Attracting and retaining top talent is crucial for any startup's success, and Employee Stock Ownership Plans (ESOPs) are one of the most powerful levers you can pull to attract, retain and motivate staff.
However, there’s a lot of variability in the design and structure of these programs based on the different cultures and compensation philosophies of organisations. This means communicating the value of ESOPs to employees can be a minefield, as there is no hard and fast playbook on how to do it.
To help, we hosted a forum for our portfolio with Jason Atkins, President at Cake, and Simon Baume, COO at Eucalyptus, to pull together best practice principles for communicating the value of your ESOP to employees. Here's what we learnt:
Before we dive into how to communicate your ESOP, it’s important to understand the purpose of salary and equity in compensation programs. For talent, salary is more universally understood and easy to compare between offers, whereas equity can be more confusing. Equity is usually given for three reasons:
There are a few reasons why ESOPs are misunderstood or undervalued by employees:
The good news: effective communication can resolve much of the confusion around ESOP.
We’ve broken down the most important ways to communicate ESOP value into two categories: offers and onboarding, and financial modelling and exit event scenario planners.
Embedding an understanding of ESOP right from the offer stage is the best way to ensure employees value it and are motivated throughout their vesting period. While you may be inclined to present equity as a $ offer, this misses the point that future exit scenarios determine the ultimate value for an employee. This can result in incorrectly setting employee expectations and potentially falling into the realm of financial advice. You should avoid phrases like:
🙅 We’re giving you x% of the company
🙅 You’ll receive $x worth of shares or options
🙅 We’ve converted x% of your salary into equity
Instead, you should provide clear verbal and written explanations of the key terms of your ESOP (including exercise price, vesting schedule, vesting conditions and exit events) in offer letters and when onboarding new staff.
To ensure that all current employees are equally well-informed about the value of the ESOP, you should conduct a session to bring everyone up to speed. Here are some questions to proactively answer at the offer and onboarding stage (and in a session for current employees):
👍 What is an ESOP?
👍 Why do we have an ESOP?
👍 What is vesting?
👍 What is your vesting schedule and conditions?
👍 What’s an exit event and what’s the company’s current outlook?
Financial modelling and exit event scenario planners simplify the complexity of potential ESOP outcomes into clear data. Providing models and planners to employees increases transparency and gives context on how you’re thinking about the company’s future outlook. As an example:
In the above table, the scenarios are directly linked to a recent raise amount and equity value. This gives employees a chance to see their equity’s value across a range of different outcomes, and importantly, the outcomes are made more real by their link to a recent raise amount. You’re also acknowledging the lowest potential outcome ($0) and you haven’t committed to an outcome, nor to how much their equity is worth in $. Instead, you’ve provided them with a tool to understand how their ESOP works.
To help, we've created a financial ESOP model template which includes a value calculator, salary package calculator and vesting schedule. Click the link on the left to access it.
Worried about sharing too much? You don’t have to tell your employees everything, but there are a few things you should share to ensure they understand ESOP and its value.
From a technical perspective, it's crucial to grasp the impact of changing valuations on ESOP and be ready to communicate the potential effects to employees.
It's essential to inform employees about any changes in valuations, valuation goals, raise goals, secondary goals, and important dates. ESOP options typically have a 15-year expiry and allow employees to buy stock at an agreed price in the future, making them attractive to employees who believe the company is expected to grow and exit at a price greater than the exercise price.
A change in valuation, especially a negative outlook, may cause employees to consider why they’re working for the company. When this happens, companies should focus on a long-term outlook and share any future planning with employees to reduce impact.
📖 ESOP template doc for Aussie startups
🤝 Crafting your ESOP: Key terms and best practice