Ask HN: Am I getting a fair deal?
To be fair, It will be a new domain I will be working on, with really smart people on a really interesting problem.
So am I getting a bad deal or am I over thinking this? Badly need some advice.
UPDATE1: Should highlight the fact that after six months, they plan to pay my lost wages subject to the availability of capital.
Market Rate: y FIRST SIX MONTHS SALARY: x NEXT SIX MONTHS SALARY: y+ (y-x) + z AFTER ONE YEAR SALARY: y + z
z being equal to a measure of the risk I am taking
My opinion of the co founders is that they are really smart and honest people.
UPDATE2 : Just got a call from one of the co-founders. He has very kindly explained to me that the deal they have offered me is taking into consideration the fact that any equity I have will be enforceable in U.S. Their idea of this structure is a cash payout in lieu of an equity.
44 comments
[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 101 ms ] threadAnd as a sidenote: if you're uneasy about the terms offered, maybe you already have your answer.
After that, you may be without a job. This is your downside, and it's what you should plan for.
In a best case situation, after 6 months you will start gradually earning back the money you missed out on, + a raise.
This means the only upside for you is the raise you _may_ get after 6 months. You should decide for yourself if you're comfortable with the amount of risk you will be taking for this upside.
As an extra caveat: it seems to me like it would be very easy for the founders to claim "there is no capital". Especially considering you are in a foreign country and are likely to not have any insight into the company's financials, it will be extremely hard and costly for you to prove otherwise if things go sour.
Unless the work is absolutely fascinating to you then you shouldn't even be considering this. I'm impressed that someone had the balls to put an offer like this on the table. Honestly, even if you loved the work I'd suggest telling them off because it's kind of an insulting trick when some people try to get geeks to work cheaply on "interesting" projects.
If they're somewhere where giving you shares triggers auditing requirements, which is the only reason I can think of them giving for this, there should still be plenty of workarounds. Significantly increased pay back over the following few months at least being the immediately obvious one.
What kind of a return would you want the upside to be for you to walk out right now and gamble 3 months of salary on a 25% chance of winning bet. Unless you've got significant wealth already then most measurements that take into account the diminishing returns of wealth will probably suggest a that you'll want the win to be at least 6 times that mount.
That's quite a lot of cash for a startup and it makes no sense to a startup that's worried about cashflow to make that kind of an offer when they could give out nice free equity.
Liabilities are much worse on a balance sheet than having employees with stock. Employees with stock in the company have an ongoing alignment with the company; employees who are owed cash are going to be slowly getting more irritated.
In this case your risk is that after 6 months of working far below market rate you will have nothing to show for it and then be out of a job.
Paying you back market rate at a later date isn't really compensating for it, unless there is some sort of bonus. Sometimes this bonus is equity, but it could just as easily be monetary (often this is how sales people are motivated - work for cheap, but if you sell then you get a large reward).
It's hard to say what compensation you should ask for. The most important factor is that you don't feel like you're being screwed, you should feel happy with the deal. Because if you are unhappy, then that unhappiness will leak through the stress of a startup and probably result in fighting, you hating your job and depression.
If, instead of getting the missed wages after 6 months, you were offered equity equal to the wages you were missing, would that be fair?
In the end, that's the same deal, assuming you could buy equity. (That isn't necessarily true, though.) If the company survives, you get your money in both situations. If the company doesn't survive, you don't get your money in both situations.
If you still think it's not fair, ask for equity instead. But they apparently just don't have the money right now, so they couldn't possibly pay you more to start.
Unless you get something out of it that isn't obvious (been out of work for 2 years, really need a job?) then you are taking all the risk here... They could fire you in 5 months and save a TON of money. And that might just be too tempting for them.
Unless you get something out of it that isn't obvious (been out of work for 2 years, really need a job?) then you are taking all the risk here... They could fire you in 5 months and save a TON of money. And that might just be too tempting for them.
If you're seriously considering this offer there must be something else in play. Is it a visa you're after? Have you always wanted to work at a startup? Is it a field you're very interested in? Have you been out of work for a very long time?
Whatever it is, at the very least, you should push back and try to negotiate to get what you really want.
