HACKER Q&A
📣 fortydegrees

Co-founder wants me to leave but won't entertain a buy out offer


I'm the technical co-founder of a pre-revenue startup. We were 51/49% to them and took a small round of pre-seed funding (~$100k) so our cap table is approx 40% for me and co-founder, 10% option pool and 10% investor. We have very standard shareholder agreements for 4yr reverse vesting with 1yr cliff.

My (non-technical) co-founder spent $10k to create the initial website over a year ago with the idea. I joined about 11 months ago and since then the idea has changed a bit, we've built loads of products, grown from 2k users to 60k users and continuing to grow due to dominating SEO for our niche.

Recently my co-founder said they wanted to work on it themselves. I said I didn't want to leave. They suggested I go down to 3% equity and they continue. I said they would need to buy out my equity at a fair price.

My co-founder doesn't have the money, and the business only has around $40k cash in the bank right now. My co-founder also won't entertain the idea of raising external money to buy me out, or monetizing the site right now.

To me this seems ridiculous as I'm literally just giving away my equity after spending 11 months building the tech and growing the business. Right now if we stuck adsense on the site, we'd generate $5k/mo, and we have inbound sales leads looking to spend upwards of $40k with us. Basically, the business is primed to make money.

They will not entertain the idea of me buying them out for cash.

What are my options here? It's basically being presented to me as "Take the 3% otherwise you'll own 40% of nothing". I don't really want any equity in the company at this point if I'm not involved.


  👤 ohyes Accepted Answer ✓
It sounds like you own 40% of something fairly valuable and now that it's 11 months into your contract other founder who needed your help is getting greedy and trying to push you out before you are owed anything.

You said it yourself, you've grown hugely, you're dominating SEO since you joined, and built loads of products. This is your 'partner' getting greedy after you've done a lot of hard work. It wouldn't have happened without you. Don't undersell yourself.

Your 40% is worth $400k based on that initial funding valuation, right? Assuming it's as successful as you seem to be implying, it is almost certainly worth more now.

Everyone is telling you to roll over but seriously, fuck them. This other toxic guy is the one who should be getting pushed out, not you.

The other investor ultimately has power in this situation, not you or him, so whoever convinces them that they are the person to go with gets the seat and gets to continue with the project.

If he has a good relationship there you're probably fucked, but results matter... and if you can prove you've done great stuff since joining and and have great plans for the future, he can be replaced.

To be clear: this guy has decided to blow up the project so he can get a bigger share, if it all fails now he can only blame himself.


👤 rat9988
Do NOT sell. keep 40% of nothing, matter of pride first and for all. Secondly, they are more than likely bluffing. They don't want to put advertising that would generate 5k/mo means they are trying to make things look artificially worse so you leave and keep the rest for themselves.

Don't fall for the 40% of nothing once you are close of making money. They just don't want to share the pie.


👤 basseq
Since you have a 1-year cliff and have only been there 11 months, sounds like as of today you have 0% equity. So the immediate question may be whether your co-founder can fire you.

In 1 month, you've vested 25% of your grant, or 10% of the company. So I would try to get to that mark to strengthen your negotiating position. Any references to 40% are red herrings at this point.

Unless there's a specific buyback clause in your stakeholder agreement, they're under no obligation to buy you out at any time. (They may have the right to do so. That's not uncommon.)

Of course, you're under no obligation to resign, either. So this is a negotiation.

So the way I see it, you have a few options:

1. You take your 10% and leave. You "don't want any equity", but better something you don't want than nothing.

2. You agree to a buyback, potentially at a discount to FMV. If you don't know what FMV is, it's hard to negotiate one way or another. It's v. likely not $1M. Sounds like this is a no-go.

2B. You agree to a non-cash buyback, e.g., in IP. You spent 11 months building the tech: what if you took that with you?

3. You flip the script and buy your co-founder out.

In any case, your relationship is over. You might walk away with nothing.


👤 gkoberger
Can I give you some advice that really sucks?

Walk away. It's not fair, but starting a company isn't like getting a job. It's a relationship and a risk that doesn't always work out. Sometimes you find more money and success than you could ever dream of, and other times you waste 11 months.

Here's my thought process. You and your cofounder aren't going to be able to work together after this. The company has no money and no value, so you're trying to get your portion of something that doesn't exist. Them raising money to pay you just kills their chance at ever being successful... plus, who would give a company money just to pay someone out? Same goes for accelerating vesting on the 40%... there's no way they can build a company when someone not involved owns a huge stake.

You could spend time and money trying to right this injustice. And yeah, it is an injustice. But the worst thing you can do is tie your identity to this. There's not much upside to fighting it; all you'll do is spend more time, money and energy you could be using to start something new.

I've had this happen to me before, so I completely understand what it's like. You feel helpless and shitty and like you wasted a ton of time. Rather, do your best to put it behind you, and focus on what benefits you got out of it.

Did you learn about a new space that will make you extra valuable to another company? Even just having a founder mentality will raise your value to a startup. Did you learn things you would do differently? You can start another company, and do it better this time.

I know it sucks. But I'm 99% confident you won't get anything out of this, so it's best to just walk away. It's cheesy, but "success is the best revenge." Your relationship with this company failed, but you haven't. Don't tie your personal journey to this one company.

Good luck, and my emails in my profile if you want to talk!

(Also, a few years ago I wrote about going through it: https://medium.com/@gkoberger/five-years-time-6a6ae1157a66)


👤 tyingq
I'd say first things first. You have 11 months and a one year cliff. Find a way to stall for a month and your position gets much stronger. This is a great environment to find a way to stall. Tell your co-founder to write up a proposal so that you can have a lawyer look at it. That's easy to turn into a month of stalling.

👤 andjd
Hey. As a former lawyer, I'm going to echo the many comments in this thread to consult a lawyer. If you find a good one with relevant experience, it should only take a few hours at most to properly understand the exact situation you are in and know your options. Your rights could vary drastically based on the specifics of the company and the employment/equity agreements you entered into, in addition to where you and the other founder are, and where the business was incorporated or registered. If there aren't formal agreements to this, but you have emails or other documentation that's short of a formal contract, that can also be relevant. Regardless, the co-founder and the investor owe you, an equity holder, a fiduciary duty. The threat to tank the business if you don't surrender most of your equity is a pretty cut-and-dry breach of that fiduciary duty, and you are fully within your rights to demand relief, which could be monetary, but could also be equitable, such as requiring your co-founder to relinquish control of the company, or to transfer ownership of the company's source code, domains, and IP to you. Whether any of this relief would be practically available to you would require expert legal advice and would depend highly on the specifics of your situation.

To others in this thread, if you're looking to join a startup as a technical co-founder like this, 'We have very standard shareholder agreements for 4yr reverse vesting with 1yr cliff.' is not standard in the same way it is for other early employees. In this situation, your equity should be in real shares from the get-go, not options that vest over time. You should also have a partnership agreement or similar document that outlines how board-level decisions are made, and for a business with a few mostly-equal owners, such decisions should typically require consensus of the owners, even if one person controlls 51+% of the equity. This is the most reliable way to protect your interest in the business, and this is what true co-founder status looks like. If the O.P. had asked for this before signing on, my guess is that the co-founder would have balked, and the O.P. would have known from the get-go what the dynamics would be, and could have walked or insisted on a higher salary to reflect the fact that he's being treated like an employee not a business partner.


