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Employee ownership

Employee ownership:

Why it matters

As a founder, the equity in your company is your most precious asset. You should be unwilling to give it up lightly. But you also need to leverage it wisely, in order to access the two things that are essential for success – financial capital, and human capital.

Ambitious founders know that talent is their key bottleneck, and that building a world class company requires a world class team. In a competitive talent market, where FAANGs, BATs, banks, and corporates can offer high salaries and generous benefits for top candidates (especially in technical roles), it can be daunting to compete.

However, as a startup, you have two big advantages. Crucially, you can offer a compelling culture and mission. Your employees can feel part of a close- knit team, directly involved in shaping something truly innovative, rather than feeling like cogs in a machine.

But you can also offer a more tangible benefit. Ownership, in the form of stock options. Giving your team the opportunity to own a stake in a company that could become highly valuable a few years down the line, and to participate in the financial upside that could result, is a compelling proposition.

With less cash at your disposal for salaries, especially in the early days, stock options are also given to employees in lieu of the cash compensation and benefits that they might receive at larger companies. This enables smart founders to secure the best talent available.

In fact, offering stock options can benefit founders in several ways.

Hiring

Helping you secure the best talent, even when you’re up against companies with much deeper pockets.

Retention

Once you’ve hired top talent, you need to hold onto it. Stock options vest over multiple years, appreciate in line with your valuation, can be topped-up, and create disincentives for leaving. This gives your employees ongoing reasons to stick with you.

Motivation

Having a personal stake in the success of the company encourages employees to work harder and be more ambitious.

Alignment

Stock options direct all employees towards the same goal – the company’s overall, long-term success. They act as an incentive for collaboration.

Using equity wisely

Diluting your equity is only worthwhile if it truly allows you to hire, retain, motivate and align the very best talent.

If your stock option program is perceived as unfair, inconsistent, unreal, or is simply not understood, cynicism can set in. You will have given up your most precious asset, without obtaining the benefits. It is critical that your employees understand what stock options are, and perceive their grants as contractually protected, and objectively and fairly awarded across the team.

This is the driver behind much of the advice in this book: adopting a formula-driven system for awards, strengthening rights for leavers, and being more open with your employees. More traditional European lawyers and advisors often propose approaches and grants which are biased in favour of the employer, but we invite you to be more enlightened. In our experience, rewarding talent meaningfully and fairly is not only warm and fuzzy, it also makes business sense.

The Silicon Valley flywheel

Employee ownership pulls in top talent

Employee ownership has been at the core of Silicon Valley thinking for over 30 years. The story of the part-time masseuse who joined Google in its infancy, and ended up a millionaire, has now been played out thousands of times, in all sorts of startups. This has drawn thousands more talented employees into the startup ecosystem.

Employees from successful startups often go on to start their own companies, or invest in the next generation of startups as angels. A cycle of entrepreneurship is fostered.

Employee stock options are standard practice in Silicon Valley and across the US, where grants are driven by the market. Widely available benchmark data helps founders determine grants for any given role at each startup stage.

In contrast, levels of adoption vary across Europe. Grants here are mainly determined by the founder’s philosophy: the culture they want to create, and how mission-driven they want to be. A lower risk-appetite on the part of talent, and onerous regulations and taxation, feed into an environment where employee ownership is low..

Ambitious founders should think and act globally from day one. This starts with a forward-thinking, consistent approach to employee ownership. Sharing the pie with employees – in other words, offering them equity – is a great way to grow the size of the pie over time.

Staying ahead of the curve

A message to European founders

In much of Europe, it is still possible to get a startup off the ground without giving your team stock options.

But expectations are rising, particularly in major tech hubs such as London, due to the growing number of big exits of VC-backed startups. Employees are more likely to know others who have benefited from stock options, and want to ‘get in on the action’. If you offer options proactively, you can hook in the very best people and access talent that you would not otherwise have been able to reach.

At least as importantly, stock options are a way of retaining talent as you scale. In a few years’ time, if you continue to scale and raise brand awareness, your team’s success will make them hot targets for other companies looking to poach. If you have not built in sufficient upside and retention options, individuals crucial to your success are likely to be tempted by better offers elsewhere.

It is our view that the next generation of successful European startups will not achieve greatness if they do not effectively reward talent through the use of stock options.

Criteo – Bringing Silicon Valley practices to Europe

Founded in Paris: 2006

No. Employees: 2,800

Index initial investment: Seed round, 2007

Offices: France, US, UK, Spain, India, Turkey, Sweden, Russia, Germany, Singapore, Korea, Brazil, Japan

Criteo is the global leader in digital performance display advertising, partnering with over 3,000 international advertisers to deliver highly-targeted campaigns.

The best of both worlds

Criteo was founded in France, and retains a Paris headquarters and R&D centre, but the US is its largest market. In 2013, seven years after it was founded, it listed on NASDAQ (CRTO).

Jean-Baptiste Rudelle, co-founder and CEO, viewed Criteo’s dual locations as an opportunity.

We’ve implemented best practices from both markets. The combination makes our company stronger.

Learning from the US

At the beginning, Criteo did not offer stock options to employees. At the time, employee ownership was rare in France and candidates were not concerned with equity.

Interview candidates in Paris asked us about meal tickets, not about share options.

Things changed when Criteo expanded into the US and Jean-Baptiste realized immediately that the company would have to adopt US standards.

Our second hire, an Office Manager asked about share options during her job interview. This would never have happened in France, but Silicon Valley was very different.
The Silicon Valley attitude is: we’re asking people to go on an adventure with us. If we find treasure, everyone deserves a piece. You can see the logic.

As a result, Criteo decided to offer equity to everyone in the US, regardless of role or seniority. A few years later, they expanded the policy, offering stock options to all employees, regardless of geography. Jean-Baptiste Rudelle, saw the benefits in aligning and motivating his team once he implemented the new policy.

When I see the cohesion and enthusiasm stock options have generated, I’m very glad we embraced the idea.

Finding the treasure

When Criteo floated on NASDAQ in September 2013, at least 50 employees became millionaires overnight. Jean- Baptiste recalls one particular employee, who joined as a part-time intern and worked his way up.

He took a risk and it paid off. I’m grateful to everyone who was part of our journey.
Startup ownership
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