Ask HN: How to leave a startup when you own a third of it?

202 points by Jomi ↗ HN
I'm leaving a startup I founded due to disagreements over team/strategy. I worked on it for about 16 months.

We are 3 co founders and we have 33/33/33.

I want to quit it in 2 months and we are currently in the process to raise 500K for 25% before the end of the year.

Is it reasonable for me to keep 10% of it. - They think it's way too much.

Sell to them 10% right now - How much??

Sell 13% of it after the 500k raised - How much??

Thanks!

161 comments

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You shouldn't care about what other people think is "too much". Keep your 33%/25%-post raise if you can (assuming there is no cliff in your vesting and you had your shares from the start).
> You shouldn't care about what other people think is "too much".

Except for one situation: if the remaining partners don't believe the company is worth much, and you believe it'll be worth a lot, then that's the perfect time to buy THEM out. (Especially if you're having disagreements over strategy, and you believe you have a lot invested in the company.)

They are obviously worth at least $2M and other ones want to continue, and apply some mental tricks to lower OP's share as she is obviously inexperienced/mentally weak (otherwise wouldn't post such a worded article on HN but instead went maximizing her returns). They can anytime offer a buyout (3-5x times what her share is worth right now), but they don't.
> ... as she is obviously inexperienced/mentally weak

Unless you can read mental states from behind an internet comment, there was no need to resort to ad hominem to characterize the OP.

There is absolutely no ad hominem. It's simply a very well known fact that when it comes to money, people turn into sharks and prey on inexperienced or weak, which in our (still) idealistic business is a majority. And the original post radiates insecurity (by default the mindset "I have to give up something as somebody told me to"); somebody has to step in and tell her "please don't be insecure, you have 33%, that's your starting point, don't allow pressure from your partners force you to make a stupid decision".
> Except for one situation...

And the other situations.

If the rest of the founding team think you're holding too much; it may well demotivate them or cause them to leave entirely, damaging growth and ultimately your chances of success.

If incoming investors think an early investor or departed team member is holding too much equity they may be reluctant to come on board unless that situation is rectified.

Thinking about you as an early employee with 16/48 months of vesting, 10% is about right assuming you hit full "good leaver" provisions... but that's a huge proportion of the business to be walking out of the door.

I understand your co-founders' frustration. They now need to use the remaining 23% equity to replace you rapidly without losing critical early momentum. Even aside from no longer actively contributing that distraction will reduce the chance of the business succeeding.

Considering the gambles taken by all parties I don't think there's a right answer here. I guess I'm curious what you think the actual value of the equity is if you're willing to leave so early.

Use a vesting schedule, so you keep equity but your other founders effectively dilute you depending on how much work they do and for how long. So you wouldn't get to sell anything just keep your equity in a fair way.
> your other founders effectively dilute you

concretely how does this work? I understand dilution to be a function of premoney/postmoney valuation when raising, and nothing else. So all common stock holders get diluted equally

Starting an employee stock option pool is another form of dilution.
Yes, 10% is fair, but it's also fair to be diluted down by the other founders in the future.

Experienced founders also have vesting periods. It entices founders to stay, and is a fair way to value a founder's work when they leave. Typical 4 years with major events triggering a full vest.

$500k raise doesn't qualify here.

Each partner in your case is 1/3, presumably you are all considering yourselves at the same market rate, so your time spent is the same.

If you were to have done a 4 year vest, you would be getting 1/3rd of your shares at 16 months.

It's fair for you to receive 1/3rd of the current 33% of shares which is even more than 10% today. However, expect to be diluted down as the vesting for the other partners continues.

-----

Here's another way to look at it without retroactively creating a vesting schedule.

Each of you have contributed to 1/3 of the business, entitling you to 1/3rd now. Going forward, the remaining founders will be incentivized to stay by having new shares allocated to them.

Say, in 16 more months, the number of shares allocated will be double what it is today, and split between the two remaining founders. Your size goes down, but in proportion to the value that you are no longer creating on the business.

In this scenario, you need to work out that future allocation before you finish the 500k raise.

If you own 33%, you own 33%. That can't just be changed arbitrarily.
It's not being changed arbitrarily. It's being changed by agreement. Holding 33% could make it difficult to raise money in the future I presume, which wouldn't be in anyone's interest (including the leaving founder). Every founder should be subject to a vesting schedule, of course.
It can. You simply increase the denominator (number of shares issued.) This happens all the time during normal financing.

Absent an agreement to the contrary, his other two partners can issue more shares to themselves, diluting him to near zero.

Or, a better solution, start a new company, agree to transfer the "assets" (if any) from the old to the new, removing him from the equation entirely.

Stuff like this happens all the time.

Here's the questions we thought through when our 3-person consulting firm split up:

https://ozar.me/2015/12/what-does-it-mean-to-buy-out-your-pa...

The first thing to do is read the startup's legal agreements. In our case, when we started the company, we agreed that partners (owners) could not participate in a business that competed with our own. You could leave at any time and do something competitive - but if you did, you thereby let go of your ownership. (You may also have a vesting schedule.)

If it's not obvious to you what your legal agreements mean, get a lawyer. Most lawyers will talk to you for 30 minutes for free to decide if it makes sense to hire them. Hiring a lawyer won't be cheap. You need the lawyer to tell you if you can simply walk away from the company and retain all of your ownership. If you can, then just ask the remaining partners, "What would you like to pay me to buy out my ownership?" It's simply a matter of what you're willing to accept.

