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Startup ownership

Founders, investors and employees

A startup’s success depends on three groups of people: founders, investors, and employees.

You – the founder or co-founder – are the visionary, and the final decision-maker.

Investors place their faith in you and your vision, contributing capital to kickstart and scale your business, and offering advice and expertise along the way.

Your startup is only as great as the people building it – your employees. It’s a big risk to join an unproven business like yours, especially when well-established companies offer similar, more assured positions. Employees are your most valuable asset, and you need to treat them accordingly.

Together, these three groups determine the fate of your company. Company ownership is a great way to recognise and reward everyone’s commitment.

Cap tables

Your cap table breaks down your company’s ownership. It lists all the shareholders, and the number, class, and percentage of shares each holds.

Founders and investors are the main shareholders. This includes early investors, such as friends, family and business angels, and later investors, such as venture capital funds. If you issue stock options to employees, you’ll have an ESOP on your cap table, representing the total option pool available.

All too often, we’ve seen founders make regrettable decisions during early capital raises: giving away too much equity too soon, or on unfavourable terms. These mistakes can unnecessarily dilute your stake in the company and make it difficult to attract further funding.

How ownership evolves over time

From one to many

Funding rounds are a useful proxy for the stage and scale of a startup, as it moves from seed to Series A, Series B and beyond. However, there is a lot of variation between startups at each stage. For the purpose of having a shared understanding, the table below sets out some typical characteristics of Index- funded European startups at each stage:

Funding Rounds Pre-seed Seed Series A Series B
Type of investor Self-funded, friends and family Angel investors (individuals/syndicate), seed-stage and micro funds VC investors VC investors, potentially growth or strategic investors
Typical round <$500k $1m ($0.5–2m) $5m ($3–20m) $20m ($10–40m)
Pre-money valuation Not applicable $5m ($3–8m) $25m ($20 – 60m) $100m ($50–150m)
Development phase Ideation, beta-testing, MVP launch MVP and initial signs of traction Commercially viable product, testing, go-to- market strategies Ramp up, go-to-market, internationalise
Typical headcount growth Founders only, with non-employee contributors From 0 to 10 From 10 to 60 From 60 to 150
Hires made Not applicable in most cases Initial team
  • Mainly product and engineering

Ramp up
  • Continued engineering and product

  • First customer- facing roles (marketing, sales, customer success)

  • Initial executive level hires

Build-out
  • Emphasis on commercial hires

  • Central teams – finance, HR, ops

  • Multi-layered management and leadership

On day one, you (and your fellow co-founders) will own 100% of your company’s shares. As you raise capital from third party investors, you’ll issue additional shares. And as you hire employees (or advisors), you may offer them stock options. Stock option holders are not shareholders.

They appear on a separate line on the cap table (in your ESOP). The total number of issued shares and outstanding stock options in your ESOP is known collectively as your fully diluted equity (FDE).

Evolution of ownership in US startups across funding rounds
(where Founding CEO remains in place)
Evolution of ownership in US startups across funding rounds (where Founding CEO remains in place)

The impact of dilution

When you raise additional capital, pre-existing shareholders are diluted. This dilution is proportional to the amount of capital raised, and inversely proportional to the company valuation you achieve. Any options granted to an employee at any point in time are diluted in the same way.

This level of dilution might appear unattractive to an employee granted options early on. But it doesn’t take account of valuation increases as the company scales up and attracts further funding. In other words, an early employee’s options will convert into a smaller percentage of the company, but may still be worth more in dollar terms. The table below shows the impact of dilution on a seed-stage hire, initially granted options over 1% of the company’s FDE. It also shows the notional gross value of these options, for a strongly-performing startup as it scales.

Typical employee option dilution over multiple funding rounds
Typical employee option dilution over multiple funding rounds

An employee owning 1% of the company’s FDE in common shares at a notional gross value of $100,000, will own only 0.40% of the company at Series D, as a result of dilution. However, the value of this diluted stake might be as high as $2 million. This shows how valuable stock options can be.

Common and preference shareholders

There are two main share classes:

  • Common (or ordinary): owned by founders, employees, and seed investors

  • Preference (or prefs): usually owned by institutional investors.

Stock options, when exercised, become common stock. If the company is sold at a lower valuation than the preferred shareholders paid for it, they will be the first to get their money back. Generally, anything left after repaying the liquidation preferences will be distributed among common shareholders. Later stage companies may have multiple layers of prefs at multiple valuation points. There are also more complex ways of structuring prefs. If the exit valuation for the company is lower than one or more of the previous investment rounds, option holders (and other holders of common stock) will only receive proceeds, if at all, after the pref holders have been paid back.

ESOP size

How much should employees own?

How much of your company’s FDE should you set aside for your ESOP? If you already have an ESOP component in your cap table, should you top it up?

You’ll need to answer these questions as part of each fundraise.

ESOP size is a board-level decision. Given the legal and administrative overheads, you won’t want to revisit it between rounds of funding. So the size of your ESOP should aim to cover all your potential talent needs through to your next round.

You’ll need to tread a careful balance. You want to make sure your ESOP allocation is sufficient, but if you over- allocate, you risk diluting your stake, and your existing investors’ stake.

The table below shows an indicative example illustrating the impact of ESOP size on shareholder dilution at Series A, whether at 10%, 15% or 20%.

