by siegel on 2/14/19, 2:08 AM with 4 comments
by corecoder on 2/14/19, 4:38 PM
There is a name for people in a company who share the risk of running a company, and that name is owners.
There are also names for people who want all the gains for themselves and all the risks and losses for their employees, and they are not flattering names.
by siegel on 2/14/19, 2:08 AM
But this doesn’t seem to be enough, does it? These two factors would say that any company that can’t afford employees can simply not pay anyone who would otherwise be an exempt employee. I don’t see that as sufficient. There could be other criteria: 3) In addition to #1 and #2, the “employee” would have to own at least X% of the equity of the company 4) Or maybe just X% of the voting power of the company (even if not the economic ownership)?
Those are just examples. Or maybe part of the solution is protection in terms of a liquidity preference of sorts. If a company has a less-than-stellar M&A exit, preferred shareholders (investors) typically have a liquidation preference that ensures they get their money back before anyone else shares in the merger proceeds. This seems sensible as a matter of investor protection – they put in $X million and understandably want to recoup their investment before other shareholders get a windfall. This might mean, however, that an early employee who didn’t get paid in cash and only has common stock, might get nothing while an investor who put in a bunch of money is made whole. What is the rationale for the investor being made whole, but an employee who worked for free getting nothing? The law could, for example, require that upon liquidation, employees who worked for free get a certain amount of money. (The law already provides a preference for wages in the bankruptcy context, but this is different. I’m imagining a situation where companies would be able to lawfully hire certain people for payment only in equity, rather than cash.) I’m curious to hear your ideas. How do you change the law to match the reality that startups can’t usually pay employees at the earliest stages, while not ending up in a situation where unscrupulous employers can take advantage of employees?
by gus_massa on 2/14/19, 2:23 AM