👤 guytv
If you're willing to buy out his share, I would approach the investor, explain the current dead lock, and get his support to force your partner to do a BMBY (Buy Me Buy You), where you offer him a price per his shares, which he either accepts or have to pay the same sum to you and buy your part.

👤 mmastrac
First of all, in a case like there where you have founders at odds so early on, your company is basically on life support and probably dead already.

You have very little to lose by digging in and waiting for your co-founder to fold. If your co-founder has done this at this point of the business where the stakes are so low, they will absolutely try to screw you out of the 3% through other nefarious means.

It sucks that a single founder can tank a promising startup, but that's how it goes (unless you've already got a shotgun clause or equivalent in your shareholder agreements).


👤 swat535
I'm going to go against the grain here and say that you shouldn't make decisions based on what random people on the internet say. By all means read all the replies but the best course of action is to seek professional counsel and guidance from an attorney.

You may or may not have to go through a legal battle to get your share.

You should document everything as soon as you can, text messages and emails. The more paper trails you have, the better. Don't agree to anything verbally or sign anything.

Finally, don't make hasty decisions on an impulse. It would be best to be cautious and consider all possibilities.


👤 cyphertruck
You must get a lawyer now. Below us my thoughts given several decades experience As founder-

You have a strong position here, since you built the products. Don’t walk away. The ultimatum is counting in you being non-confrontational and wanting to cave.

This cofounder has betrayed your trust at this point, so some sort of exit is needed. Non-technical is a lot easier to hire- you can get marketing or whatever expertise he has easily.

He should be the one leaving. Maybe offer to buy him out at current equity value paid over 20 years at %6 interest, secured only by company stock.

If he forces the issue he will destroy the company in the ensuing lawsuit. So this is a mutually assured destruction situation.

What is the ownership of the software? Did you retain rights to it? If you are forced out can you recreate the company quickly using the software you already created?

Get a lawyer, now. You need an advocate who is ready to play ball and who can be the “bad guy” for you.

Your cofounder will likely try to spin it, try to portray any resistance from you as evidence of bad faith, etc. Don’t let him.


👤 MoJoPokeyBlue
It's too late for this idea in this situation, but it might be of interest to others thinking about getting into a partnership. Because most partnerships eventually go south, there is something known as the "Shotgun Clause". (I don't know who named it this, but this is what I've always known it as.) If your partner wants you out and comes to you with a lowball offer, you can invoke the Shotgun Clause, which gives you the right to buy him/her out at exactly the same terms, and THEY HAVE to accept. It's the risk they take by making an offer. It's designed to get them to make a "fair" offer, or one that they would accept.

👤 tmakks
Get a lawyer or at least someone who deals (talks) with them, asap, you are in a war.

Important question: If they gave notice today would the notice period "help" with staying longer than 1 year and hence, not falling into the 1 year cliff?

All further advice depends on above question, so once we know the answer we can give proper advice.


👤 jashmenn
Sorry to hear you're going through this. I went through something similar and it wasn't fun.

As much as you have shareholder agreements etc. none of that matters too much if the business fails and so it's basically about what the two of you can negotiate.

In my case, I've paid off a former business partner much like a loan. You can negotiate all sorts of parameters on this: monthly payments, grace period, cash triggers, funding triggers etc.

Basically you set a valuation for the business (at least as set by the price of the round of the last investor, if not more because of growth) and then he buys your ownership.

Idk what "reverse" vesting is, but if you had normal vesting it sounds like your 49%, after the 1 year cliff, would be worth e.g. 12%. So you can either keep that 12% or if he wants to buy you out he could pay you your 12% vested * last valuation * growth factor.

It sounds like it's not going to work for the two of you to work together, so now it's just about negotiating the details before the conflict kills the company


👤 memossy
It's important to see if you are before or after the cliff.

If before then depending on your employment agreement and other docs there could be a scenario where you are fired/let go and get 0% shares.

Your last round valuation was $1,000,000 post so that price would be $141,000 or so for your 14% stake, can include some triggers on when that occurs that doesn't impede the business (ie $xm raised, $y profits).

If not then your ownership of the company is basically 10% on good leaver terms and that is the floor you should accept.

To illustrate assuming 100 total shares

Now: 40.8: him 39.2: you 10: option 10: seed investor

Goes to new cap table of: 40.8 him (57.6% ownership) 10 you (14% ownership) 10 option (14%) 10 seed investor (14%)

You're not going to get bought out now although you could say that your stake is purchaseable in the future at the last round valuation, which is very reasonable and keeps the cap table clear, probably $140,000 per the above with some sort of trigger for that (eg $xm raised, $y profits)


👤 manuelflara
Just because your co-founder just now feels like "working on it alone" doesn't give him/her the right to force you out, specially if he or she doesn't have any leverage (as you say, the investor is remaining neutral). So what is preventing you from just saying "no, thanks, I'll keep my 40% and keep working on this". What would he/she do, then?

👤 jedberg
It sounds like you and the investor together control more than 1/2 the shares. Is the investor a friend of your cofounder or more neutral?

If they're a neutral party, it might make sense to get them involved, or at least threaten to get them involved. You and your investor could potentially vote out your other cofounder, and knowing that might make your cofounder change their tune.

On the flip side, if the investor is a friend of your cofounder, be aware that they have a lot of leverage here and could vote you out.


👤 kqvamxurcagg
Lots of advice but none seems to have a basis in law and how this will play out in reality.

You have an employment contract and rights. Your co-founder cannot fire you without cause (in most legal systems). Continue working and fulfilling your duties. Document everything and all conversions with dates and times.

It's unlikely you can be forcibly removed as your co-operation will be required to ensure the product continues to operate. If you are forced out you'll have to present evidence to a court or employment tribunal so proceed with this in mind.

You should start off with negotiating for your full 40% share, but accept 20%. Reverse vesting a non-issue if you are unlawfully terminated.

However I suspect there is more going on here as very unusual to see this kind of dispute (smoke) without cause (fire).


👤 momokoko
I don’t know if you can still delete this, but this is way too specific and way too many people read HN for your co-founder to not see this.

I would email dang at hn@ycombinator.com to see if they can at least delete the body of this post.

Please seek legal advice and the personal advice of contact you can trust that has angel investment experience if you have one.


👤 dustingetz
The problem with your ask is that early stage capital is for growing the business, not liquidating founders, and investors are not interested in giving anyone cash to liquidate a founder. Additionally, your valuation is currently underwater and even that is assuming a functional founding team.

👤 hedgehog
Find two people to advise you, an attorney and someone with founder or angel experience. Gather up copies of all employment agreements etc + directly related correspondence for them to review. Don't sign anything, don't discuss this issue more with your cofounder until you get advice. Also don't read too much into anonymous internet commenters who don't know the details of your situation. You can be fired but you have some leverage because this kind of dispute is a red flag for any prospective investor. Feel free to e-mail me.

👤 g42gregory
My advice: wait 1 month and then leave with 10%.

As people mentioned, you don’t want to stay because the relationship is broken. It’s not worth your time.

