That advice also serves INHO well regarding angel investments and potential secondaries. If you made some x in a short time, take the money and run and leave the risk to institutional VCs who are not investing their own money.
I believe the complete opposite. If someone is willing to buy your business, no matter the amount, it’s because it’s worth MUCH more than what they’re paying. It’s illogical for them to pay less than its real value. It’s even illogical to think they’d pay exactly what it’s worth. Why would somebody bother buying a company if they were only going to break even?
There's a crucial extra factor that isn't in the original article, but ought to be: Money's ability to buy great experiences decreases as you get older. I've seen this with beach vacations, road trips to see a favorite band, fast cars, ski trips, etc.
Seize the moment, friend! What you can do NOW with that 10% slice will never exactly be on your possibilities map again.
I took a few months off intentionally in between jobs to hike and camp and hang out with my kids. Now that my kids are older my only regret is that I didn't do it for longer.
Think of it this way: Given any company in the world to invest that money, do you think it's best invested in your company or some other? Because if there's another one (eg nvidia, apple etc) then you should take the money out and move it into stocks in that one
I participate in a personal finance sub-reddit, and there is often a question of whether someone should pay off their mortgage (completely, or make some lump sum payments).
The mathematical answer is that if your interest rate is lower than the expected returns of some kind of portfolio you have, than you'll make more money investing.
But I like to bring up what Morgan Housel, author of the book The Psychology of Money, said on paying down his mortgage:
> It just increased our independence, even if it made no sense on paper. So that's another element of debt that I think goes misunderstood. And a lot of that for both of those points is this idea that people don't make financial decisions on a spreadsheet. They don't make them in Excel. They make financial decisions at the dinner table. That's where they're talking about their goals and their own different personalities and their own unique fears and their own unique skills and whatnot. So that's why I kind of push people to say like, it's okay to make financial decisions that don't make any sense on paper if they work for you, if they check the boxes of your psychology and your goals that makes sense for you. And for me, extreme aversion, what looks like an irrational aversion today, and I would say is an irrational aversion to debt, is what works for me and what makes me happy, so that's why I've done it.
If you make that big of a decision at the dinner table without excel, it implies that you make the decision without doing the math, which implies you are stupid.
IMO always take the money. Money to me is like water. If you're dying of thirst, that first glass of water is extremely important, the 100th, not so much. You really only need enough money to do the things you want, raise your kids, and retire. The money after that isn't going to bring nearly as much happiness as that first bit.
"Jim Bennett: I've been up two and a half million dollars.
Frank: What you got on you?
Jim Bennett: Nothing.
Frank: What you put away?
Jim Bennett: Nothing.
Frank: You get up two and a half million dollars, any asshole in the world knows what to do: you get a house with a 25 year roof, an indestructible Jap-economy shitbox, you put the rest into the system at three to five percent to pay your taxes and that's your base, get me? That's your fortress of fucking solitude. That puts you, for the rest of your life, at a level of fuck you. Somebody wants you to do something, fuck you. Boss pisses you off, fuck you! Own your house. Have a couple bucks in the bank. Don't drink. That's all I have to say to anybody on any social level. Did your grandfather take risks?
Jim Bennett: Yes.
Frank: I guarantee he did it from a position of fuck you. A wise man's life is based around fuck you. The United States of America is based on fuck you. You're a king? You have an army? Greatest navy in the history of the world? Fuck you! Blow me. We'll fuck it up ourselves."
1) Making money & keeping money are 2 different skillsets. You've made some $$$, now learn how to keep it.
2) Time is far more valuable than money. If you can take life-changing $$$ off the table in exchange for time, do so. The 2nd $1M buys you a tiny proportion of the benefits that the first $1M did.
3) You have a v. high risk concentrated portfolio that is aligned with your income. That's massive risk.
4) Taking it now buys you time & optionality. Leaving some still buys you blue sky. Best of both worlds.
Take the money. These things are 10x bets. You won't be sad that you got 7.5x instead of 10x (which is what happens if you take the 25% of your stake off the table). If you flip it, you'd have 10x instead of 7.5x. It's not meaningful.
Each time you get money you get to deploy that elsewhere. If you have super risk tolerance, push $25k cheques as seed.
I would recommend Taleb's book Skin In the Game for this type of question. The best choices are highly dependent on the individual's preference for risk and whether or not they count their existing stock as "extra" or as "income."