Don't get hung up on valuing what the company will be worth in the future. If you can't agree on strategy, you won't agree on a valuation, either. Just ask them what they're willing to pay, and see if it lines up with what you'd accept. If it doesn't, and you can retain your ownership, and you believe the company will be worth a lot in the future, then walk away and keep your ownership.

But if you don't have that legal ability to keep your shares, then be prepared to accept a cup of coffee and a smile, and that's about it. (In our case, I bought out my cofounders because it was the right thing to do, but don't expect your partners to do the same. It's just a matter of character and your negotiation skills.)

The most common method of valuation for splits I've heard is the shotgun clause into "offer what you're willing to accept" methodology.

As in, offer a price to buy me out - but you have to be willing to accept the same price for your share (which is the incentive to make a fair offer). Ofc i've only seen it in 2 person partnerships but imagine can be generalised.

I don't understand the "shotgun clause" at all. Suppose we simplify and the offer must be accepted using only money in a (private) bank account designated in advance, and each person knows the other person's balance because they're honest with each other.

Then if one person has $27,000 in their private bank account and the other person has $14,000 then the person with $27,000 can offer $14,001 and the person with $14,000 is forced to accept.

If one of the parties happens to be overdrawn on that account and have net -$3.70 then the other party can ofer $5 and the overdrawn party would be forced to accept.

Now granted in the real world people can raise buyout capital from their private network on short notice -- but doesn't this show great unfairness, if the parties aren't both independently much richer than the value of the business they're discussing?

For most startup founders who own, say, 50% of a startup whose last valuation was $7 million, that is nearly all of their net worth. The vast majority probably could not so much as raise $50,000 on short notice. So, if one of the parties already has a hundred thousand, they can offer $55,000 and the more cash-strapped party would be forced to accept it.

So what gives. I just don't get it at all. Like, I don't even get the theory of why this is supposed to be fair... it just seems "obviously" broken to me -- so I must be missing something.

You are missing the "raising for buy out". If the shares are realistically worth $20K, and the $27K guy offers $14.1K, then the $14k guy would raise $0.1K (possibly even with a 50% APR) and counter; instant 5.9k profit.
It was an illustrative, mathematical example, of what I'm talking about.

If the shares are worth $3.5 million, how much do you think the guy leaving can raise on short notice? If you say anything over $100,000 you are delusional.

Investors don't even see the value in companies that are provably worth $1 billion. Even in retrospect you say, "well yeah history showed it is worth $1 billion, and the founder made a good case for that, but actually that is like a founder making a good case that he will role 10 "6's" in a row on a die, and then proceed to do that. The chances that he was going to do that are actually just 1 in 60,466,176 so the correct value of that "$1 billion" share is actually $1 billion / 60,466,176 = $16. That seems a little low - I'll give you a $100 for it. That's my annual budget for lottery tickets."

Investors don't value startups correctly and the idea that a guy can quickly raise money for a buyout of a stake in a company he's leaving borders on delusional. Plus, who would invest in a company with a negative signal that strong: that a guy who owns 1/3 of it wants to leave it.

There is obviously absolutely no way for a cash-poor founder without prior exits to raise anywhere near $3.5 million for a 50% buyout of a company raising a round at $7 million.

honestly - have you tried raising money around the seed stage? It's brutal, if everyone is on board and there are no negative signals of any kind.

I wouldn't be surprised if no poorly networked, cash-poor founder has raised significant (>$1 million) for a shotgun buyout of a company he's leaving, on short notice, ever. I might be wrong though, and I'd love to know if so. In my model it's really, really hard to raise money.

Yes, I have raised successfully at the seed stage several times. If the company is worth $3.5M and no vesting schedule, no investor will touch it (and the 3.5m valauation was reached either out of thin air, or on the back of a sucker).

If you cannot raise (with e.g. 20% discount for the trouble), the valuation is wrong.

I think we're saying the same thing. The example wasn't of raising a round - it was raising money for a shotgun buyout, so you can leave a company completely while the company tries with other principals and other investors. Using your money - but not using the guy you're giving your money to, who will go home. That's the scenario that I don't think is very realistic.

As a result the poor founder will not be given a fair offer. Which is why I don't get how shotgun clauses are supposed to be fair. This is pretty "obvious" to me. So I might still be missing something.

No, we are not saying the same thing.

I say that the situation you described is so far fetched as to be irrelevant to a discussion of "shutgun buyouts" in general.

How did the company reach a $7M valuation? They might have sold 1 share out of 7M shares for $1. That, technically, would make it worth $7M. But practically, it isn't.

Let's say company raised $3M at $4M pre-money => $7M post money. That's not unreasonable. At this point in time, the company has $3M in the bank, so it is indeed worth at least $3M.

Let's say "cash poor founder" only has $100K in the bank. If "cash rich founder" offers to buy 50% for $500K (five times what "cash poor founder" can afford), then it is extremely easy to raise $500K, for a promise to pay $550K from company coffers the next day, because in fact those $500K will buy control of $3M.

And that's exactly why investors insist on vesting schedules, first rights of refusals, tag-alongs, bring-alongs, etc - because the investor who put $3M into that company is likely to lose it in a variety of real world cases without those clauses.

I say your cases are not impossible, just extremely improbable. In practice, it is easy to borrow against a grounded valuation with some.

The poor founder will likely get an "unfair" offer, but "unfair" here is within 10-20% of a fair offer, not a 50% or 90% as in your examples.

