One of those (one of the first to join) has been an issue for quite a while. Lots of time off, low effort at work, minimal hours. Felt like squeezing water out of a stone to get a result from them.
Recently, their behavior has gotten worse despite feedback. Taking off without informing team. Found out a lot of past work was plain wrong.
They vest in a few weeks. I don't want to have them on the team anymore, I'm done trying and this employee is negatively affecting me and the company.
Should I let them vest then let them go, or just let them go? Feedback from former founders esp is helpful. Any downsides to having them on the cap table?
Typically, vesting cliffs are designed to give some breathing room for new hires. If they turn out to be terrible, you can part ways with them without impacting your cap table. If this person had long term performance issues, it's kind of shitty to wait until just before they vest.
I don't know what your company's situation is, but this likely doesn't have to be an "all vesting" or "no vesting" situation. By default, it sounds like you can terminate this employee and provide "no vesting". You can make it clear that you'll be offering them some/most/all of their anticipated vested stock despite you terminating their employment prior to the vesting cliff. This lets you terminate the relationship right now while saving face with the rest of the team.
The reality is, you should have fired this person months ago. You didn’t, for whatever reason, and that’s ultimately on you as the founder. That is your fault. Punishing someone who took a risk of joining your team early, even if you’re unhappy with their performance, by cutting their vest seems ridiculously petty and to me, is a sign of a bad manager.
Given the nature of startup options, it is likely the vest amount both won’t be substantial in the long run (if your company succeeds, you’ll raise further rounds that dilute early employee options) or, candidly, that none of this will matter at all because there will be nothing to vest.
This isn’t a co-founder. This is one of your first hires. You made a bad one. It happens. The time to fire pre-vesting was months ago. Taking away the vest mere weeks before it happens is something you would never do to an executive on your team if you were more established. Why would you do it for someone you made the poor decision of not just hiring, but keeping around long after it was clear their hiring was a mistake?
Pay it out. It’s a small thing in the grand scheme of things and hopefully can be a lesson to fire faster in the future when you bring on the wrong people.
If you terminate shortly before vesting:
1. You face the prospect of an expensive and distracting wrongful termination suit.
2. You're sending a blindingly obvious signal to all other employees, and potential employees, that you can, will, and have terminated employees immediately before vesting. That may well prove ruinous if you find yourself unable to hire and/or retain talent.
Let the vest happen. Whether you separate from the employee before or after is your call, though if you've made that determination, do so.
PIPs are fugly as hell for all involved but exist for a reason. You should probably look into setting that up as a process.
Fix your recruitment, training, and monitoring processes.
Knowing what I know now, and having been a manager who's had to fire people, I wouldn't have hired me in the first place. What they needed was a senior engineer, what they got was a n00b with a heart of gold who couldn't handle medium to large projects. Wrong expectations on both ends. My manager was also brand new to management at the time so he flubbed this part too, I don't fault him for it because I made basically the same mistake when I first became a manager at a fast growing startup too.
That being said, you can't change the past, here's a few tips:
1. Put the business first. It sounds cold, but that's the reality. In my example I was a super early employee with a crazy large equity chunk. Looking back, it made zero sense to give me that much equity considering my skill level and what the market was for compensation at the time. I had a larger equity chunk there 10 years ago than when I joined to manage the entire engineering team at another company.
2. You can soften the blow with a nice severance package instead of equity if it makes you feel better. Three months severance ain't a bad consolation prize in the startup lottery game.
3. It may be a bad look to the rest of the team if they seemed like they were contributing, but by the sounds of it they were generally a low performer anyways. In my experience, letting go of low performers doesn't cause morale to go down.
In the future, nip performance issues in the bud as quickly as possible. Especially at early stage startups. Putting someone on a 4-6 week PIP as early as possible makes things _a lot_ easier on both sides.
Something like:
* Last day of work is today, all building and system access is revoked.
* Remain employed, on the payroll, full benefits, etc until after vesting (30, 60, etc days).
* Subject to signing an agreement around non-disparagement of the company, not poaching employees, etc, whatever else.
These kinds of things are typical for layoff situations. Trying terminate prior to vesting seems unnecessarily punitive, but you can still get them out of the building immediately.