In terms of getting fired before 1 month is over, get an employment lawyer and talk this over with him. Most likely, you will have a case if they fire you just to save 7%.

Get the lawyer first, before responding to your cofounder.

If you think this business is going places, that will change my advice.

In this case, get a lawyer and negotiate a higher % or assurance that you will stay at the company and continue to get vested. Maybe you will get more than 10%?

Remember, investors/executive team will dilute you by issuing extra shares to the people who stay.


👤 boulos
Everything is a negotiation. But you’ll probably need an employer to push for that. Firing you just before your cliff is obviously not a particularly defensible action.

More importantly, your last statement (“I don't really want any equity in the company at this point if I'm not involved.”) suggests you don’t want the most obvious settlement: you retain your equity plus some acceleration (since you aren’t leaving on your own terms, it’s standard to request more than your currently “vested” amount).

You can’t likely “force” them to pay you for those shares above the price you paid, unless you have another buyer willing to do so.

Like others here, I’d suggest you involve your investors and almost certainly a lawyer (assuming you think that would even be worth it).

I can’t tell if you want to take over the company (you buy them out), you want them to buy you out, or you want to walk away. Do you have a clear preference?


👤 neosavvy
I’ve been through this. Twice.

Once it got hostile. Allocate some money to hire a lawyer. Have your lawyer send him an email as a first step with your buy out terms. This would be skipping a step I went through which was the disagreement where we realized we weren’t good for each other in business anymore.

Let your partner sit on that a while. He has no leg to stand on, and if folds and competes with an identical business you can sue him on grounds against his Fiduciary Duties to the current business.

Maybe also google “Fiduciary Duties”.


👤 andrewmcwatters
Stories like this make me wonder if there's a form of pre-business counseling much like premarital counseling where you discuss with your cofounder expectations going into the business and talk about worst-case scenarios like this and how each party would handle it at the time of the counseling (considering people change over time).

👤 pdutt111
So you have every leverage in this scenario.

> if he fires you that's wrongful termination(there's no performance issue until right before cliff). you can sue in that scenario

> I'm guessing you have a board seat too. he doesn't have 51% voting rights so he probably needs the investors to side with him to oust you for which he needs a legitimate reason. (title of CEO doesn't really matter all that matters is the voting rights you're not an employee).

> if there's a law suit and dispute between founders no investor will touch the company with a 10 foot pole, so if he goes for a fight he loses everything.

> there's no reason to go down to 3% when you own 10% next month. and people think of 10 idea everyday all that matters is execution and if you wrote the code and gave around a year of your life that's worth around 100k for an entry level engineer so I'd say you put in more than the 10k he put in.

> finally you have the code and you can tweak it and make it open-source there's no IP laws protecting code so at that point he owns nothing.

> honestly the company is done, the investor is neutral cause he's already written the company off and I would say this is the point of no return no matter which side this goes the chances of running the company are rather slim.

> the reason he doesn't want to monetize it is because he was probably planning on doing this to you, it'll be much harder to do it if the company is making money if you get out he'll monetize it the next day

I'd stick to my guns and tell them if they don't buy you out then the company is dead. The only scenarios are - 1. he buys you out. 2. lets your equity remain ( he probably can't fire you ). 3. company goes down


👤 tptacek
Lots of really bad advice on this thread. Something to keep in mind is that people venting about how unfair this is and how you shouldn't give an inch as a matter of principle are writing that to gratify their own emotions more than they are honestly trying to help you in this situation.

You need to talk to a lawyer, strictly to figure out, given the structure of the company, what your partner has the authority to do. It sounds like they have an edge in ownership and are likely set up as the firm's CEO, in which case it's very likely that they can sever you from the company.

You can probably get a cost-effective answer to that question, especially if you're willing to accept the most straightforward answer (ie, if you're just using the lawyer as a sanity check, and not tasking them with pursuing weird theories of why you'd be impossible to fire). You probably cannot get cost-effective answers to the rest of your questions from a lawyer; be prepared to sink 5 figures into legal, speculatively, to pursue anything past that. On the firing, figure high hundreds of dollars. On the equity negotiation, figure $10,000.

At 11 months in to a 12 month cliff, you are going to get 0 if you're terminated. Maybe you can slow roll past the cliff?

Even if the paperwork is locked down on their side, your partner is likely going to offer you that 3% just to avoid the drama; your argument may be doomed legally, but you can easily inflict 5 figures of legal expense on them. So there's a negotiation here. It may be that as soon as you start to sound reasonable --- not asking to assume control of the company yourself, not expecting to walk away with all your shares vested --- they quickly become amenable to improvements in the deal, just to get this over with.

While you think this through, remember that it is also very early in the life of this company to have a departed founder with a huge equity stake. A lot of reasonable people in that situation would just wind down the company and restart it; why plow forward while encumbered the way they are now? You're (justifiably) thinking about the 11 months you just spent, but if the company has legs, those 11 months are not much compared to the person/years that are going to be invested down the road.

Nobody is going to raise money to liquidate your position in the company.

Nobody is going to court. Lawsuits that actually get litigated take years and cost more money than anybody in this story have.

It also doesn't seem realistic to expect investors at this stage of the company to buy out your partner. How would that even work? You'd end up working for the investor. Probably nobody wants that outcome, including the investor, but also: with the low revenue you're talking about, your investors are unlikely to waste their time.

I've been a party to some similar situations and my advice is just to keep things simple. A good mental model of the legal services you have available here is a complicated divorce: only the lawyers win, and they know it. Your time is worth a lot, and dragging this out will eat a lot of your productive time. You suggest downthread that you're not all that interested in the equity and think your partner is going to fly the company into terrain. I think you answered your own question with that. You can fight a little bit, especially if it makes you feel better, but it sounds like you'd be kind of crazy to fight a lot.


👤 DoofusOfDeath
Is it possible to play the long game? I.e., before your partner tanks the business, lay the groundwork for you alone to rebuild it from the ashes.

E.g., make sure you have copies of all the source code, and any other intangible assets. After the business tanks and he too is short on cash, buy out all claims he has on those assets, and restart the business?

Also consider including your investor in the planning. He/she might be more willing to help you save the business at your partner's expense, if the alternative is losing their entire investment.


👤 monkin
I will say something immoral to many: Leave him, walk out, and build a business in the same niche with contacts and know-how you already have.

There’s one advantage of this: You can start from scratch, build it faster, and better without starting with a baggage. And, have fun doing it. I’ve done this, and couldn’t be happier.

Business I left is nonexistent anymore.


👤 gwbas1c
I worked with someone for about a year without making any money. We had to part ways without anything to show for it. I can empathize.

You didn't say why your co-founder wants to fire you. I suggest digging deeper into those reasons before you haggle on your exit terms.

Assuming you weren't negligent: I would try to point out that pushing you out one month before your equity vests is bad faith on your co-founder's side. Offer to leave voluntarily after your one-year cliff. Otherwise, if your co-founder just wants you gone now, request that you keep your 1-year equity and some severance.

Furthermore: Sometimes it's cheaper to just close the company and use the "lessons learned" to restart a very similar company... And that very similar company won't owe you anything.

[Edit: Deleted some text that, after reading the discussion, isn't relevant.]