I assume poor founder is a smart founder, of course - he might not have access to lenders/investors, which could get him treated unfairly; But of course, that's also the case for having illness, immigration problems, disability, etc. Money is an advantage, lack of money is a disadvantage -- but it is not fatal in these cases in general.

Thank you for the detailed write-up! I have some questions, I would like to understand it better. You are a real expert and I appreciate your taking the time to understand my question and help me understand better.

1. Why do you say cash-rich founder's offer of $500K is within 10%-20% of the market price of the shares, when in fact the market has just priced the company at $7M, half of which the market has therefore just priced at $3.5M? It seems to me that $500k is 1/7th of $3.5M, so the offer is only 14% of a fair offer...

For example, what if one partner is greedy and wants to buy out the less greedy, but also poorer, technical founder, after they have some huge windfall that gives huge value to the company. (Some of which is reflected in the $7M valuation they've received - which is not at all low.)

2. You write "that's exactly why investors insist on vesting schedules, first rights of refusals, tag-alongs, bring-alongs, etc". Would you say under the typical clauses offered by VC's, they would allow the remaining founder to spend an unexpected and large amount of money from the company coffers in order to buy out the other partner? (Or repay a debt investment they had raised to do so)? Why would the investors allow that? Especially if it was not envisioned explicitly under "use of funds" and, of course, they'd rather have two partners work on it than one. (But the greedy, cash-rich funder would prefer to own and have the company by himself.)

3. You write - "he might not have access to lenders/investors, which could get him treated unfairly". Would the company be able to raise debt to finance a buyout of one partner by the other or is that not something a company can raise debt for?

Thanks for your answers. I'm pretty shocked at everything you've said. (As you noted at the top of your comment, I misinterpreted you also.) By the way, this does not apply to a situation I am in - and I hope won't apply in the future. I simply do not really understand the clause and its implications in the real world, that well. Thanks for your help.

Ground truth assumed:

- founders "Rich" and "Poor" have 50%/50% split, with zero investment so far.

- they raise $3M at a $4M pre-money valuation. This is highly unusual for a "seed"/"pre-seed" stage, but not unusual if they already managed to bootstrap, have paying customers, etc.

- cap table is now: 3/7=~42% investor, 2/7=~28% Rich. 2/7=~28% Poor. (This is your first mistake: poor's stake in the company is worth $3.5M but rather $2M, on paper), and his 28% actually controls ~$850K of cash (assuming perfect democratic voting rights).

1. I am not saying that. I am saying that if the rich founder makes a $500K offer (5 times what the poor founder can afford), the poor founder will easily raise those $500K, because they control about three times as much in voting power. Any offer significantly below $3M * (4/7 * 50%) =~ $850K, e.g. $500K, means that one can raise $500K, and "buy 850K" with it. So the offer, even by rich dude, is guaranteed to not be below $850K. If the company has tangible measurable business, and the real worth is indeed $2M, then the same would be true for any offer significantly less than $2M.

2. Not, they would not. They might buy the founder out themselves, perhaps through the company, but they would not give a carte blanche for that.

3. It is possible to raise money for that, but it would usually be in the form of bonds or loans (essentially different mechanics for the same principle), not in the form of equity.

Thank you for all of your answers! I've gotten nearly everything from you, you've been very helpful. But I do have a couple of remaining questions. (This comment is not as llong as it seems.)

  Discussion of pre-money valuation
  ---------------------------------
First of all I have a fundamental followup question that cuts across literally everything around equity raises.

I don't understand why you continually use the pre-money valuation for how much a stake is worth! Usually post-money is used, isn't it?

This is how I think about it - tell me if I'm wrong: let us see if pre-money or post-money is the more appropriate metric, by looking at the extremes. You create a machine that poops bars of gold and show me. I want to buy 99.9% of your company for a billion dollars. You say okay, because you want to go invent something else using a billion dollars, and anyway you're pretty sure I can grow it to a seven hundred billion commodities company, which will make your remaining stake - which might come with anti-dilusion or ratchet clauses, so you always have 0.1% of the company - worth a further $700M. And the rich guy takes all the risk regarding whether he can actually grow it to $700M or fucks it up. You have your $1 billion today, either way, and obviously anyone who can invent a machine that poops bars of gold has good R&D ideas for how to use $1 billion. So you agree.

Ground condition: you had owned 100% of the company. A $1b investment for 99.9% of the company implies a post-money valuation of (1/99.9%) * 1 billion = $1,001,001,001. It implies a pre-money valuation of $1,001,001,001 - $1B = $1,001,001.

So how is the $1M relevant in anyway?

If the pre-money valuation is $1M then would the founder who just accepted $1B for 99.9% of the company, also accept a 50% buyout of the company for $2 million? After all, it's TWICE the pre-money valuation offer he just received!

Of course faced with two options - a 99.9% buyout of the company for $1 billion or a 50% buyout of the company for $2 million, he would accept the first one and not the second one, which to any reasonable person values the company at a much lower value.

As an even more extreme example, if the $2 million were for 100% of the company, then any reasonable person would understand that that offer values the company at $2 million. But the pre-money valuation is $0.

Which also OBVIOUSLY doesn't make any sense whatsoever. How does a 100% buyout offer of $2 million value a company at zero? Obviously it doesn't.

Would a guy looking at a 99.9% buyout for $1 billion and a 50% buyout for $2 million consider the second one to have a higher valuation? Of course not. But the pre-money valuation of the first one is just $1 million and the second one is $2 million - twice as high.

So we have three examples of absurd results from using pre-money valuation.