Unfortunately, engineering is more .1x engineers than 10x engineers.
Leadership demands you make hard decisions early, with sometimes only 60% certainty, but firing needs to be done as fast as possible for the sake of the team and product. It can be really hard, I've only had to do a few times and each time it was never easy.
Its totally reasonable to want someone who you think is better going forward, but to be as callous as to play politics on something you have used as a motivator is manipulative, contemptible, and a further sign of weak leadership.
Don't delay the decision - You've had performance conversations with them already, so this won't come as a surprise.
Tell them they're on leave immediately, and then pay them whatever they're owed in terms of leave, set their effective termination date for just after their vesting date.
Talk to the team, explain that it didn't work out, but that you're not the kind of founding team who will screw someone out of their equity weeks or months before their cliff.
The team will respect you doubly : For getting the under-performer out of their team, and for treating them fairly. This may sting a bit, it's your company and you're killing yourself to try and make it worth something.
Consider that the cost of learning how to be a better boss and not having made the hard decision earlier.
If you go the other way, you risk killing your velocity and losing the people you need.
So after thinking about this for a while, it occurs to me that you might actually have an employee who has a problem with the other employees.
Normally, giving/getting feedback (in my opinion) means that they care enough to actually perform to some extent.
But if they are taking off without informing the other employees... that tells me they don't respect those other employees for some reason. It could be that this employee is just a jerk; but it can also be that the other employees are the jerks. I know that may seem a stretch, but I've run into it before myself, where the other employees were doing all sorts of things wrong, and were risking getting customers sick/hurt. So of course I did the right thing, and did my job, which is make sure that sort of thing isn't happening.
The result? They all complain to the boss, claim my work is below standards, and get me fired.
I wonder if this is the case for your problem employee as well, because you say it 'felt like squeezing water from a stone'.
I can totally be like that in the eyes of some at times, especially when I am verifiably correct about something. And guess what the group thinking mobs tend to hate the most? Yup, people like me who don't budge for nimrods.
So I wonder if things go worse because of the others recognizing they weren't getting their way and so they are now making things worse for that employee. I know that if it were me, I would certainly start to give a lot less fucks about a lot of things, especially if the boss is taking the wrong side of things.
So ask yourself this.
Are you being fooled by fools?
I would grant them the equity. It's on you for not firing them earlier - don't make them pay for that mistake.
If you don't people will gossip and hurt employee moral.
As for effect on cap table, theres no issues with a former employee having some common shares. If you raise money it will likely be in the form of preferred shares.
Find a better way to indentify under performers earlier so it doesn't drag out to this point
Being generous and parting on good terms is desirable, even when they suck. Even moreso on a small team.
95% of startup shares are pointless funny money. The remaining 5% that turn into something only really make wealth for the founders and the VCs. Having been through acquisition a couple times and seen how it shakes out for individual contributors -- most employees could make more money in a year or two of regular FAANG compensation.
I know those shares look super important to the founders, and founders need to believe in their business to stay motivated. But the share agreements for startups these days rarely provide more than a small fraction of a percent to an employee, and even fairly generous exits lead to "helps with downpayment for house" level money, not "retire in the south of France" or "go start my own startup now" level money. https://www.tldroptions.io/ is informative here.
Those of us who are working in startups as employees don't do so on the hope of getting rich -- we do so because the work is sometimes interesting. In competitive job markets, founders need to keep this in mind. For non-junior employees -- or anybody who has been around the block -- the equity is rarely the thing keeping them there. The work environment and project is.
All this to say, focusing on the vesting seems silly. Those shares are likely useless and not worth getting stressed about. Unless this person was offered a substantial equity stake, it's the wrong thing to focus on.
Fix your performance management process and move on. Playing games with the equity now is only going to make you look petty.
The real issue here is that this wasn't properly addressed by the company when it was a going concern. Now there's a "reason" to do it, the vesting event, you are attempting to fit a round peg in a square hole with this type of rationalization. And thus, you then find yourself questioning it and putting it up for public consideration.