How ESOP top-ups can dilute existing shareholders
– an indicative example for a Series A startup
Pre SeriesA PostA – 10% ESOP PostA – 15% ESOP PostA – 20% ESOP
Founders 65% 47% 43% 40%
Existing investors 25% 18% 17% 15%
New investors 0% 25% 25% 25%
ESOP – existing 10% 7% 7% 6%
ESOP – top up 3% 8% 14%
ESOP – total 10% 10% 15% 20%
Total ownership 100% 100% 100% 100%
Source: Index Ventures’ analysis

In theory, you should base your ESOP allocation on your hiring plan through to your next fundraising. However, sticking to a plan for 12 – 18 months in the future might feel over-ambitious.

In any case, unexpected opportunities or challenges are bound to impact your hiring plan. Your company might grow quicker than expected. Or, you might meet an executive with huge potential to transform the business, who expects a substantial option grant.

In practice, most founders take a top- down approach, and VC investors will expect your ESOP to be sized at a round figure.

ESOP size at seed

Traditionally, ESOPs are set to 10% at seed. This is the recommendation of Seedcamp, and still the norm in both Europe and the US. However, some accelerators, including Y Combinator and The Family, now advocate 20%. They recommend that seed investors should increase their valuation of the company to accommodate the larger ESOP.

This doesn’t mean you should allocate or promise all of this amount to your early employees. But it recognises the importance of stock options for securing top talent when company cash is particularly constrained.

The composition of the founding team can also influence what is the right ESOP size. For example, if you are:

  • A solo founder who needs multiple key hires

  • Co-founding team thinking of outsourcing early development versus hiring engineers

  • Lacking a technical co-founder, and need to hire a non-founding CTO

If your focus is on leading-edge technical challenges (such as Internet of Things hardware) or deep tech (such as virtual reality or AI deep learning), you’ll need a large and exceptional technical team.

Competition for such talent is fierce. And you’ll be contending with the deepest pockets around – including Google, Facebook, Amazon and Apple. These hires will expect high offers of equity participation, so you’ll be likely to need a larger ESOP than average.

ESOP size at Series A and beyond

In the US, ESOPs are typically increased from 10% at seed to 15% at Series A. The ESOP then grows with each funding round – reaching 20%, or even 25%, by Series D. The ESOP is topped up to provide more firepower, as more employees are hired and leadership teams are put in place. This pattern is illustrated in the company ownership graph earlier in this chapter.

In Europe, whilst seed ESOPs are also usually set at 10%, our research indicates that, on average, this figure doesn’t rise with successive funding rounds. Instead, the ESOP ‘flat lines’. It gets topped back up to 10% at each stage, after accounting for the dilution of existing option holders. We also found a much wider range than in the US, with ownership between 4% and 20% by Series D. But this means that on average, European employees end up with only half as much ownership in later stages, compared to their US counterparts.

We believe this difference is a key issue in the European startup ecosystem which needs to be addressed. We identify four key reasons behind it:

  • Government policy

  • Risk appetite – of talent

  • Mindset – of entrepreneurs and investors

  • Lack of benchmarks

Our aim at Index is to address each of these factors, increasing employee ownership in Europe through the research and recommendations in this handbook.

We can also validate ESOP size bottom-up. We’ve set out a plausible scenario for your Series A hiring plan and individual allocations in the OptionPlan app that accompanies this handbook. We also apply this scenario in chapter 6. If you were to follow this scenario entirely, you’d need a 12% ESOP to cover your needs up to your Series B fundraise.

It is extremely unlikely that your company’s situation will exactly match our default scenario. So we recommend using our OptionPlan app to customise your own option plan, and to more accurately gauge the size of ESOP you need. However, it is very likely to fall within the range of 10 –15%.

We have also modelled ESOP size requirements beyond Series A, into Series B and Series C. This combines the OptionPlan benchmarks for grant sizes with our experience of hiring trajectories. It projects an average ESOP size for the next generation of successful European startups set at 12% for Series A, rising to 14% for Series B and 16% for Series C.

Projected ESOP size in the next generation of successful European startups
Projected ESOP size in the next generation of successful European startups Source: Index Ventures analysis

We have already discussed how ESOP size can be affected by the composition of your founding team, and how deeply technical your company is. But there are two other significant factors in Europe to consider.

Your philosophy

What kind of company culture do you want to create? How mission-driven will you be?

You might mirror a Silicon Valley mindset, using equity to win and retain the best talent, and encourage alignment across your team. To offer options to all employees, including large options to attract exceptional individuals from major companies, you’ll need a substantial ESOP.

If you’re more concerned about dilution, you can consider offering higher cash compensation to employees instead. You might also hire less experienced individuals you believe will grow into their roles, as they’ll be less likely to expect large stock option grants.

Where you are

Generally, the size of a company’s ESOP is closely linked to the maturity of the local ecosystem. In regions that haven’t seen many high-profile successful exits, people are less aware of – or perhaps more sceptical about – the potential value of stock options. Whereas thriving local ecosystems create more competition for talent, which means startups must offer larger grants to secure the best people.

Unsurprisingly, London – Europe’s largest startup hub – has the highest expectations overall in Europe. Across the rest of the continent, there’s a very mixed picture. In some places, legal and tax rules also affect the attractiveness of options. (See chapter 7)

We expect these dynamics to shift over time, but the direction of travel is clearly towards rising employee expectations in all geographies.

As the ecosystem matures, employees get more sophisticated, and are more willing to trade-off salary for options.

Martin Mignot

Partner, Index Ventures

ESOP rules
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