Stock Vesting and Equity Guide
57 min
comprehensive stock vesting and equity guide introduction to equity compensation equity compensation is a way for companies to provide ownership interest to employees, executives, advisors, and investors this form of compensation aligns the recipients' interests with those of the company's shareholders by giving them a stake in the company's future success types of stock common stock definition the basic ownership unit in a company characteristics last in line for payouts during liquidation; typically held by founders, employees, and early investors rights usually includes voting rights but fewer economic protections preferred stock definition stock with additional rights and privileges beyond common stock characteristics priority in receiving dividends and distributions upon liquidation rights may include dividend preferences, liquidation preferences, anti dilution protection, and conversion rights restricted stock definition common stock that is subject to restrictions, typically vesting requirements characteristics owner has immediate stockholder rights, including voting and dividends taxation taxed at grant unless an 83(b) election is filed stock vesting basics vesting is the process by which an employee, investor, or other service provider earns their equity over time vesting is used to incentivize long term commitment to the company ensure that equity recipients contribute value before fully owning their shares protect the company and other shareholders from premature equity distribution until stock vests, it cannot be fully owned or sold by the recipient if a person leaves the company before their shares vest, they typically forfeit the unvested portion understanding cliffs a cliff is a period after which a significant portion of equity vests all at once standard cliff structure one year cliff most common in startup environments functionality no vesting occurs until the cliff date is reached example with a 4 year vesting schedule and a 1 year cliff, you would earn 0% of your shares until exactly 1 year of service, then 25% would vest immediately purpose of cliffs ensures that employees contribute meaningfully before receiving any equity protects companies from short term employees who might otherwise leave with equity after just a few months reduces administrative burden of managing small equity positions for short term employees what happens before the cliff employee has no vested equity if employment terminates, typically all unvested shares are forfeited what happens after hitting the cliff the designated percentage (typically 25% with a 1 year cliff) vests immediately regular vesting (often monthly) begins for the remainder of the vesting period vesting schedules standard 4 year vesting most common schedule in tech startups 25% vests at the 1 year cliff remaining 75% vests in equal installments (monthly, quarterly, or annually) over the following 3 years alternative schedules graded vesting different percentages vest at different intervals milestone based vesting equity vests upon hitting specific company or individual performance goals hybrid schedules combines time based and milestone based vesting back weighted vesting higher percentages vest in later years to encourage longer retention continuous vs periodic vesting continuous shares vest daily or continuously after the cliff periodic shares vest monthly, quarterly, or annually preferred vs common shares preferred shares primary holders investors, particularly venture capitalists key features liquidation preference receive distributions before common shareholders (e g , 1x, 2x, or higher multiples of initial investment) participation rights may participate in distributions with common shareholders after receiving liquidation preference conversion rights ability to convert to common shares (typically at a 1 1 ratio) anti dilution protection protection against future financing rounds at lower valuations dividend preferences priority in receiving dividends voting rights may have special voting rights for certain company decisions common shares primary holders founders, employees, and early angel investors key features standard voting rights typically one vote per share lower priority last to receive proceeds in a liquidation event fewer protections minimal protection against dilution or downside scenarios series naming each funding round typically creates a new series of preferred stock (series a, series b, etc ) later series often have more favorable terms than earlier ones voting rights common share voting one vote per share standard practice for common shares matters typically voted on election of board members major corporate changes (mergers, acquisitions) changes to company bylaws stock issuances changes to capital structure preferred share voting voting structure options as converted basis votes counted as if converted to common shares class specific voting separate vote among preferred shareholders for certain matters board representation rights to elect specific board members protective provisions veto rights on specific matters voting right variations super voting shares multiple votes per share (often held by founders) non voting shares shares with economic rights but no voting rights class specific rights different classes of stock have different voting rights proxy voting shareholders may delegate their voting authority to another party common with institutional investors and large shareholder blocks share dilution what is dilution? dilution occurs when a company issues new shares, reducing the ownership percentage of existing shareholders sources of dilution financing rounds new investment rounds add new shares to the cap table employee stock option pools reserved shares for future employees convertible notes debt that converts to equity safes (simple agreement for future equity) agreements to issue shares at a future funding round stock dividends additional shares issued to existing shareholders anti dilution provisions full ratchet adjusts conversion price to match the lowest price of new shares issued weighted average broad based considers all outstanding shares including options and convertibles narrow based considers only outstanding preferred shares pay to play requires existing investors to participate in future rounds to maintain anti dilution protection calculating dilution pre money valuation company value before new investment post money valuation company value after new investment ownership percentage your shares ÷ total outstanding shares fully diluted shares all outstanding shares + options + warrants + convertibles minimizing dilution impact pre emptive rights right to maintain percentage ownership by participating in future rounds pro rata rights right to invest additional capital to maintain ownership percentage carve outs certain share issuances exempt from anti dilution calculations stock options vs restricted stock units (rsus) stock options definition right to purchase shares at a predetermined price (strike/exercise price) types incentive stock options (isos) tax advantaged, employees only non qualified stock options (nsos/nqsos) for employees, contractors, advisors value derives from appreciation above strike price exercise must pay to acquire actual shares expiration typically 10 years from grant date post employment usually must be