👤 codethief
> We were 51/49% to them and took a small round of pre-seed funding (~$100k) so our cap table is approx 40% for me and co-founder, 10% option pool and 10% investor. We have very standard shareholder agreements for 4yr reverse vesting with 1yr cliff.

Could anyone tell me what this means in plain English (preferably, ELI5)? I have no idea what term sheets look like in detail but I would really like to learn.


👤 mooreds
What does your founder agreement state? When I founded a startup we discussed how an exit would happen (for either party) and documented it.

That's the controlling factor here, and of course HN has no insight into those docs. Depending on what legal jurisdiction you are in, you might have some other rights/obligations.

Either way, please consult a lawyer who has helped clients through this kind of situation before. Preferably a local one.

After doing so, you may want to reach out to the investor and make sure that your co-founder isn't controlling the narrative with them. Again, the lawyer probably has some advice on this approach.


👤 richardlblair
For readers - This is a lesson in having an actual shareholder agreement. Incorporating isn't enough, outline how situations like this go down before hand. Get a lawyer, pay the fee, you will be thankful later.

👤 dcolkitt
I would propose structuring the buyout in the form of convertible debt instead of a cash buyout. You give up your equity today, but the LLC gives your a convertible note to cover your valuation conditional on some future funding event.

Set a specific valuation target, at which point the note will pay in cash equivalent to a certain percent of the company's equity. That defers the issue of liquidity until if/when the company gets sufficient funding. But it gets you out of the equity today, particularly with regards to voting shares. Which is probably what your co-founder cares about the most.


👤 andrewstuart
Why should you say anything except "no"?

You own that equity even if you are not employed there.

Hang onto it ..... there's no reason you should be bullied out of it.

I've seen this situation come up a number of times. It's just bullying.... there's no legal reason for you to give up your stake.

Go watch "The Social Network" movie.


👤 gojomo
Find a lawyer/negotiator with experience in this area you can talk to directly, high-bandwidth. They'll echo many of the themes here, but be able to get (& give) more depth/detail.

This is a negotiation that's already started. Any communication about what they are or aren't interested in is a negotiating stance, or opening offer, which may be very far from what's possible if you properly understand your position/needs.

Too bad there wasn't a 'shotgun clause' from the beginning. (Then, even if you didn't have cash-on-hand, you could seek other financing/investment to win a fair/orderly divorce process. There are many investors who specialize in SaaS businesses.) Still, insisting on a bilateral agreement that whoever is able to pay more gets to buy the other out might be a reasonable negotiating goal for you, depending on other factors.

Your vesting cliff is very important. After the 1 year, there's zero justification for not delivering a full quarter of your shares (~10% of total equity). So I'd see retaining 10% equity (or at the very least 11/12th prorated if you do them the favor of leaving ASAP) as the absolute baseline you should consider.

It's unclear if your use of 'they is for gender-neutrality or indicates your co-founder & investor share this desire to get you out. But if the investor is neutral, or swayable, or cares about their reputation for treating technical cofounders, they may be all-important to a fair & amicable resolution.

That the co-founder would try this indicates some combination of real difficulties in the working relationship, differences in your perceived values of each other going forward, and/or a willingness to play hardball in grabbing more of a success in contravention of earlier agreements. To the extent it's that last factor, there are other ways you can still be edged-out, via dilution/re-orgs/etc, later on even if you resolved the current negotiation amicably. That's not a reason to run or give up, but something to keep in mind: a seemingly attractive result that's not ironclad could be further reneged. So you might give a little more, with the right protections, so that the result is more aligned/sustainable/enforceable in the future.

Good luck!


👤 poulsbohemian
I'm trying to understand how your non-technical founder plans to continue supporting the product as they "work on it themselves". Is the intent to simply replace you with cheaper labor who won't expect equity? Have the investors asked for you to be replaced by someone of their choosing? This feels like a key point to the decision making, IE: knowing what the future leadership of the company will actually be and whether there really is a future here or best to walk away.

👤 rexreed
Why do so many people on this thread not understand how a one-year cliff works?

The OP already has 40% of nothing. He has to earn that 40% over 4 years but if he leaves within the first year he gets nothing. All he has within the first 12 months is the promise of potentially 40% of something if he sticks around for 4 years.

But honestly, as the lawyer in this thread said, this was a crummy deal from the get go. FOUNDERS (rather than employees) should get Founder shares, which are immediately vested. There can be conditions for "claw back" which allow the company to buy back / vest back shares for an early departure, but founders shouldn't have to "earn in" their share into a company that they start. After all, they started it. It's an odd idea indeed if all the founders have a 1-yr cliff because then in the first year no one technically owns anything!

When they say "otherwise you'll own 40% of nothing", it's not even clear what they mean. Do they imply that they will dissolve the company and form a new one without you leaving you to hold an empty shell company?

At best you can argue for your 1 yr cliff value, which is 10%. You're not in the position to negotiate between 40% or 3%. You can only negotiate between 3% and 10% because there's no way you're going to earn the 40% over 4 years.


👤 hinkley
This reminds me of the person who bought my old house. It has issues. Those were factored into the price. But he kept trying to talk me down further because he had a story in his head of what this house was going to mean for his life and it wasn't turning out to be a deal that was too good to be true (note: banks reject loans for houses that are too good to be true).

On the last back and forth round I offered to meet below the middle and it turned out he wanted me to meet him 3/4 of the way. When you consider the overall price of a house and how many % that is, it seems like a smallish thing to disagree over. But if your equity in the house is low, the house hasn't appreciated much, or both, a few percent could be a good deal of your profit margin, especially if you count in taxes and repairs like a sober investor, instead of the typical magical thinking about houses as investments.

Between us and my realtor we finally convinced ourselves that his dreams were not our problem. I'm not going to sacrifice my future so someone else can go live their best life - particularly when the goal is for them to live that life without me in it. If you're not my child that option isn't even on the table. You selfish, selfish bastard.

(We called his bluff, he bought the house anyway.)


👤 rubyist5eva
Tell them to shove it. Something tells me your 40% is worth a hell of a lot more, otherwise they wouldn't be trying to screw you out of it. Lawyer up.

👤 davmar
I've been in tough founder situations. What I'd like to add to this conversation is: leaving is the right choice, find a way out, don't stay.

👤 NicoJuicy
How long do you think the company will survive without you? Act accordingly.

The ceo is trying to get someone in at a lower cost to take-over your work. Do you think it will work before the site crashes or a hard bug arises?

Inform the investor and take the money out, be honest to him. He will not like this.

He will wait to invest again ( or inform other investors), untill the CEO has proven he can do it, which he probably won't.

Ask the cofounder to take on a loan if that's possible ( perhaps less than the equity), he thinks you are disposable.

Get out and don't help out. Have the same contract with you as you do now, but take 10% of his equity, if you think it's going to fail.

Don't fix anything untill he signed, don't create a bug before you leave.

It's a normal thinking pattern of narcissists and it ressembles "the expert beginners" POV.

There are more opportunities, don't try to spend a lot of time on it anymore.

Ps. This will probably go to court, if it's worth it.


