one of the things you can do is incentivize your team appropriately right so that's the purpose of compensation and when you design your compensation program my view is keep it simple you don't need to reinvent the wheel necessarily but you want to incentivize people to build a long-term enduring business we're learning a lot right now that short-term optimizations don't earn you a lot of brownie points for you know the public or the private markets over the long term so what can you do to incentivize uh you know over the long term for for most startups that's just a four year investing period so that's kind of standard for people i know companies that do longer than that but they're different um and for co-founders that's included now as a co-founder um you can go to your board and say hey you know i've been working on this for four years all my equity vested like i am beholden to the board into the company like should we incentivize me to work harder or not with compensation and they can issue you more equity as well um and that can't happen at any time in the company's life cycle uh there's a chance your co-founder and you split and there's you know more equity in the pool there's a chance that you you know buy out your investors over time there's many different uh outcomes you could have but my view is especially early on it's like you don't want to do something too innovative i mean i'm not restricting innovation but you you don't want to necessarily take unknown risk so definitely think again about the best case scenario and the worst case scenario with any decision that you make and and maybe put another way every second you spend not making your startup successful right you are hurting your customers right so right after this i'm about to not be talking to 100 people at once that's why i'm still here because i'm hopefully increasing all of your odds of success in life and that to me is worth the roi but any second you spend building you know the next cayman trust or whatever like is okay you can do it but like realize there's an opportunity cost and if you were in y combinator like we were they would they would kind of you'd get some sort of frowny looking face from the yc team that would be like you know what what are you doing with your time like and it'd be kind of embarrassing so that's how i think about that and then emmanuel i think you have one question saying that you have options that are fully vested um how do you think about managing that potentially with an upcoming liquidity event and then maybe like diversifying or selling them uh yeah so in that version of the world the question um you know once there is a liquid event maybe an ipo maybe an acquisition you know maybe there's a tender offer you will have all of this other money or the potential to have all this other money and it's not clear what you should do with that money right it may be actually more money than you've ever seen in your life right it may be so much money that you will buy a house in tahoe and like another house in tahoe as well and then you'll be like well what do i do with the rest of this money so that version of the world can very well happen there's not a lot of empathy for those people but i have it so it is a weird position to be in in the world um my suggestion is to go back and really write a memo to yourself listing how you want to use your money to make your life better or others lives better so literally write a memo to yourself before you diversify saying i am going to sell equity in my startup because of x y and z and then go execute on that i think people have a very hard time calibrating risk oftentimes they say well if i sell 90 of my company equity now that we've gone public i'm super conservative right i think about that and i say well no no you're super optimistic in your company you think the ten percent that you left on the table is going to be worth so much in the future that you're not even going to think about the 90 that you just sold and took off the table in that kind of really best case scenario but in the worst case scenario again you've kind of built a reservoir for yourself so again i'd go back and i'd say let's figure out the cash flow model the tax implications for the best and worst case scenario and try to work backwards from there i think there's a few more questions that could be starting to get a little bit more specific um when you're thinking about negotiating and sharing equity compensation do you compare yourself to people in similar positions at your company maybe at other companies yeah and and this is the question from paul max the last one yeah yeah exactly awesome yeah so and then i think maybe implicit here is like can you form a union like against your company to kind of negotiate people i would say like you know i don't see it commonly maybe there's a startup idea in there somewhere but um i think in general like you are the real point of leverage right they want you if you've got an offer for a company you have leverage right and they want you because you are awesome um so i would i would generally start there i think um what i would go back to is like being default optimistic right these are about to be your employer right and you're about to make them hopefully really wealthy in the future and they're going to help you make be really wealthy in the future so i wouldn't necessarily start in like an antagonistic step we're all trying to like get to the end result at the end of the day i think um obviously i'm biased i'm a founder and max is on the team so i'm not ready for any unions uh to form quite yet but uh i would say that um in general uh if you ask them very candidly i'd love to understand your compensation philosophy right and you really ask them to share like figure out like are they doing a good job of that like do they care about the weight of the fork in this regard they may say no no we're prioritizing our sales and our customers all the other things but remember the founder has two jobs right build a product but also build a company right and if they don't think about the compensation philosophy of the company sure they're not evil people and maybe that's the right kind of balance to make but also it does say something about what they're prioritizing and that can be for better or worse and you could say and we had someone do this to me early on jordan our competition philosophy is not good enough but i'm a smart person i'm going to solve it for you right so you can actually be the champion of these things at your company and then you can say hey jordan come give a talk at my company you know we're gonna we're gonna go increase all of our odds of success so that's another uh path you could take if we have a break in the questions uh i just wanna quickly ask first of all thank you everyone for coming thank you especially to the compound team for being here jordan and max we would like to ask that if you like the event please share this link with your friends so that they know about other events that are happening and there's also a link to compound's manual on the event page so that that's a great resource even if your friends can attend this event they'll be able to learn from that guide remember you will make all of your friends really rich like it's the best deal ever right it's like free to make other people you know money and less stress so it's pretty awesome we want to build like y combinator for people right great and head over to with compound.com we will help you i promise um and yeah lots to go