1. A hundred billion dollar investment for 99.9999999% of the company values the company at $100 pre-money ((1/99.9999999%) * (100,000,000,000) - 100,000,000,000 = $100). This is absurd.

2. A 100% buy of any company at any price values the company at $0. This is absurd.

3. A $4 million valuation (50% for $2m) can value the company higher than a $1 billion valuation - as long as the pre-money of the latter is lower. Again, absurd.

All of these absurd results make it totally unrealistic to use pre-money valuations so I really don't understand why you're doing it! Please explain in detail, as I've been used to using post-money valuations to talk about the value of a company. I thought this was standard.

Maybe I've grossly misunderstood something, so it would be very useful if you told me what!

  Your other answers
  ------------------
Thank you for the other answers.

Your answer number 2 essentially means these kinds of clauses are only possible where there is not a VC on board, (because if there were, they wouldn't allow it and ha...

I would recommend reading http://www.investopedia.com/ask/answers/114.asp for how valuations work.

Don't take this as a personal attack: To me it seems you are very confused about the difference between share purchase and investment (these are NOT the same thing). In the world of company founding and funding, these go hand in hand with other things like dilution, vesting, rights of first refusal, "double dipping", and many more (and you practically need to be familiar with them to understand why things work the way they do; other wise, things that are very logical and pragmatic like shotgun buyouts don't make much sense).

I don't have the time to give you an answer all of these cases, but when you read on it, keep in mind that EVERY DEAL has both a pre-money valuation and post-money valuation, and the difference between them is exactly the money invested (in a "standard" investment deal). It is important to qualify a valuation (whether pre- or post- money) when you discuss it.

I did NOT use one or other valuation; I gave both, to make the numbers clear.

Again, until you properly understand the difference between share sales and share issuance (which is what is done in an investment), nothing will make sense. Make sure you have a good grasp of these -- a reasonable test if you got it right is to see if my "ground truth" example makes sense.

I read that.

Thank you for the rest of your comment as well (not taken as a personal attack): I think you have identified one source of my confusion. I closely relate the idea of valuation to share price.

I will read up to get a fuller understanding, but could I just ask one question before you go: do the terms "pre-money valuation" and "post-money valuation" or does the term "valuation", mean anything when you buy 100% of the company from me (without issuing any extra shares shares, and the company doesn't get any of your money) for a certain amount? If that amount is $500,000 then what is the pre-money and post-money valuation (if these terms apply).

This should clear up my confusion as in this case no extra stock is issued. I will read up on the rest. I want to know if these terms (pre-money valuation; post-money valuation; valuation) even apply in such a case!

Thank you for taking the time to understand some of my sources of confusion. Other than this one, I'll try to get a handle on the rest of my questions from other sources.

"pre" and "post" valuations are not relevant terms for a buyout; only for an invsetment; an invsetment goes into the company bank account and increases the value (hence, pre/post) of the company by that amount. in a buyout, an existing owner is paid, and no money goes into (or out of) the company bank account.

For a buyout, you usually talk about price (although some people talk about "valuation" in this context too -- nomenclature is not completely standard here).

> Then if one person has $27,000 in their private bank account and the other person has $14,000 then the person with $27,000 can offer $14,001 and the person with $14,000 is forced to accept.

Not necessarily - for example, in my own company's case, the company itself paid out the other partners. The company can take on debt to buy out a partner's shares (or a portion thereof) if the existing partners are willing.

I couldn't have afforded to buy out my partners personally, but with the business's assets, I could.

Hey, this is very useful information. I would like to ask some more details, but not here. Could you throw up a contact on your profile or mail me at mine, if you'd have a couple of minutes for my questions around that? Thanks.
There are financing options for people facing a shotgun clause. e.g. http://www.shotgunfund.com/
OMG, I'm not in that position or anything right now but thank you SO much for this link! So good to know.
Roulette Clause
Keep the 1/3rd of the company you are entitled to today, and make sure the other two founders stick around by creating a new allocation of shares that will have a vesting schedule, and will dilute you down fairly over time.

There's nothing to stop the other founders from doing the exact same thing you are doing - leave and retain the company. Give them a compelling reason to stay.

This is absolutely the best strategy in my opinion. If they would sell the company 1 month after you leave, you'd still have almost the same percentage as they would, which is fair. If they'd stick around for another 16 month and then exit, your share would be diluted, which is also fair.
These are some of my favorite sorts of threads on HN. Love thinking about this sort of thing for any future endeavours.
Great idea. Though I wonder if it would just be simpler to to transfer some of the the shares in question back to the company over time ( a "reverse vesting"), and so "reverse dilute" everyone else over time.
Let's say OP decides to play unfriendly hard ball and hold on to his 33% of shares. Could the remaining two partners force through a new allocation of shares, vesting over time but only to active members, which would dilute OP to near zero?

I am asking about who gets to decide what is considered fair dilution. Assuming good will on all sides, I like the idea of your suggestion. Assuming non-cooperation, I am wondering what the worst case could be for OP.

It's hard in this case not to argue that he owns 33% of the 1.5mm company that the three have built until today. Diluting him out to effectively zero would be cause for criminal charges against the company. It's theft.

In the same vein, they can't raise the $500k and then immediately dilute the investors. That's also theft, called fraud.

He seems to have shown a lot of good faith in this matter so far.

It's a serious contract issue but it's not criminal.