It would be expected that a person's behavior will "double down" when they get closer to vesting. They can "be themselves" the closer the event comes. That said, they also "stuck and stayed" at the company through all this.
The best thing is to not discuss this further and do the right thing even though it's difficult. You've already made up your mind to let them go. What can also help is to let go of the blame you've applied to them over the years and give them what they have earned by staying: their stock in the company.
Since that employee being around is an ongoing net loss for the company, you could consider quietly sending them off to garden leave to end on the day after vesting, conditional on signing a severance agreement that's favorable to you (do not disparage, do not solicit etc.)
On the other hand, in some jurisdictions firing an employee a short time before a benefit is due may actually be legally hazardous.
Under the normal employee grant conditions - specifically waiving off power of attorney for governance - there shouldn't be that much that person can do to harm you. (They still might have access to shareholder reports FWIW). If they care about vesting, probably they have at least some interest in the company's success.
A final angle is the optics towards other employees - even if they don't like the person in question, you probably want to appear reasonable - which includes making an effort to part amicably.
So the takeaway here is - consult a lawyer and try to work a quiet solution so that everybody can go back to building that startup you care about so much.
What I'd do - if this person has been underperforming under bad faith, and you have this well documented, I'd move to terminate right away - vesting or no vesting. If that means they don't get to vest, too bad. Don't be scared of lawsuits - yes it will be unproductive if a lawsuit pops up, but if you've been following the law, and you've been following your contract, and you have been direct about the under-performance, the law will be on your side.
When someone is allowed to operate in a team in bad faith, it also severely demotivates the people who perform well. And when this person is allowed to derive a benefit which they don't deserve, it is unfair to those who are putting in their time. And this employee knows that there is a 1-year cliff with vesting; the whole point of that cliff is to weed out such employees.
If they have been underperforming for personal reasons, or because they're not best fit for the job, or if they have benefited you at some early stage, perhaps with fundraising, initial prototypes etc, and then lost momentum, then some amount of empathy is justified, and you can apply that at your discretion. In this case, I'd immediately send this person on garden leave, and terminate past your vesting date, since that's so close.
As to whether there are any downsides on having them in the cap table - it depends on how much equity they hold, assuming that's very small, then no.
Rewarding an incompetent shirker is financially foolish and sets a tone for everybody else in the company. If the employee is as bad as you say he is, everybody that works with him would know that and fully understand why he was sacked.
They put a year of their life into making you rich. I would part ways amicably and be generous.
If you IPO, none of this will matter either way. So if you fire them early, it’s a needless risk.
Of course I could be completely wrong.
Out of curiosity what counts as lots of time off and minimal hours?
I read this and am glad to live somewhere with legislation covering working hours, rights around leave and around being fired.
You’re treating it like they’re a machine who is starting to break down and needs to be replaced. This is a shameful post for a founder.
> Should I let them vest then let them go, or just let them go? Feedback from former founders esp is helpful. Any downsides to having them on the cap table?
IMO the time to fire an employee is as soon as you have decided that you need to fire them. That's all there is to it barring an extreme circumstance, but in this case it's clear cut - you gave them plenty of time, warning, etc. It has gotten worse.
As for your cap table, I doubt there are serious implications to having them on it, assuming they're just typical common stock options and not very many. That said, the first time I fired someone I got on a call with my lawyers to make sure everything was ironed out - I suggest you do the same.
Firing people really really sucks. It's maybe the worst part of the job? Not sure. But ultimately that's what you sign up for when you start a company. It's not fair to anyone else on the team to keep someone around who you know needs to go ASAP.
I see a lot of posts saying that your other employees will feel negatively. That's not my experience at all. If this is a justified firing they probably already think it should have happened and they will totally understand why you had to do it. Explain to them that there was ample notice, you set a timeline for improvement, you saw things get worse, and so you took action.
edit: I will add that:
a) It's your company, you ultimately make the calls on how these situations are handled
b) You're going to have the most context. No one else has the same view of how the company is structured, how people will react, etc. Use your best judgment.
If it's the entire team then get rid of them asap, after checking corresponding labour laws. Imagine you work hard and someone's smooching off your hard work, then they get paid the same to boot! That shit negatively affects everyone.