👤 digitaltrees
It feels like there is something not being said. Your cofounder just randomly woke up and said you should resign? Nothing triggered it, no prior conflict, no warning? Seems odd to me.

👤 hvaoc
You got nothing to lose all on your own (except time wasting with this person), but if that's worst enough. You have two options

1. 40 % of Nothing, other part gets the same deal. 2. You get 40 % of whatever this business is worth for. The other party gets the same.

You lose together or gain together. That's a fair game in a Startup as founders.

Don't accept anything else, if you do they just managed to bulldoze you out of your equity.

Stand for fair deal.

Don't get bullied by these negative tactics.

Remember "Two broccoli or Four broccoli" from your mother. - Call the bluff and fake dichotomy of choices. I would say - No Broccoli.

Meantime, keep everything documented and be professional - do not let them have any choice to get you out.


👤 burpee
Negotiate for converting your equity into debt that needs to be paid off at certain events. Easiest way to get the most money out of him. Lawyers can help you set that up in a contract, you just have to negotiate on the value of the debt.

👤 jxm262
This is pretty interesting to read through. I'm aware of a thing called "ERISA" , where (I think) there's law forbidding termination before vesting (retirement funds though).

Are there any similar legal protections in place to prevent termination based _solely_ on equity vesting?

And to all the comments here saying to just walk away and keep your peace; ie - just take it as a learning lesson. Which learning lesson is that exactly? Sounds to me like this is a pretty typical situation we engineers can get ourselves into. What other protections (learning lessons) could they have done to mitigate what's happening here?


👤 elmerfud
Did they really pose it to you that way of take the 3% or they'll torch the company? Was it just a bluff because they'll own nothing too? I would talk to a lawyer and possibly the seed investor, but the lawyer first.

👤 nullc
A stable 5k/month cashflow is worth maybe 1.5 million dollars flat. Ignoring the phenomenally unethical effort to part ways with you one month before the cliff, you rightfully own about 9.16% of that-- or on the order of 137k. You could argue that up and down based on risk and operating cost vs the potential to increase it, but I think that would be a fair starting place for the present realized value that I'd hope to negotiate from.

Have you talked with your investor? They may be more sensitive to the consequences of their reputation being damaged due to ripping you off than your cofounder is...


👤 honkycat
I'm not a lawyer and don't know what I am talking about, but even if the other co-founder fired them, couldn't they file a wrongful termination suit since them being fired at this point would clearly not be due to performance, but due to the co-founder wanting to fuck them out of their shares?

I may be vindictive but I would not walk away, and would rather see the whole venture tank than get blackmailed into giving away a year of my work for free.

To be clear, I wouldn't do anything illegal that would be dumb. But I wouldn't roll over just because a bully tried to bully me out of my cut.


👤 yding
Talk to a lawyer.

👤 rlucas
A meta-comment here: Beware the advice you might glean here. Often, surveying HN for the consensus provides a signal; more often, skimming the cream of the commentary provides a better signal. Here, a lot will be misleading, particularly to the kind of founder who would otherwise be inclined to seek some direction from HN commentary.

Here's my best try as an antidote:

Remember that as a technical founder, unlike almost any other kind of knowledge-worker, you have a non-zero chance of generating $1 B in equity value for yourself in every new company you start. But for a company to do so, it will require getting enormously lucky and getting you strapped in for years of extremely intense work along with your team (and likely, investors & board). You should never bail because of mere problems with product-market fit or current sales traction, because those things can change dramatically and swiftly. You should always bail if your faith in, and interest in working with, the people around you goes to zero. When you do bail, go graciously and negotiate some kind of spiff on the way out, but don't belabor it. Your mental energy is far, far better spent preparing for the next big thing, and you are getting the better end of the bargain, for you have now denuded yourself of the albatross of a team you won't succeed with.


👤 viztor
Growth from 2k to 60k is an important tipping point.

There should be a buyout at this point. Valuation based on income result in 5k * 12 * 15 * 40% = 360k, which should be a fair price. valuation based on funding would be around 400k, which would be similar.

You can have that written down as a contract, not necessarily direct cash payment, but cash payable, and have your co-founder to sign as guarantor, which would not be a bad price for him, and not a bad price for you too. Deduct the 3% if you want.


👤 nashashmi
Not experienced in this by any means at all, but I still am interested in what are the legal, social, and professional responsibilities here.

Legally, you are entitled even though the market is no longer the same as which you were brought to help in. Professionally you have put in lots of un-tallied TLC. Socially, there seems to be no effort for an amicable resolution.

On the business side it doesn’t make much sense for you to continue with the company if this is not your area of expertise. So you should taper off the position of founder and become a silent investor. Do not budge on percentage. It is your right.

If the other person does not accept this, then the option is to dissolve the company. Keep all assets as is. And license to new entity for royalty or one time debt.

If you want to continue with the company, negotiate a position that is optimized for what you can do. And remain shareholder. And board member.

Either way, assess the true value of the company in terms of current potential revenue, future growth, and future risks. Use that as as premise for negotiation. And set aside a BATNA. A best alternative to negotiated agreement.

Don’t focus on the torch and burn scenario even if the other person insists is a possible outcome.

(All this comes from someone who doesn’t know a single thing about this other than how businesses merge, split, and dissolve.)


👤 epa
If they dont have cash, tell him to issue you a convertible promisory note for $X amount that you think is fair. If the Company does well then they can pay you out or you can convert your stock into shares for cheap. If the company goes under, then you all lose. Lawyers can draft these for cheap, just make sure you put a timeline in there and make it one sided so you can convert at any time with anti-dilution provisions.

👤 godmode2019
Visit a lawyer, this is the point in legal agreements. There is a thing called court that, no one wants to go to courts its time consuming and expensive.

Also talk to the investor, I'm sure they would rather not see their 100k be worth nothing because of a founder breakup.

Don't take any bad offers, you don't have to sell.

On the other hand if you are the one that is worth firing and you know this, do the honourable thing.


👤 hluska
You have some options:

1. Hire the best lawyer you can afford. This is easier said than done because there are relatively few lawyers who are qualified to do this kind of work. The ones who are qualified will be very expensive and unless I’m missing some key details, I don’t think you have much chance of coming out of litigation with a profit. You might come out with a W, but I don’t think it will be worth the cost.

2. Assume that this startup is fucked, leave and keep a good relationship with the seed investor.

3. Assume that this startup is fucked, stall for a month until you actually own stock and then you have some leverage. BUT, depending on where you live, you may/might/likely will incur a tax liability on those shares. If you already assume that the startup is fucked, talk with an accountant to figure out what this strategy will do to your 2020 taxes owing.

4. Assume that the startup is fucked and name the company/your cofounder. It would be damned nice to avoid this toxic piece of shit in the future.

Outside of those options, I don’t see any other good choices.


👤 Foober223
Your co-founder wants to profit from 11 months of your life and leave you in the gutter. 11 months is about 2% of your entire adult working life.

Don't give in to anything. The guy is a crook.

He should have proposed the paltry 3% before you dedicated 11 months of your life on the business.

At the very least he should offer to pay you a market salary for the 11 months you worked. He could take out a loan to pay you.


👤 newbie789
I hope this works out for you! I am not sure how I could contribute much insight without quite a bit more detail, this strikes me as "Should I hire a lawyer?" to which I'd say "yes."

