Does anyone have real data on how many employees actually see financial upside from equity grants? Are there studies or even anecdotal numbers on how common it is for non-executives/non-founders to walk away with any money? Specifically talking about privately held US startups.
RSUs at a public company are straight-up benefit if you survive to vesting. Whether that was better than getting more salary is only known in hindsight, but some companies are reliable in that being pretty good. Not FU money anymore, but when it's over 100% of your base it is objectively good. Options at a public company are risky, the markets were favorable for a while but you can see that high-flyers may be at the top of their market. Anything at a private company is a crapshoot, mostly filled with crap. Top execs and maybe a few early employees can benefit from some equity sales. Since you are asking the question, I'll guess this doesn't describe you. In general the company needs to thrive pretty well or have an in on a buzzy acquihire for either options or RSUs to be worth anything, and you took a salary cut for those chances. The old rule of 9 out 10 fail may need updating, but if you join at series C or after you have still a 90% chance of 0 and a 10% chance of a little something (because the quantity and pricing at that point is not all that interesting). Plenty of companies will not top you up after your first grant, so your slice is small. A few companies take care of their employees, but you need to treat the employer's statements in this as completely suspect. An employee, outside of work and in a social setting, is much more reliable.
> There are a number of options/equity calculators:
> https://tldroptions.io/ ("~65% of companies will never exit", "~15% of companies will have low exits", "~20% of companies will make you money")
I’ll take equity in a private company on top of them paying my fair market value in cash. Now RSUs in a publicly traded company is as good as cash. Even though even then you have a risk of the stock falling.
While I personally would never work in BigTech (again) and prefer smaller companies and will accept the lower pay that comes with it. I would never suggest given a choice anyone join a startup that pays less than they could get somewhere else hoping that their equity will be worth something
I sell them whenever they vest, though I would have probably been better off to keep them given the past year’s stock market.
Selling did help me pay off my house in 8 years.
I joined a private "startup" one year before its IPO and got a 40% return on my equity grant's first vest a week after the listing, but ~60% loss on the following grant. The company granted me more shares to make up the difference, so my compensation (almost) never declined, despite huge drop in value. Since the all time low, the stock is up 40%.
This year, I will/have receive about $300k USD in stock (which I can immediately sell on the market). My base pay is $245k/yr USD, so equity is a significant part of my compensation.
Every employee at the company benefited from the equity, although some should have sold when they could have.
0/ Options
Options are typically bad, because they expire when you leave. For example, the company gives you the option to give them $20k per year to exercise options.
- But if you're only making $100k/yr, $20k/yr in post-tax paper money isn't great - But if you don't exercise the options when you get them, you may need to pay additional money for taxes - But if you leave the company, you may only have 1-6 months to pay for those options.
IMHO, the only way to make money with option equity is if you are very lucky and can stay the entire time at the company.
1/ RSUs
RSUs are shared by later stage company and can be sold before a liquidity event. You owe taxes when they vest, unless they are double-triggering, unlike options. but at this point in the company's lifecycle, hopefully those rsus will be worth something.
I can't say this is the highest expected value, its a reasonably reliable value. It seems that if you have a sense a company has a good chance of successfully IPO'ing, you can maximize negotiation of both RSU and salary at this stage.
N=1 but this worked personally for me. I remember reading this a few years back, and negotiating strongly with an offer from Reddit when the tech market was at the bottom. And it did turn out they IPO'd. I did pretty well through that.
1. Vest valuable equity
2. Hope the powers that be let you cash out said equity
Rsu at public company is obviously almost as good as money if the company is doing okay.