> Taking off without informing team
You tolerate such a behavior if you let him vest and show weakness. Maybe the guy did worse things, talked behind your back and what not. Maybe there are more people who would appreciate his lay off and then, wonder why he still got the vesting. Letting him vest might make you the nice guy with an easy company to work with but could also frame you as the dumb, weak CEO who doesn't dare or can't make tough decisions. It's a thin line.
Not an easy decision and the majority goes for the easy way but there must be a better solution. Despite of a lot of good advice in this thread, I wonder how many in this thread are founders/employers vs employees.
Vesting is compensation unlocked after a period of time. It is _meant_ to keep people _engaged_. You shouldn't feel bad for having to terminate someone two weeks before vesting, or 1 month before vesting, or 6 months before. No more than you should feel bad for having to stop paying someone that you fired.
Do you have _facts_, undebatable ones, demonstrating that the person is below expectations? Do other team members share the same point of view? Do you have feedback from others, pointing out that this person wasn't pulling its part? Did you share that with the person? Did you share these elements, did the person acknowledged that there was missed expectations? Did you agree on concrete goals to progress and meet expectations? Did you guide that person on this, for like 2~3 months?
If you answered YES to all these questions, but the person is still failing, then let that person go. You've made your job. Whether they are vesting tomorrow or in 6 months or in a year, is _a detail_. They have been failing to meet the bar, you've told them, you explained them how to reach it, you guided them for some time, and they are still failing.
If you didn't, then start right away.
Put vesting in parenthesis. That is not the topic at hand. The topic is meeting expectations or not.
Now you're going to make this even worse by not letting them vest? You're making mistake after mistake. You're going to look like an asshole in front of the other employees and they won't forget that because you could turn around and do it to them.
The question is not whether to fire, but how to manage this person, whether present or former employee/founder.
As a founder, you're creating something with at least as many dimensions and perspectives as you have stakeholders -- not a graphic but a sculpture. Worse, as the founder/creator you actually can't see things from stakeholders' perspectives, because you don't have their concerns or knowledge gaps or insights. Even worse, you're building a live thing: you start something and it keeps going, becomes precedent or expectation or concern. So it's a multi-dimensional seed.
To avoid getting lost in situations like this, get in the habit of putting on everyone's hat for a minute, and then think about the dynamics, and then ask what's the distinguishing feature of this situation. (Ideally you develop a team doing the same thinking, and then they can do this without you as the business grows.)
Other commenters have mentioned some of the perspectives, particularly about people's sense of fairness. But I think the distinguishing factor here is the safety of closeness with deciders.
If you as the decider fire this person for not putting out, and then it comes out they were struggling with something they couldn't share (e.g., an addicted spouse or sibling?), aside from piling havoc on horror, you look like you don't understand those working closely with you and don't appreciate their (earlier) sacrifice.
You want people to tell you the truth -- about their situation, the business, and you as a person. If you don't know, that's your problem. You don't have to agree with them, or even understand how it all fits together, but you should know.
So, all thing considered, in this case I would recommend doing something that will ensure observers will be more inclined to come to you with the truth, not less.
Sooner, softer, smoother...
A harsh firing process can actually even improve trust into management/leadership.
Poor performance especially in smaller companies is often very noticeable to coworkers and firing people for not performing at all can signal that management is willing to follow through with hard decisions for the good of the company (and that IS important to employees!)
If there is consensus in your team that your disappointing employee is useless, than firing him on the spot might be the best thing you can do to increase trust in leadership (but this is a hard decision and a lot more context would be needed to judge).
I don’t know the compensation details and I’m not trying to be mean, but if you’re an early stage startup, odds are the options are worth negative dollars (zero minus strike price). It may be insulting to say, “we graciously kept you on so you’d have a chance to buy into the startup that’s firing you.”
What’s chiefly on my mind is that I think you shouldn’t unilaterally decide what’s best for them. Maybe they don’t want your stock and would have preferred you just be honest and prompt.
My other consideration would be on whether or not I've actually let this employee know that there was a problem.
Did they know they were on the edge of being fired? Did they know their performance wasn't up to expectations?
