Equity: The Golden Handcuffs
Last month, I wrote about positioning your company to attract
and keep top performers. One very effective way to do both is to
compensate your key employees with equity.
Performance pay has become a critical factor in keeping top talent;
combine it with a sense of ownership and a stake in the future
of the business, and you've got a powerful set of incentives.
That is what equity does. The basic theory behind equity compensation
is simple: generously pay your people in the future, with the financial
value they help create, and make it very expensive for them to
leave. In this article we'll look at three ways to do that.
Why use equity and not some other variable compensation such as
performance bonuses or profit sharing? Both bonus and profit sharing
plans tend reflect past period performance, rather than current
and future endeavors, which is where you want your people's attention.
They are fixed sums of money, and once paid out, no amount of creativity,
imagination or hard work can make them larger. Bonuses and profit
sharing are typically one-time payouts, which in today's what-have-you-done-for-me-lately
atmosphere are quickly forgotten. Finally, bonuses require cash
- and profit sharing requires profits. In a rapidly growing company,
either (or both) of these may be in short supply.
Equity addresses these shortcomings. Equity is the bonus that
keeps on giving. The value of equity compensation is likely to
increase over time, often considerably. Equity acknowledges your
employee's past contribution, but its real payoff is for work still
to be done - and your people have to stay around to reap the rewards.
In real terms, the current cost of equity compensation is cheap,
especially relative to the loyalty it can purchase. Plus, since
no cash changes hands at the time of the equity bonus, you can
use it as a reward even if your company is cash-strapped.
There are other plusses to equity. Especially if your business
is likely to go public or be acquired, equity helps top talent
choose between your smaller company and job offers from larger,
well-heeled public companies. Also, equity highlights and underscores
the common interests between your company's owners and the "rank-and-file",
and helps top performers feel like the business is theirs.
Outright Stock Grants
Outright Stock Grants are simple to implement. Your company grants
a key employee a specific number of shares, the value of which
is the total company value divided by the number of outstanding
shares. That's it. More than any other form, shares are tangible.
Stock makes your key people feel like owners, and when people really
see themselves as shareholders they rarely want to leave.
But there are drawbacks. One is the lack of a vesting period -
ownership occurs at the moment of the stock grant - which means
if someone has a better offer, they can leave and take it with
them. It also leads to the second drawback: the stock value is
taxed as ordinary income for the employee in the current year -
resulting in a double whammy - no extra cash to spend and a tax
liability to boot. Stock grants can also dilute your control and
decision making power.
Critical Success Tip
To use stock as an employee retention vehicle, require a holding
period before the shares can be sold. Remember to retain the right
of first refusal on any sale - you don't want those shares finding
their way into unfriendly hands. Plus, require the shareholder
to offer the shares for buyback in the case of termination. (Offer
- don't require your company to buy them.) Lastly, if you don't
want to share decision-making power, create two classes of shares:
voting and non-voting.
Non-Qualified Stock Options
Non-Qualified Stock Options are a powerful and efficient way to
keep your employees. An option holder has the right to purchase
shares in the company at the "grant price", which is
typically the current share value. As your company gains in value,
the value of the option rises. Options often have a vesting period
before they can be "exercised" to purchase shares, requiring
employees to stick around and keep contributing to the company.
A benefit for employees comes from the tax-deferral feature: there
is no tax due until the option is exercised. Importantly, options
themselves do not carry voting rights.
Critical Success Tip
Since you can grant non-qualified options on a totally discretionary
basis, use them to reward performance on individual, team and company
levels. Also, establish the vesting period to occur on an "stair-step" basis
- for instance, 50% vest in two years, the second 50% vest in another
two years. This type of structure gives your employees the "choice" to
leave, but holds out a significant carrot for staying.
Phantom Stock
Phantom Stock is an accounting fiction which enables top people
to partake of increases in company value. Unlike "real" stock,
phantom stock does not convey any actual ownership in the business.
A phantom share is a credit in an employee account for an amount
equal to the value of your company's "real" shares. Over
time, the account is credited with changes in share value, along
with dividends and other distributions. There is no taxable income
for the holders of phantom shares until they are "redeemed" by
the employee.
There are two types of phantom stock plans, "growth" and "basic".
Under the growth plan, at redemption, employees receive an amount
equal only to the appreciation in the share account. Under a "basic" plan,
employees receive the total of the appreciation, plus the original
value of the shares.
Critical Success Tip
Phantom shares are the equity vehicle of choice when you don't
want to dilute either ownership or control, or when you have a
Subchapter S and can't exceed the maximum of thirty-five shareholders.
Establish a vesting period for phantom shares: grant the shares,
but require a minimum holding period. If the employee leaves before
the holding period expires, he or she forfeits the value of the
shares. You can also establish a payout period, after which time
you will redeem the phantom shares for cash. In other words, your
people don't have to leave to cash in.
Valuation
For public companies share value is determined in the marketplace.
Private companies must engage in some kind of valuation process,
which is outside the scope of this article - but a few "success
rules" apply.
1) Perform the valuation at regular, published, intervals - at
least once per year.
2) Document your valuation process so that your shareholders can
understand it.
3) Establish a capital reserve to enable share redemption, and
publicize it.
Following these three rules will increase your employees' sense
that their shares (and options) have real value, and will have
them want to remain and continue participating in the upside.
Business Coach http://paullemberg.com and Strategist, Paul Lemberg
is the President of Quantum Growth Coaching, the world's only fully
systemized business coaching http://quantumgrowthcoaching.com program
designed to create More Profits and More Life for entrepreneurs.
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