exercised within 90 days after leaving (unless extended) restricted stock units (rsus) definition promise to deliver shares upon vesting value equal to full share value when vested exercise no purchase required; shares are delivered upon vesting taxation taxed as income when vested/delivered risk profile less downside risk than options common usage more mature companies, especially public companies comparing rsus and options risk profile options have higher risk/reward; rsus provide guaranteed value if vested company stage options more common at early stage; rsus more common at later stage tax treatment different tax treatment for exercise and sale cash requirements options require cash to exercise; rsus don't tax implications stock options taxation iso tax treatment no tax at grant no regular income tax at exercise (but potential amt implications) long term capital gains if held for 1+ year post exercise and 2+ years post grant nso tax treatment no tax at grant ordinary income tax on spread at exercise capital gains/losses on subsequent appreciation/depreciation rsu taxation no tax at grant ordinary income tax on fair market value at vesting capital gains/losses on subsequent appreciation/depreciation 83(b) election purpose pay tax on grant date value rather than vesting date value deadline must file within 30 days of receiving unvested equity benefits starts capital gains clock early; tax based on lower initial value risks if value decreases or shares never vest, taxes paid aren't refundable applicability available for restricted stock; not applicable to rsus or options tax upon sale short term capital gains shares held less than one year (taxed as ordinary income) long term capital gains shares held more than one year (lower tax rate) exercising options exercise methods cash exercise pay the strike price with personal funds cashless exercise sell enough shares to cover the exercise price (public companies) net exercise company retains shares equal to the exercise price value stock swap use already owned shares to pay for new shares early exercise exercise unvested options (requires 83(b) election) exercise considerations exercise window period during which options can be exercised standard 90 days post termination extended some companies offer longer windows (e g , 5 10 years) exercise price fixed price at which options can be purchased market value current fair market value of the stock spread difference between market value and exercise price (taxable for nsos) lock up periods restrictions on selling shares (common during/after ipo) early exercise definition exercising options before they vest benefits potential tax advantages; starts capital gains clock earlier requirements company must allow it; must file 83(b) election risks losing money if shares never vest or decline in value acceleration provisions types of acceleration single trigger acceleration based on one event (typically change of control) double trigger requires two events (typically change of control and being terminated without cause) partial acceleration only a portion of unvested shares accelerate full acceleration all unvested shares immediately vest common acceleration scenarios change of control company is acquired or merges ipo company goes public termination without cause employee is laid off or fired without performance issues constructive termination material reduction in role, compensation, or relocation requirement negotiating acceleration standard packages executives often get single trigger or stronger double trigger standard employees typically double trigger if any acceleration acceleration percentage can range from 25% to 100% of unvested shares cliff acceleration acceleration of shares that would vest within a certain time frame key terms to know cap table comprehensive list of company ownership including all securities shows percentage ownership on fully diluted basis tracks how ownership changes over time 409a valuation independent assessment of fair market value (fmv) of private company stock required for setting strike prices for options updated typically every 12 months or after significant events helps avoid tax penalties for below market option grants strike price price at which options can be exercised must be at least fmv as of grant date (based on 409a) fixed for the life of the option exercise window period during which options can be exercised standard options expire 90 days after employment ends extended window some companies offer 5 10 years post termination liquidity event occurrence that allows shareholders to cash out examples ipo, acquisition, secondary offering may trigger acceleration provisions right of first refusal (rofr) company's right to purchase shares before they're sold to a third party typically at same price and terms offered by the third party common restriction on private company stock lock up period period following ipo when employees cannot sell shares typically 180 days imposed by underwriters to prevent flooding market with shares negotiating equity compensation understanding your offer percentage ownership more meaningful than number of shares fully diluted shares total including outstanding shares, options, rsus, warrants, and convertible securities equity value number of shares × current price per share expected value consider probability of different exit scenarios key negotiation points grant size number of shares/options granted vesting schedule standard is 4 years with 1 year cliff exercise price should be fmv (based on latest 409a) exercise window standard is 90 days; can negotiate for longer acceleration provisions whether vesting accelerates upon acquisition or termination repurchase rights company's ability to buy back shares questions to ask what percentage of the company do these shares represent? when was the last 409a valuation performed? what is the current preferred share price? how many funding rounds has the company had? how much total funding has been raised? what is the expected timeline to liquidity? is there a secondary market for shares? what has been the historical dilution rate per funding round? employee vs founder vesting standard founder vesting schedule typically 4 years with 1 year cliff rationale ensures founders remain committed to the company variations credit for time worked before financing accelerated vesting milestones different schedules for different founders based on contributions special founder considerations reverse vesting founders start with all shares, which are subject to repurchase rights that lapse over time accelerated vesting more generous acceleration provisions than typical employees co sale rights right to participate when other shareholders sell shares drag along rights obligation to sell shares if majority shareholders decide to sell founder vs employee differences founders typically negotiate directly with investors employees typically receive standard plans with limited negotiation founders often have better acceleration terms founders may receive preferred stock or special classes of common stock employees typically receive common stock or options on common stock this guide provides a comprehensive overview of stock vesting and related equity concepts as with any financial matter, consult with a professional financial advisor or attorney before making decisions about your specific situation