The two founders own 66%, presumably 2/3 of the board seats (but if they can't even be bothered to write a vesting schedule they probably don't have a board at all). For the sake of argument if each of them own 10k shares (30k total), there is nothing criminal about the board voting to issue 100k new shares to the two remaining founders. So now they each own ~48% and OP owns ~4%. Shitty move? Yes. Morally and ethically terrible? Absolutely. Will OP sue them? I would hope so. Illegal? Not even a little bit.

The way you prevent this is by having a contract. But again, OP was just doing this with his buds so no need for a contract, right? This is why you sign a contract for anything you're doing that involves more than $100 in assets or a few weekends of time.

You cannot issue 100k new shares out of thin air... If the company is worth $1.5M, split in 30k shares then each share is worth $50. Issuing 100k new shares would require those two founders to invest additional $5M (which I assume they don't have).
Sure you can. You issue the remaining founders options for 100k shares at an excercize price if $50 per share. You can probably even do it at $10 or $20 per share, since investors shares are likely preferred, and don't have vesting requirements, meaning you can discount common shares for illiquidity/fewer rights.
Shareholder oppression is criminal. Whether the actions they take constitute shareholder oppression or not is a matter that usually gets settled in court or arbitration.
I'm curious, would it be against YC ethics ( https://www.ycombinator.com/ethics/ ) to do a dilution like this? And what are the consequences for founders in the YC program (or alumni), that did it? Nothing? Case-by-case?
I was in a very similar situation 6 months ago. If you have a typical agreement in place (4 yr vesting schedule w/ an initial 1 yr cliff), about 10% is not only reasonable, it's what you're legally entitled to. If you're legally entitled to 10% and you believe the company is going to increase in value and eventually exit without you, it would be foolish to sell then your stake.
If no vesting was set up when ownership was divided, you technically own a third of the company. However if there was some implied agreement, or you want to be fair, it makes sense to give back some of the equity. I think it's reasonable to keep more than a third of your portion though. The biggest risk in working on a startup is before it's raised (significant) funding when it's worth 0$. If you're actually raising another round soon, you've together brought it from a valuation of $0 to $2M. This was the highest risk time, so without a vesting agreement you may 'deserve' more than a third of your third, e.g. half of the third. It would be good to consult a lawyer though.
It sounds like you own a contractually agreed upon amount of shares. Since it's not an employment contract but ownership you can just walk away and keep all your shares until you or the company dies. If they want you out they can buy your shares. But otherwise there is no problem with keeping the shares and walking away.

Before I had to fight for my legal rights a few times I always considered agreement more important than legal state. Don't do that. People will exploit that and give you much less than they owe you or ask much more than you owe them. Focus on your legal right first. You wouldn't give them your car or smartphone as a gift, right? Then don't just gift them your shares.

It sounds like there is no reason to sell your shares before the company gets more funding, which should also increase the value of your shares.

If you don't have a written agreement about the shares take whatever you can as fast as possible.

No problem? If the company dies because 1/3 of the cap table is dead, that's a problem.
I think the parent's advice wasn't to screw over the company, but just to approach it from the legal standpoint first. It sounds like his co-founders don't believe he's entitled to his 1/3 share, even though he is. So start from a position of strength (which he already legally has), and then work down from there:

"Hey you two, the fact of the matter is that I own 1/3 of the company outright. We didn't start off with a vesting schedule or anything else that would change that. Dwelling on that isn't helpful. I may be leaving, but I do want this company to succeed; my owning 1/3 of something that fails doesn't help me or anybody. I get that 1/3 of the company belonging to a non-participating founder will look bad to investors. However, I've put in just as much work as you two have up to this point, so I'm not just going to walk away empty-handed."

At this point it's just about good faith negotiation:

"I'm willing to let you guys buy me out of all or part of my stake. What do you think is a fair offer?"

All that being said, it is a shame that there was no vesting schedule set up in the beginning, so it might make sense for the OP and co-founders to essentially retroactively make one up, and, if they can all agree to it, all be subject to it. The OP will be giving up some of his shares, and the other two cofounders will feel an incentive to stay and work hard to ensure they vest as well.

He's not entitled to his 1/3 because typically a startup is worthless without its key employees. If his other two partners also quit, the purchase likely disappears, poof. Essentially he would be asking his partners to work years more so he can get value for his shares while he does nothing.

The proper thing is to issue new options to remaining partners to dilute him heavily and keep them motivated to work at building business.

Absent an agreement that stipulates a vesting schedule or dilution/share return on leaving before some point, he absolutely is (legally) entitled to his 1/3.

Whether or not it's best for the company that he keep it (I agree it's not) is an entirely different matter.

He's entitled to 1/3 of the founders shares. He's not entitled to any new shares and they have the ability to issue as many new shares as they want. Their only restriction is that the shares have to be fairly valued, so they might have to issue them as options with high purchase prices.
but you cannot just dilute shares. Otherwise everybody would do that all the time. You buy 30% shares of a startup for 2 billion, then they just dilute you down to 0.3%. That's not how it works.

What they can do is either put him or themselves on a vesting schedule that represents share % with future work.

Oh but they can.

If you start a company with two other founders and agree to a 1/3 split each, or 33,000 shares. After a month you get bored and decide to let them make it a success, quit the company and tell them to wire you your third when they finally succeed.

In that case they can issue 1 million new shares immediately to themselves, and with very little tax consequence. It's a one month old startup, worth close to nothing so they can make them options costing a few pennies a share to make it fair and legal with no tax consequences .