Without knowing how your partner is inclined to act or respond to negotiations, or what your negotiation strategy is and how likely it'll be effective in this dynamic it's all a giant question mark.

Essentially it's like asking a website "How do I win a fistfight?" except unlike actual fistfights, there's an entire profession and industry dedicated to people that can (hopefully) act effectively as your proxy.

If you're genuinely dead-set on not getting a lawyer, then you've got a fistfight scenario on your hands. If that's what you're looking for, make sure that you've taken stock of your capabilities and those of your adversary and form a strategy accordingly. This answer is basically as vague as the question though.


👤 ockco3je
Hold out. Keep working and keep proof you are working and do what is required to keep your stake. Don't give them anything that could be used to justify firing you or the upper hand in any legal battle. Keep any evidence of them violating the contract. Try to get the upper hand in any negotiations. You'll get a better deal at the very least

👤 docflabby
Alternative view, ask if they will consider a unrestricted licence to the IP in lieu of payment rather than any ownership.

👤 tootie
Ask for a fair buyout in the form of an IOU. They can pay it when they have more cash or default when they fold. You've locked them in to sticking with the work that you have done by dint of the SEO juice. If they want to reap the benefits of that, they have to compensate you commensurate to what was agreed.

👤 taylortrusty
Your co-founder likely has no ability to just kick you out. What do the documents you signed say? Is there an operating agreement?

Who brought in the investor? Who has that relationship? If you're friendly with them, you could ask for advice or feedback. Do you have business mentors near you who can help you navigate this?


👤 kovac
This quote might put things in perspective:

"The only rules that really matter are these: what a man can do and what a man can’t do. For instance, you can accept that your father was a pirate and a good man or you can’t. But pirate is in your blood, boy, so you’ll have to square with that some day. And me, for example, I can let you drown, but I can’t bring this ship into Tortuga all by me onesies, savvy? So, can you sail under the command of a pirate, or can you not?" (Jack Sparrow)

So, the question is what these other guys can do vs what you can do. You probably want to keep track of any correspondence regarding this matter in case legal action becomes an option. I hope no sane board will think that facing legal action is worth any cofounder's "wants" and "likes".


👤 jiveturkey
keep 40% of nothing. do not capitulate. you have the upper hand here, and an honorable position.

3% of nothing is nothing also. i’d go with 40%.

it’s absolutely ridiculous because the other founder isn’t prevented from working alone because you hold 40%. the 2 things aren’t connected. so just agree to sell all your shares in the next raise. then it’s his choice: take on debt now to buy you out (cheap) or pay later (expensive). the latter is likely far, far too expensive so more likely you can only sell half your stake in the next round.

EDIT: it has occured to me that you are only 11 months vested. this is a bait and switch. make their lives hell, even after and if you get to keep 10%. he probably can't fire you so you'll just keep vesting. make it very clear you will make it impossible to fundraise unless he buys you out.


👤 lmeyerov
Bad news: If the CEO wants you out, by default, you should leave. It won't work to stay wrt high-pressure collaboration & trust, and is a warning sign against continued growth. Worse, they are likely about to fire you over the equity + performance, and unless you have single-trigger, you get 0 equity. Even if you keep equity after you leave, 40% equity is too much 'dead weight' for professional investors to not pressure them to wipe you out after you leave.

Question is how replaceable are you. (Sadly, most people are.) If the plan is a funding round, they'll need you or a new technical cofounder (they may be replacing you anyway?), they'll need equity to represent that. good news there is they want someone proven or harder to raise. The founder may also be wanting to keep > 50% after funding dilution.

I'd stretch it out 1mo till you got your cliff, so you get your 5% or whatever vested locked in. Then I'd try to figure out why the reln is broken, and if you truly want to stay / can fix it. Negotiation wise, I'd assume you are leaving, and maybe they are playing hardball. Asking for a buyout doesn't work as they are cash poor, and keeping too much equity doesnt bc they can just fire you. they may also decide to wipe you out after you leave by issuing more stock to remove dead weight on cap table.

Maybe: Offer to stay on until you help get a good replacement at 90% efficacy, and keep vesting at high rate, then leave. Say you are good for partial buyouts during the next rounds.

if you have single trigger, you have way more leverage. if a success 10yrs / 1000 employees / $1B from now and you leave now, you'd have contributed little of the ultimate work, and your equity & departure more of a hindrance during fundraising, so leave it w even 5-10% now is fairish.

edit: I would discuss w a startup lawyer. if you break the reln now w money still in trust of the untrustworthy ceo, like equity to sell at next rounds, you may want extra protections on it, like conversion dates to something more liquid.


👤 rsweeney21
A lot of people saying you own 40% of this startup so you need to fight for it are giving you bad advice. Based on what you said, you don't own anything yet because you haven't vested any shares.

If you are a Corporation, and your corporation is setup in a standard way with your partner as the CEO, he can fire you. They only thing you can do is go to your board of directors and plead your case. The board has the ability to fire the CEO, so they can force him to retain you.

If you are an LLC, then you don't really have a cap table and there is a good chance there is no vesting. You have something else. You need to read your operating agreement. It will define who has the real ownership and how the buy out process works.


👤 mawise
Disclosure, I have no specialized knowledge or experience.

I wonder if he's already worked a deal with the investor? If he's offering the investor half of your stake to push you out (for example), you might be able to turn the tables and offer the investor 3/4 of his stake (or all of it) to push him out. This depends on your ability to have a frank conversation with the investor and their faith that you can continue to drive the company. If that's the case it also means the investor is probably toxic which doesn't bode well for the future relationship but it might at least prevent your co-founder from getting away with this.


👤 andy_ppp
Set up a meeting with the investor Andy UT partner and say you want to be as transparent as possible. Explain the situation and suggest to the investor that you and the Cofounder need to find a way of working together, otherwise one of you is going to have to leave with 40% of the company. This is a great example of where vesting for founders sorts all of this out clearly and makes it more difficult to get greedy. Of course this makes some assumptions about the legal agreements you have with the company. Do these agreements allow cofounders to be sacked usually, because I’m sure as hell writing into any I sign that I can’t be!

👤 tubularhells
Just don't sell then. What they gonna do, they are bound contractually.

If they try something fishy like getting toxic, abusive, etc and still doesn't want to buy out, I'd just blow the server on them, which, along with the entire code base, had no working backups uNfOrTuNaTeLy, then spin up a company two months down the line under a shell company that is registered via lawyers and doesn't have your name on the public papers.


👤 pbiggar
This is a delicate and nuanced matter that's hard to know the right answer without all the details. I've gone through this 4 times, and also recently talked to 20 people who went through it, specifically about this topic. Feel free to email me and we can have a call and talk you through the options (paul.biggar@gmail.com)

First thought: You don't have 40%, you have at most (11 months / 48 months vesting) * 40% = 9%. But, at 11 months you haven't hit your cliff, so you actually have 0%. That is, if they can fire you. It sounds like they're the CEO so they probably can, but if not the board can.


👤 kotxig
"Take the 3% otherwise you'll own 40% of nothing"

I would call the bluff. It doesn't look like you have many options to exit with a cash settlement unless you're allowed to sell your own equity. I wouldn't take 3%, 15% minimum.