This is how it should be. I am taking the risk and paying them full time, and since they were also happy with the interesting work they did not need or ask for equity. In your case you should either get full salary or equity. Because you are taking the risk with them. It is simple as that.
I don't get to judgement that your employer is taking advantage of you, sometimes arranging equity gets complicated, you need lawyers etc. He may have good intentions to keep you until you see the upside. But there is no guarantee, and if he is not paying you now, he should agree to offer you something in exchange that should fulfill you, or simply just pay you your market rate.
You are not overthinking at all. You should protect your rights at all times.
Get them to sign a contract in your country of origin - so fighting you in court becomes expensive for them. Or maybe in a state far from them within the US.
Let's say they let you go after 6 months, or tell you "there's no money". If your normal rate is 100K, you will be working working for $33K. Which means that in 6 months you lose $33.5K. That's quite a lot of money.
I would not take that.
WARNING: if they offer you equity, let's say 50,000 shares, but don't tell you what % of the total number of shares that represents, DO NOT TAKE IT, IT'S A SCAM.
Taking a below-market salary itself, if there's likely funding, isn't horrible, assuming you can live on it. Adding that you're being paid back the difference makes it good, too.
> The next 6 months however I will be paid back the diff and also get my market salary, provided there is money.
So, answer, What if there isn't money? Then what?
Draw up the contract so that you get something if there's no money for you. You'll feel burned quite badly if the answer is just, "Oh, sorry, we don't have the money now."
So, figure that out. If you want to guarantee you get the cash, have something serious in the event you don't get it. Maybe very significant equity at that point? Then it's very clear that you need to be paid, lest there's consequences. Look, everyone is great and honorable and all that, but things go wrong sometimes, and it's better to have it written down in the contract what happens in the event things go wrong.
Another thing to consider is whether you'll ever be subject to US taxes. Unless this is a non-elective deferral you could face stiff penalties: * http://www.irs.gov/retirement/article/0,,id=186222,00.html
> Should highlight the fact that after six months, they plan to pay my lost wages subject to the availability of capital.
Another very bad sign, they're already looking for an easy way out. Chances are in six months you're either stuck with the exact same level you started with ("there just isn't any money, we swear!") or they'll just can you. Don't do this to yourself.
I'm not categorically advising people to stay away from bootstrapped startups, it can be fun. But I think if you do something like this, you should have a personal stake in the company (i.e. be a co-founder). Because if this goes south, as the majority of them do, at least you have been working on something that you own as opposed to being a wage slave for a few months.
You also implied you would be the only developer there. If this is in any way a web company, this is another very bad sign. If so, you'll probably end up doing most of the work there yourself.
Sorry to sound so pessimistic, but this just doesn't sound right. If they don't have any money they should make ANY financial promises to you, period. It doesn't feel like they are being completely honest (or realistic) about the risk involved.
The correct offer, if they want to conserve cash, is to take the 2/3 of the salary they are not paying you in the first 6 months, convert that directly into stock (not options) at the same price that the founders are doing so, and give you a bonus on top of that for risk of say %25-%50 of the stock value.
If they want to stop giving you stock after 6 months, then paying you the amount they're proposing to pay you now would be fair (at least to make up the 2/3 you missed out on for 6 months.)
Basically they're asking you to take as much risk as they are, yet they're going to screw you on equity and on income. And they're not even offering it as a deferred salary (which would give them the legal obligation to pay it.)
To be honest, looking at this deal, it communicates to me that these people are not honest and you should not do business with them. I could be misreading something, but it sounds like they're trying to cheat you and use your nationality as an excuse.
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Edit to add: This is the reason for equity in startups. To allow cash poor startups to attract good talent. They're trying to not pay you (until some imagined future cash infusion at which point they can fire you) and not give you equity.... you're going to do the 6 months of work that earns them the big venture capital and then they can replace you without you getting any equity?
That's why I think this transcends raw deal into the realm of cheating you. (And normally I'm of the "whatever two people agree to is none of my business" persuasion. But you asked here so this is my opinion. It doesn't matter how great the idea is or the other guys, if you're not going to be able to participate in the long term. Equity measn they want you around, no equity means they'll replace you in those 6 months.)
You're taking just as much risk as the founders, however you aren't receiving any equity. Negotiate an equity position that rewards you for your risk.