In the case where you leave with a sale or investment pending, it gets much trickier. The shares have to be priced at fair value. If the company is about to sell shares at $15 per share, new options for the remaining founders can likely to be priced somewhere around $1-$5 per share since they will be common shares, not preferred shares like the ones being sold. They can be fairly valued much cheaper because won't have the special rights of preferred shares, and should be less liquid.

True. In that regard it's also fair.
I think that's the crux of it: is it fair?

If it's fair, you're in the clear. The diluted partner might be unhappy, and could even sue (but would hopefully lose), but at least objective observers with good information about what went down would be ok with it.

If it's not fair, you open yourself up to lawsuits you may be unable to win, and your reputation as a fair dealer gets damaged, perhaps permanently, and people will think twice about working with you in the future.

Why is 1/3 dead? Usually if you own 1/3 of the company you paid for it with adding time, money, intellectual property, etc. You bought these and the corresponding value should still be there. Same as with the car. If you buy a car, you pay for it, thereby giving back and assumed equal value. If you then never drive the car you don't stop other people from driving cars. They can buy their own cars.

Maybe it's a confusion of how shares work? If you earn 1/3 of a company you earn 1/3 of what is considered the core value of the company (not sure how to call that in English). If a new investor comes he'll give you money to participate in your company. He gives you $1mio, then your core value grows by that amount and he gets a share of the company which equals $1mio/<old_value>. Nothing is lost.

The only way to lose in these deals if you sell a share of your company for much less than what it's worth. That can happen, e.g., if you give someone 1/3 of the company because you expect him to deliver something in the future (e.g., code the software you want to sell). But in that case you should put that in the contract. "You work here for 3 years, and for each you get 1/9th of the current size of the company." or "When the software with feature x,y,z is finished, you get 1/3rd of the company as compensation".

Make clear, legally enforcable contracts that state exactly what you want, and there's no problem.

> raise 500K for 25%

This puts the company at a valuation of 2M

After that you would have 1/3 of 75% of 2M, that is, 495k

You can base your "how much" answers on the above calculation (and previous money raised)

If you really don't want to be a part of it anymore, propose them to pay you in installments (depends on the company cash flow)

He'd only have 495k if someone would be willing to buy him out for 495k. Nothing else.
Common vs. Preferred stock.

Divide your result by a factor of 5 or 10.

This. It's kind of surprising how many people in this discussion are equating the value of common and preferred shares!
No. Investors are no going to be happy about dead equity having over 10% max (total) and will very likely take steps to dilute you if you try to leave with that much.

With 3 founders, I think the max you can hope for is 3-4%. But get an agreement from the company that neither of the remaining founders can receive additional shares for 2 years.

I've been in this situation before, and that clause is a pretty effective way to protect against dilution.

But mainly, but not sticking out, you avoid a really punitive recap that could make your stake round to zero.

I would sign a legal contract from the beginning so you can retain 33% as an absolute (whatever allocation after investor's share).
I don't know you any better than your co-founders and in general I would say that those who either 1) continue to finance or 2) continue to work should have much more of the equity than those who quit. If one or both of your co-founders leave, or if an investor doesn't follow up on his investments, you would want that party to have much less as well.

I feel bad for your co-founders that you guys haven't had a vesting schedule in place or similar so that you would lose most of your equity now when you quit. Imagine having to work for free or for low pay in the future just to hand over 1/3 of the result to someone else. I don't know if 10 percent is too much or fair. I

I know you could say that you have worked for 16 months for free or very little but right about now is when it usually gets really tough. Your savings are probably up, maybe you haven't found a product market fit yet, maybe there are no customers yet. Doubts set in, both in you and your partner, family and friends. Now is when it hurts to continue.

So right now, I think the decent thing to do would be to increase the capital by a lot and let the co-founders subscribe for those new shares but have the shares vest gradually as they continue to work.

I also think if would be a decent thing to let the possible investor know that you are quitting before he commits.

I'd be curious as to what the difference is between the theory of equity ownership and the reality.

The theory, is that you have a certain percentage of the company (whether that is 10% of whatever), that is somehow "yours". But this is a private company, and you are a minority shareholder who presumably hasn't put much in the way of cash equity. What's to prevent the shareholders, after you leave, simply from dealing you out? There are all sorts of ways of doing this. The existing shareholders can get a liquidation preference in later rounds. The remaining co-founders (who presumably hold common), get paid out with a consulting bonus that acts as a drawdown on the equity, resulting in nothing for any of the minority shareholders after the preferred gets taken care of. If there are employees during a liquidation event, they can be taken care of with "Retention" or "Continuity" bonuses, and not rely on their holding of common.

Once you leave a company, I wonder how often (in the real world, versus they way we all want it to be) you simply end up with, completely legally, nada.

YC would likely know very well the answer to this - I bet it is north of 98% of the time.

Can you really deal certain shareholders out because you don't like them? I was under the impression that there is still a fiduciary duty to non-employee shareholders.
Typically if you are under 10% you can't block the company doing from things that may in the end tend to disadvantage you, ie you can't obstruct legitimate business unreasonably, though shareholders generally have to be treated equitably. YMMV depending on local laws.
"a fiduciary duty to non-employee shareholders"

I believe this is fairly difficult to prove in court. It happens pretty commonly; it's not super hard to dilute someone out if the company wants to. In fact, it's probably seen as a good move by the board and all current employees.

So, the catch here, is if you can get a significant portion of the common shareholders together, you might have grounds for a lawsuit, which may not be successful, but it will slow things down. What typically happens is that the big ones (in this case, the founders) get a "Consulting Bonus." - leaving the other common shareholders out in the cold as they no longer have enough shares to mount a law suit.