Have you talked to your investors? They might be able to provide some guidance. It's possible that they know nothing or they are responsible for the move, so you need to figure out where they stand. I would personally be looking to kick the CEO out with support from the investors. See how the CEO behaves when the shoe is on the other foot.


👤 bodegajed
I'd say take the 3% and continue. Current price has little or no value anyway. If you take 3% and just chill for 2 years you get a higher price per share. Don't let the emotions run over you right now

👤 Dumblydorr
Negotiate up to 6%, get feedback, stay polite, then on to the next venture. If they're acting this way, I don't think the co-founder is worth the massive risk you'd be wasting another few months.

👤 rutthenut
Definitely do not sell / give away that shareholding. It may well become 40$ of nothing, but it could also become 3% of nothing or almost-nothing, and the co-founder will have been paying himself a return when the company gets revenue.

I suspect there may be other personal/personality issues here and he may well like the idea of hacking alone on this, now that it appears to be viable. However, he has an agreement with you, and you made commitment, put in effort too. That's why you have a shareholding.

Do not just give that up, unless he makes it worth your while 'now'.


👤 avemuri
Speak with the other investor, negotiate a buyout or negotiate exit terms and equity. I'm guessing you'd own 10% if you left after one year and left the rest unvested. You may need to risk a small chance of owning 40% of nothing to get this fair settlement. It's worth it.

The worst thing you can do is stay. Any compromises you make for the greater good in hopes of getting past this and putting it behind you are likely to come back to bite you 9 out of 10 times. Cofounder conflict doesn't go away so easily.


👤 talkingtab
Don't agree to anything. That is all you have to do. When the company tries to raise money later, they will be asked about any other people who have an interest. At that point your company will need to address your issues and they will have money/incentive to do it. You don't need to be mean spirited, just say "Okay, I have my 40% and let me know if in the future you want to buy me out." And be fair.

Don't walk away, don't sign anything that isn't fair to you, don't be mad, just be patient.


👤 asah
Sorry, that sucks.

Every situation is unique and I'm sure there's more to this, so I wouldn't seek or accept legal advice from HN (including me).

DM if you want a referral to a veteran silicon valley executive compensation attorney. That's the pro move, it's less expensive than you might think and results in a lot more long term happiness for all parties involved.

(I'm a veteran engineer myself and between myself and friends, lots of experience in these sorts of matters)


👤 jacquesm
Talk to (1) a lawyer, and (2) the $100K investor. Because when capitalized that loan will quite probably tip the scales as long as they agree with you to a > 50% stake in the company.

👤 wakeywakeywakey
What do your corporate agreement and bylaws say? They may be in violation of your stated roles/responsibilities, or in breach of fiduciary duty.

Get a lawyer right away. Keep records of everything.


👤 e40
If he owns > 50% he can dilute you to whatever he wants. But, if he owns less than 50%, then he'd need to get voting control to do it. Is that possible? Do you own enough to prevent it? If so, I'd just tell him you're not interested.

If he controls the Board, then he can do pretty much anything. He can create more shares and give them to himself (that would possibly create tax issues, so he might not want to do that).

Also, I'm curious how the stock is valued. Do you know that?


👤 MartianSquirrel
Genuine question: Have you considered buying out your co-founder instead? You seem to have a general undestanding of the figures you can make through advertisement. I'd suggest doing more research on that, maybe meeting with a consulting/advisor CFO who could help you make a case for it. Then you could go for a loan to buy your co-founder out, or meet with the investors to have him removed/replaced with someone who's gonna put the business first.

👤 rmk
Is it possible the investor is in cahoots with your cofounder? If so, then you may not have a strong position. Are you sure your cofounder is not screwing you over at the investor's behest? If it's not something that's (technically) complicated, your cofounder may be thinking of hiring in help to replace whatever value you are providing (i.e., you are fungible, he's not).

👤 mtnGoat
some advice i got years ago that has proven its value time and time again... when dealing with ____heads, you gotta be a ____head too.

if your co-founder wants to take something from you without compensation, do not go lightly.

for no other reason, IMO, than to teach the other party a lesson. if he does this to you it will embolden him to do it to others. greedy people need to be stopped in their tracks.


👤 markhelo
What about the third option which is you building 100% of a competitor who knows how everything works and can compete effectively?

👤 staticman2
Almost all the advise here is bad. Without legal review of what you signed how can anyone know what your negotiating position is?

👤 CodeWriter23
Have you read your partnership agreement? Are there duties assigned to each partner? If so, let him play his “40% of nothing card” right into breach of contract then sue for ownership of his shares and then hire someone to do what he refused to do. But probably, speak to a lawyer. You do need to respond to this offer in writing, even if rejecting it.

👤 HelloNurse
If you have more available capital than your co-founder, can you put enough financial pressure on them (e.g. ask someone to collect their credits and loans) and/or on the company (e.g. seek out investments and expense opportunities to spend money on urgently) to buy them out in a few weeks or months?

👤 simonswords82
You need to ask for lots of advice but ultimately you need to make your own mind up about the situation.

This is a hot potato, everyone is going to have an opinion. So for this reason you need to make your mind up.

Source: this thread - there's some very strong opinions here. Get some 121 advice instead, this thread is just guidance only.


👤 newbie578
Definitely first talk to a lawyer, and take each comment in this thread (including mine :)) with a grain of salt.

A lot of us have zero idea about your situation and we are speaking from the gut. That said, fuck that cofounder, I would rather burn it to the ground than let him get his way and regret it for the rest of my life.


👤 anm89
If you are at your cliff you might want to buy time saying you will take a bad deal but need to run it past lawyers or whatever to make it past the cliff. Then you can have a change of heart after they can't take it by force.

Also this goes to show why you should not take a cliff if you see yourself as a founder.


👤 piyushpr134
Tell him that you would sue if you are forced into any decision. You have built this with your sweat and blood. Do not give up. If anyone has to leave, he should. Go to investors and tell them you would sue if forced into this kind of blackmail. And no empty threats. Please lawyer up

👤 sixty4bit
One idea would be to buy out the investor. I read in one of the comments that you do have some cash to spend. If you can work out a reasonable deal with the investor you would no longer have a neutral party doing nothing, you'd own 50%, and be able to set the terms.

👤 bredren
Just propose something you can largely feel comfortable with, but also gives the other founder strong incentive to continue, and won’t hurt future raises.

If necessary add hooks into revenue and a framework for a future buy out.

But def don’t waste time around someone who doesn’t want to work with you.


👤 jsonGobbler
Do not sell. He’s trying to push you out since it’s primed to blow up. If it becomes 40%of nothing let me know and I’ll build it with you. I’m a full stack entrepreneur who can sell and build. The only real threat that I’ve seen brought up is if he can fire you.

👤 barefeg
Why does your partner not want to continue working with you? Are your views on how to continue opposite? I understand how you see this as unfair but it also doesn’t make sense if he/she builds the product alone and owe you 40% for 12 months of work

👤 stanrivers
My assumption is that the co-founder would need the investors to vote to fire you? As in, he can't do so himself? So is his threat that he will leave if you don't leave?