And I mean, were they explicitly told these things? Are these things documented?
Because if the team doesn't like him and you have multiple documented instances where you told him his performance wasn't adequate and his job was in jeopardy then do you could fire him 5 seconds after you read this message. In that case was given every chance and threw them away.
But if you've just been mostly silently stewing about this and giving passive aggressive hints that he needs to step up, with your only note being "I need this now". Or if the team thinks he's pulling his weight and that what's being asked of him is too much, then you should let him vest. Because in that case, you're the one who made the mistakes.
Basically, determine who made the mistake to let it get to this point. And that should tell you whether or not to let him vest.
I'm willing to bet it's more latter than former considering you're here asking for advice rather than printing out all of your documentation to show him why you're firing him.
You're firing him, you're not letting him go.
> They vest in a few weeks
Who? Who vests? "They"? Talk straight dude.
> Feedback from former founders esp is helpful
I'm a current founder. You just fire the guy. What are we talking about, it's your company! You don't have to give him any shares. Even if he had vested!
Do you know how any of this works? You're talking so limp right now. It's all flexible. It is all subject to change. Every deal, everything you put in writing.
To quote another user:
> I would grant them the equity. It's on you for not firing them earlier - don't make them pay for that mistake.
This is the limpest shit I've ever heard. What the fuck are these people even talking about? The cliff exists for this very reason. The purpose is to let you spend your sweet time to fire someone, which you did. Okay, and now you don't have to give the shares.
You're in charge.
Another commenter:
> Rewarding an incompetent shirker is financially foolish and sets a tone for everybody else in the company. If the employee is as bad as you say he is, everybody that works with him would know that and fully understand why he was sacked.
This is the only outcome that makes sense. Just tell everyone that you fired this guy and did not give him the shares. End of story. If he sucks as much as you say, people will be relieved to hear you didn't give this fuck shares for nothing.
You have a specific vest date for a reason.
If you wait to get rid of that employee just because they have equity vesting in a few weeks, it means that the vest is not on "day X", but on "day X - a few weeks". But that's not what the vesting schedule says.
The only logical decision is that whether or not they are vesting soon does not matter, what matters is you want to fire them now, so do it.
I understand that there is a supposed moral aspect to it as well, and that's probably why you asked online. Once again the decision is easy, do you want to fire them today because they are not performing, or do you want to fire them today because they have their vest in a few weeks?
For me the fact that you are even exploring the possibility to keep them onboard a few more weeks means it's the first situation, so I see no wrong there.
Lastly, some comments are predicting doom for your startup due to the bad reputation this would cause, including journalists knocking at your door and customers setting up a guillotine outside of your door, but this is all BS and isn't going to happen. Even your other employees will probably not know about this vesting schedule "problem".
Equity based compensation is a bargain between you and an employee that they forgo immediate salary and supplement your cashflow in agreement to be repaid for that at a later date. Anything less than that means you're displaying that you don't respect agreed bargain on behalf of all your employees. You also burn a bridge forever of someone that was there at the beginning. You lose an investor, but gain a permanent detractor. I'd strongly consider never joining your company if it was known you'd done this to an employee, so you need to fix that in your favor (by either vesting or paying the employee).
You may find this is acceptable to the employee as a way to save face and leave a job that they're either not enjoying, is past the point where they care about, or even where there are concerns that you are unaware of that are causing this behavior (health, relationship, life etc).
I think you should completely disregard the vesting in your decision-making. I'm guessing you've not developed a performance management process in your business yet. You've highlighted that you gave feedback, however I'm not sure if you've set out a process by which they stay or go.
This isn't the end of the world, you can do this process now:
1. Give feedback on the behaviour (you've already done this)
2. Escalate the feedback to a written warning, highlight what you want to see change and when by
3. Once that date passes, if the change hasn't occurred, let them go
This process doesn't need to take very long: it should depend on expected timeline to make these kinds of changes. If these are behavioural issues, then 2-4 weeks should be sufficient.
Assuming the person doesn't change, you'll let them go. This will be a shock to your other employees, so call a meeting with everyone afterwards. Make it clear (without going deep into the details) that this was a performance-related sacking. Highlight the fact you gave feedback, with clear and actionable steps to improve, but the situation didn't work out.