I've seen it happen at least once at a company that I worked for that was sold to Oracle for about $100mm - everyone who stuck around for the liquidation event got retention bonus, plus one of the cofounders who had left (but still had a big chunk of equity) got a "Consulting" bonus - and, of course, the CEO (who had been around for about 18 months) got a monster payoff. Preferred shareholders (who actually had put down $$$) got paid off with a liquidation preference.

100% of the common shareholders, including some early employees who had a reasonable chunk of the company - were totally wiped out. Got nothing for their equity.

The directors and officers have a fiduciary duty to all shareholders, including non-employee shareholders. The level of difficulty in legally challenging a merger on fiduciary duty grounds depends on other factors, most prominently whether there were non-interested directors approving the transactions. Basically, if the board was all made up of people who got special deals, it becomes much easier to sue.
i have a vesting agreement with my co-founder, 50/50 split vest 25% per year, if he left at 16 months he would keep 12.5%, is this agreement naive given that at some point in the future we will be raising vc?
not really. As other people have said, you have lots of options.

If they leave before the VC gets on board, you can just issue more shares to dilute them down to nothing.

You can declare a new class of shares with better voting rights, or better preferences, and issue yourself those. The actual numerical value of the shares may be within agreements, but they'll give you more control/entitlement.

You can form a new company, sell the assets of the existing company into the new one (or lease them if there are reasons why you can't sell). The old company will be left with some cash, the new one with the business.

You can just liquidate the old company, and pick up ownership of the assets post-liquidation.

Basically, private companies are worth whatever a clever accountant says they're worth. As soon as your co-founder stops being a director or an officer of the company, there are lots of ways to manipulate their claim on the company.

If they leave after the VC is on board, then the VC's advisors will have a suitable vesting schedule put in place. It's basically their problem after they get involved.

However, if you knew your co-founder intends to leave, and fail to disclose this during Due Diligence, you could be vulnerable to getting your arse sued to buggery.

Of course, some of this is ethically dubious. But (imho) so is claiming a stake in a company that you left while it was still worthless. YMMV.

Also, I'm not a lawyer or accountant, you definitely need to check with a qualified advisor not some random dude on the interwebs.

I hate to be a downer here, but a lot of options you disclose above are breaches of fiduciary duty that would end up getting the remaining founder sued. I'd really be careful about creative workarounds like that.

Your point about knowing the co-founder is intending to leave resulting in trouble is a very good one. Virtual guarantee that as part of a VC round, you will be making representations that you have no reason to believe any key employee intends to leave the company. you don't want to breach such a rep.

I've heard of all of these tactics being used at one time or another.

Obviously my advice is not only unqualified, but also criminal ;) It should definitely be ignored :)

Can you confirm the company is an LLC based in the USA? (most replies are assuming this!)
LLCs don't have shares. It's a safe bet that it's a US C-corp or equivalent.
Do you have a vesting agreement in place? If not your investors will likely require one.

What that agreement should say is something along the lines of "each founder gets 1/48th of their shares for each month of having been at the company." There's usually a "cliff" of 1 year, but it looks like you're past that.

That being said, you need to realize that you bailing may put everything in jeopardy, as investors are likely to be spooked, and will likely be unhappy with the significant dead weight of .33 * 18/48 of the company. If I were you I would strongly consider taking a smaller piece in order to give the company more room to grow.

The fact that you're currently selling 25% of the company for 500k indicates to me that the company has a long way to go before spitting off serious profits, so I'd opt for whatever makes the company most likely to be successful, or you'll end up with $0 anyway.

Also realize your "percentage" will change as more shares are issued, an options pool is created, more dilution comes in, etc.

Not all investors do, and frankly, I've seen a case where a founder was pushed out by early investors after 24-36 months. In this example, they acquired his stake for $1M+.

If no vesting currently in place, you have to do exactly nothing. The stake is yours. Your co-founders might not be able to raise investment, but you can't be forced to sell your stake. If you're reasonable, you pick a price for your shares and ask them to buy you out. If they are not willing to do that, just keep it.

Even from a self-interest standpoint though it's probably not wise of him to keep the full share, since it is a red flag to investors and decreases the pool of equity available to people who are working at the company.
Recognize this company is selling 25% of itself for $500k, meaning the entire company is "worth" $2m. I'd guess no one is going to buy OP's stake at these levels, given that he's likely 1/3 of what the investors are buying already.

If OP wants to, OP can not agree to any vesting agreement, keep his whole stake, and likely do significant harm to the company in doing so (of course I'm making some basic assumptions here, but I think they're fair, and about as good as we can do considering the lack of information). If OP does that he or she is actually shooting him or herself in the foot, and destroying the value of his or her own shares.

I can certainly see many scenarios where it's actually in OP's best interest to give up more of a stake, though it's impossible to know without knowing what type of company it is, revenue and growth rates, etc. If we assume it's a software startup raising at a $2m valuation I would strongly encourage OP to play the long-term game, as the likelihood the stake will be worth nothing if he or she takes 33% off the table right now is remarkably high.

Industry standard is 4 years vesting with a 1 year cliff. You are vesting, right? You should own 8.25% at a year and then 0.6875% for each month after that.

Sometimes there are differences because different founders contributed different amounts. For example, this schedule wouldn't be fair if one of you had a side job.

Ultimately, it won't really matter. If they think you have too much ownership, they can issue themselves additional stock grants to get you down to what they want you at.