If he leaves, can you run it yourself and do you want to do that? My guess is that you would have to bring in someone to do whatever the co-founder was doing.

Your equity ownership is worth something if you have 60k users. You have a subset of them paying something already it sounds like. This is a great thing, if you enjoy it and believe in it. If that is correct, then if your partner has a problem, and you think he is replaceable, then you don't seem to have to do anything related to his demands.

I think this is also a good lesson in needing to have a really good relationship with the investors as well. If it is correct that they are the swing vote on decisions, you want them to appreciate you, know you well and understand the value you add.


👤 tschellenbach
I'm not a lawyer, but depending on where you live it might take more than 1 month for them to actually succeed at firing your. For instance if you live in The Netherlands it would take months to arrange that if you don't agree.

👤 mattmaroon
You need to talk to a lawyer, not a bunch of internet randos. Ignore literally everything else you read here. The lawyer is going to need to see your contract with the company and look at applicable case law to advise you here.

👤 wdb
Hard to give advise as you don’t specify which lawsapplies. Could California, US, or any country were the $ is the currency. Could even be based in US but other countries laws apply I have had that kind of mess in the past

👤 thelastwave
This is a fight you don't want to back away from or you will likely regret it for the rest of your life.

But don't fight, let the investor see the other guy as a "fighter" while you stay focused on the company fundamentals.


👤 tkay2617
Can you wait for another month, get your 10% and part ways with that business? That seems a fair and reasonable compensation for 1 year of work. I'd insist on a contract that would protect your share from dilution.

👤 jonfromsf
Slow play to your cliff. Then offer to accept your current vested equity, and let them negotiate you down a small discount on that. Like you will own 10% of the company, be OK with going down to 8% or whatever.

👤 nolite
Keep 40% of nothing, and tell him to fuck off for trying to strong arm you

👤 cultus
This is a bait and switch. Talk to a lawyer. Wow, just absolutely scummy.

👤 teabee89
Is there a legal framework that allows company to convert OP's shares into debt to OP and essentially by the debt for $0? The debt would only have to be paid if certain conditions are met.

👤 jsonGobbler
It sounds like he’s trying to push you out before it blows up. Don’t sell. If you end up with 40% of nothing hit me up. I’m a full stack entrepreneur who can build and sell.

👤 jmkd
Could you privately find a potential buyer for your 40%? Then tease that info and magically they may prefer to buy you out and suddenly find a way to do so...

👤 samfisher83
Everyone here is saying hire a lawyer. If OP actually has to go into litigation, It seems the cost of a good lawyer > value of the company.

👤 Grustaf
If you insist on keeping your share and they shut the company down, I suppose they also wouldn’t be able to stop you from copying the idea?

👤 23david
Are you the CEO? And does your vesting agreement have any provision for accelerated vesting if your employment is terminated without cause?

👤 gogopuppygogo
Sounds like you are in a good position. This is not legal advice so go seek your own licensed legal counsel.

If they don’t pay you the equity then they would not own your tech. Any revenue/profit they derive would be unjust enrichment.

Not to say that I’d even leave them with working tech. I’d disable everything I built today until we had a more equitable agreement.

No chance I’d let them profit from this tech alone anymore. At best I’d offer them a license to use it.

Then go start your own company with it and be the majority owner.

No need for the bad business partner.


👤 danielovichdk
This is not sound advice nor is it mentally sober. But this is what i came to conclude.

I once had a partner where we had a good business. After some years he fucked me.

What matter to me is personal values and virtue, and even though he took a shortcut, i am going to catch him one day and make him understand tht history will catch up and he will be sorry he ever fucked me.

I am not in a hurry. The longer time goes by, the more i am looking forward to the encounter.

Money is not just money. It's also about being cool and having a good heart.

Fuck em


👤 tus88
> What are my options here?

Maybe you should be asking, what are their options? They can't force you to give away something you own.


👤 jariel
This is a terrible situation because you're probably working with a really terrible founder.

Even if you end up holding on to the 40%, it's likely they'll try to screw you hard in the future so be wary of that.

If it's possible in the very, very nicest of indirect terms make sure they know they can get sued for these kind of shenanigans and it will ruin the company.

Long term though, it's hard to say, because they'll aggressively want to take everything.

Also: get a lawyer. (I should have said that first)


👤 f6v
Don't give anything away, worth case - you've lost 11 month. People have been working for nothing longer than that.

👤 adamsea
IANAL or a founder but it seems to me the #1 thing to do is hire a good lawyer and listen to their advice.

👤 kesor
You can keep holding the stock and every couple of months demand a dividend payout from the company revenue.

👤 piyushpr134
Stay on and fight. If anyone has to walk away it is the other guy. Believe me. Lawyer up and fight it out

👤 noworld
Can you sell your stake to another outside investor, and let that investor deal with the co-founder?

👤 billylindeman
Maybe you could make a buyout proposal in the form of a promissory note at a price you deem fair?

👤 danielrhodes
Equity is property. The company must pay you to buy back the shares you have vested.

👤 friedman23
You own 40% of the company, tell him to sod off it's as much yours as it is his

👤 stockholm
Maybe start a competing business with the same idea and take 100% of the equity.

👤 mbrodersen
You don’t have to do anything. What you own is what you own.

👤 underseacables
Sell nothing. Do you want to leave? It doesn’t seem like you want to leave.

👤 kevinstubbs
@fortydegrees, if you would make $5k/mo with Adsense, then you can make $10-40k/mo if you worked with my company instead.

I'm not sure if that helps your leverage with equity negotiations or raising external money, but it will definitely help your bank accounts.

My link's in profile.


👤 kfrncs
Sounds like you need legal advice from an experienced business lawyer.

👤 wolco2
Use your time to find his weakness and leverage your way out of this.

👤 dadrian
I have gone through something very similar, feel free to email me.

👤 s1artibartfast
Can you expand on why they want you out and what happens if you stay?

👤 dwt204
They are bluffing. Keep negotiating until you get what you want.

👤 hsuduebc
This is sick. Wishing you good luck and even better lawyer.

👤 jimboyoungblood
Walk away and start a new company that does the same thing.

👤 LarvaFX
"Work on it yourself; I'm keeping my equity".

👤 jl87
If the other person is smart they will:

Get your shares for free or cheap

or

Start over and own the entire thing


👤 meddlin
I'm just a country-bumkin managing to build and secure software, but uh...someone wants to push me around without having the money to do so? Let 'em, my kind are stubborn anyway.

Then again, maybe I just enjoy fire a bit much.


👤 mewpmewp2
Why does your co-founder want you to leave?

👤 fallingfrog
Call his bluff. He’s trying to cheat you.

👤 icedchai
Have you been paid anything for your work?

👤 danbmil99
Who is on the board, and who is the CEO?

👤 d33lio
Walk away or get a lawyer.

👤 rurban
Watch the movie "Startup.com", exactly the same problem.

https://youtu.be/ibuiUXOTE4M

Those guys really think they can get away with everything, but you really need to be prepared for sociopaths.


👤 atian
Name and shame.

👤 durwood
get a fucking lawyer

👤 weeboid
Seriously? If you are asking these questions, your understanding of the binding contracts belies the casual verbiage in your post. So which one is it?