In my 15 year software engineering career, the most money I could have cashed out was around $110k in crypto space; that was the value my crypto peaked at but it would have required unlocking my tokens which would have lost me my forging position and the $4k per month which came with it... I ended up not selling and earning about $20k to $50k per year for 4 years so it has been a good decision... Also, it was not possible to unlock my tokens without a 1 month delay and token prices were fluctuating wildly... Moreover, due to my public position on the project, and the public nature of Blockchains, my unlocking of tokens would have been seen by community and possibly triggered a project-ending sell-off.
So basically the only time I had the opportunity to theoretically earn $110k, at the peak of my 15 year career after working insanely hard including nights and weekends, was not even feasible in practice and it turned out that I earned more money holding and forging over the following 4 years than I would have gotten for selling.
But damn, when I see some of these corporate 9-to-5'ers sitting on $1 million+ which they got after only 5 years or so and they're not selling because they think they deserve more. It seems insane to me. It's a lot of money, they can sell anytime, probably still keep their job. As they say in crypto, I would dump the shit.
20 comments
[ 3.1 ms ] story [ 35.8 ms ] threadThe interesting discussion is how much you should take off the table if the offer is uncapped.
Seize the moment, friend! What you can do NOW with that 10% slice will never exactly be on your possibilities map again.
The mathematical answer is that if your interest rate is lower than the expected returns of some kind of portfolio you have, than you'll make more money investing.
But I like to bring up what Morgan Housel, author of the book The Psychology of Money, said on paying down his mortgage:
> It just increased our independence, even if it made no sense on paper. So that's another element of debt that I think goes misunderstood. And a lot of that for both of those points is this idea that people don't make financial decisions on a spreadsheet. They don't make them in Excel. They make financial decisions at the dinner table. That's where they're talking about their goals and their own different personalities and their own unique fears and their own unique skills and whatnot. So that's why I kind of push people to say like, it's okay to make financial decisions that don't make any sense on paper if they work for you, if they check the boxes of your psychology and your goals that makes sense for you. And for me, extreme aversion, what looks like an irrational aversion today, and I would say is an irrational aversion to debt, is what works for me and what makes me happy, so that's why I've done it.
* https://rationalreminder.ca/podcast/128
* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NSaRb-iFwPA&t=12m48s
Then consider it as an offer to buy into the startup at the same dollar amount.
Would you invest?
Not selling is the same as investing in the startup.
This same logic applies to stocks you are holding.
Frank: What you got on you?
Jim Bennett: Nothing.
Frank: What you put away?
Jim Bennett: Nothing.
Frank: You get up two and a half million dollars, any asshole in the world knows what to do: you get a house with a 25 year roof, an indestructible Jap-economy shitbox, you put the rest into the system at three to five percent to pay your taxes and that's your base, get me? That's your fortress of fucking solitude. That puts you, for the rest of your life, at a level of fuck you. Somebody wants you to do something, fuck you. Boss pisses you off, fuck you! Own your house. Have a couple bucks in the bank. Don't drink. That's all I have to say to anybody on any social level. Did your grandfather take risks?
Jim Bennett: Yes.
Frank: I guarantee he did it from a position of fuck you. A wise man's life is based around fuck you. The United States of America is based on fuck you. You're a king? You have an army? Greatest navy in the history of the world? Fuck you! Blow me. We'll fuck it up ourselves."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XamC7-Pt8N0
2) Time is far more valuable than money. If you can take life-changing $$$ off the table in exchange for time, do so. The 2nd $1M buys you a tiny proportion of the benefits that the first $1M did.
3) You have a v. high risk concentrated portfolio that is aligned with your income. That's massive risk.
4) Taking it now buys you time & optionality. Leaving some still buys you blue sky. Best of both worlds.
Each time you get money you get to deploy that elsewhere. If you have super risk tolerance, push $25k cheques as seed.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TriNet_Zenefits
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skin_in_the_Game_(book)
So basically the only time I had the opportunity to theoretically earn $110k, at the peak of my 15 year career after working insanely hard including nights and weekends, was not even feasible in practice and it turned out that I earned more money holding and forging over the following 4 years than I would have gotten for selling.
But damn, when I see some of these corporate 9-to-5'ers sitting on $1 million+ which they got after only 5 years or so and they're not selling because they think they deserve more. It seems insane to me. It's a lot of money, they can sell anytime, probably still keep their job. As they say in crypto, I would dump the shit.