Doesn't apply to cofounders, only to initial hires...
Actually, it's standard for founders to have a vesting schedule, too.
While this might be pertaining to cofounders as well, it's not a rule, whereas it is a rule for first hires. Cofounders can have completely different means to resolve conflicts/departures etc. specified in operating agreements, such as arbitrations etc.
All of the investors I've ever talked to preferred founder vesting over anything else. Maybe we run in different investor circles.
Most investors do, yes. But the investors aren't there to tell founders what to do at the initial incorporation phase, when vesting decisions initially get made. Of course those decisions can be modified when investors come on board, but until that time the founders are typically working with the original vesting structure chosen by the founders.
I'm sure there are some founders who make that mistake, this discussion being one example, but I didn't make that mistake, and the startups I've advised (all first-time founders) didn't make that mistake, you basically won't find any "guide to founding your first startup" on the Internet advocating that mistake. I have a hard time believing that it's common.

I see from your profile that you're a startup attorney, so you probably have seen a LOT more deals than I have, but to a certain extent you probably remember the messed up ones more than the ones that used boilerplate documents.

I've seen a lot of deals...and a lot of messed up deals.

Multi-founder teams with no vesting does happen. I think that's a mistake and advise against it. Things go wrong way more often than people think.

I differ from many folks in that I don't necessarily advocate standard investor-friendly structures (though structures that are easily made investor friendly, yes). But founder vesting is one place where I agree with the standard line - it's really necessary.

Walk, ask to be removed from any day to day duties in the operating agreement. Not a bad idea to have a business attorney handle it for you.
There's no great solution here. Some thoughts...

- The more you try to hang onto, the less the other founders will have an incentive to keep going on this startup

- If you are a jerk, they may decide to start another company that does the same darn thing, and it'll be expensive to sue them

- If you quit before the money is raised, you might tank the raise

- If you quit before the money is raised, you might find yourself without an ability to defend your piece of the pie

I like the "is it reasonable for me to keep 10% of it"? I say yes, but you're not me, and I don't have all of the details. Again, there's no great solution here. However it goes down, if you want to win, you'll have to maintain the trust of your cofounders to avoid getting screwed.

Whatever you do, don't be like my a-hole co-founder and leave 2 weeks before launch.
lol, what did you do to your cofounder to cause him to leave 2 weeks before launch?
How much did you pay yourself during the 16 months? Did you three all get paid the same?
A lot of people have provided helpful advice on how to handle this situation.

Is anyone able to provide links to existing info on how to setup a startup that would have already setup a framework for a situation like this to be handled fairly? This is an opportunity for someone to say "next time, start with ____ because it covers this situation as follows: ..."

Next time start with vesting (which a lot of people are mentioning) so that the other founders continue to earn shares and dilute the departed co-founder's stake over time. Ideally, founder ownership in the company is compensation in lieu of (or in addition to a meager) salary.

The founders who stay on board might try to dilute the departed co-founder's stake to nothing. Mark Zuckerberg did this to Eduardo Saverin. As a minority shareholder, you have to pay attention to the evolving cap table.

Thanks! I am looking for a boilerplate / template for startup legal documents, intended to be taken to a lawyer for finalization as a part of getting the ball rolling. Something that included vesting + protection from dilution would have been useful here.
"protection against dilution" (beyond what the law already provides for minority shareholders) for founders/common shareholders is not standard, so you'll have a hard time finding a template for it.
Perhaps this is an opportunity then. I looked in YC's Startup Documents and didn't see anything at all related to legal agreements between cofounders; maybe they will put something together someday.

The only protection from dilution I saw mentioned in this thread isn't doing so well (gray at this point):

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=14357964

an agreement from the company that neither of the remaining founders can receive additional shares for 2 years [...] is a pretty effective way to protect against dilution

Not sure how it's an "opportunity" when it's a red flag that would prevent the startup from raising money!
Thanks for expanding this point a bit further. While dilution protection does sound like a unique opportunity at this time, as you've pointed out it isn't in the best interest of anyone other than departing co-founders.

I don't want this specific point to detract from the original question asking for recommendations of competent template-y resources (legal agreements between cofounders) to build on when starting a startup.

This is a tough decision, but you're absolutely not alone.

I've dealt with this in founding a company with my closest friends. I didn't agree with many aspects of how the company was being run and simply picked up and left. I also owned a significant portion of the company in my departure.

In my opinion, you keep the shares that have vested to you, not the shares you are entitled to. I left 2.5 years after signing my stock purchase agreement, so a large percentage of shares were already allocated to me. They tried to get me to give back some of my shares, but I worked extremely hard and sacrificed a lot over the 2.5 years (including working for free), so the shares were the only feasible form of compensation I could argue for.

Eventually what happened was the company issued more shares, effectively diluting my holdings to nothing.

They're still puttering along, doing the whole "I'm the CEO, bitch" thing, we're all still close friends, and I honestly don't regret a single thing about my decision because I was miserable working on it and fighting with my best friends every day.

Do what you feel is right and what will make you happy. In the end, that's what's important. Keep your shares. The chances of them being worth a significant amount are low, but in the event they're worth anything, you've earned that payout.

> Eventually what happened was the company issued more shares, effectively diluting my holdings to nothing.

And you're still friends with these people? It's certainly their prerogative and legal right to do so, but it sounds like a shitty thing to do to a friend.

Dilution is inevitable, and faster if you leave and return unvested stock, but it sounds like this was a deliberate action by the remaining founders?

If "Silicon Valley" is of any relevance, buying a $150k Corvette seems to be a good start :)