If this seems onerous consider it this way: you're not doing this for the team member you're letting go. You're doing it for the rest of the team. You want to reassure them that you're not just looking to screw the team out of vested shares and that, if you haven't discussed performance issues with them, there's nothing for them to worry about.
From my experience this was always due to low pay and to a lesser extent bad management. When workers couldn't find anything better they focused on side gigs to top up their wages or giving a shot at their own projects hoping to launch their own business, so they were not fully focused on anything.
How long of a period was the vesting cliff?
When did their work start having issues?
When did you first talk to the about it?
When did it get to the point they weren’t doing their job?
If they were still doing their job (even to a minimum standard) by the 2/3rds point, I’d let it slide.
Keep in mind as a the boss you should have been on this from day 1. If you do fire them it shouldn’t be a surprise. If it will be, then let them vest.
On a purely mechanics level I am somewhat confused: If the setup is such, that firing the employee can lead to cutting them out of the vesting at this stage, then that's because it has explicitly been built into the vesting mechanism. If that is not an option that you are actually willing to exercise, or if the employee is not okay with this being used as mechanism against them, why was this contract set up and signed by both parties?
If there's no good answer to that, revising the system in a way that everyone involved feels actually okay with seems like a good next step. Since I am not all that deep into vesting mechanisms, I am happy to learn why this is might be a dilemma situation that has no generally acceptable solution.
If the full term is 2 years, pay him 23/24 and let him go.
Focusing on the vesting issue is secondary to the fact that this employee should have been fired a while ago. Risking giving up a little equity is unlikely to be existentially risky but keeping distracted unmotivated and incompetent employees around definitely is.
Additionally, if asked by friends in the industry why I left, I’d be honest about the experience.
Plus you’re going to have to explain to investors who that person is, and why they’re on the cap table and not in the company.
Vesting is a form of trial period. It’s the rules of the game. You warned them. They didn’t react properly. That’s it.
Moreover, firing them allows you to keep those stocks so that you can reward someone else. Someone who’s actuelly been doing the work.
You should definitely fire them right now. You need to control the narrative though. Make sure everyone on the teams understand the move. People shouldn’t be surprised.
The other option is to just fire him and then explain that you've been given feedback to him for a while and that you've had enough and that letting him vest would just be plain unfair to people who do put in the work.
Depending on the size of his grant, your current and future investors will think you are weak for letting him vest. That's also a conversation you don't want to have.
Is the timing great? No. That's why it must be well documented the behavior your penalizing. He will almost certainly come back to sue you for wrongful termination if there is no documentation (and you have any value to your shares).
Good luck, cut the dead weight, and move on.
You're probably over-valuing the (non-liquid) options, since that's part of being a Founder.
If your equity is worth real money someday, you'll have the opportunity to buy back the shares (or introduce your ex-employee to an investor interested in purchasing). This is a win/win for early employees who tend to value liquidity. Part on amicable terms so this isn't an awkward conversation in two years.
You can also talk to them, tell them you have noticed they are disconnected and have the feeling that they are waiting for vesting to leave the company. Say you find their current performance unacceptable but don’t want to deprive them of their vesting and see if you can work something out like an unpaid leave until the due date.
A big and expensive wrongful termination lawsuit is not what you need right now.
Sending a message that you can fire a guy weeks before cliff is not what you need right now.
In your position, I would offer the guy two options:
A. Lifting of his cliff for the time he actually worked (if he worked 10 months, then 10/12 of his yearly schedule) — in stock options that the guy needs to exercise by bringing money; or
B. Three months of severance pay — in real money (or some other perk if three months are a legal obligation in your jurisdiction).
Had a situation where I was let go 2 months before my cliff in an advising/part-time situation, and while I won't say anything negative about the company and most of my colleagues, I was honest in respect to the exec teams behavior. Zero of the 4 applicants who I relayed that to accepted their offers. Was my small equity stake worth (potentially, may have had other reasons) 4 hires?
Is HN quiet-quitting and afraid of similar thing happening to them ;)
You don't owe him anything more than what has been agreed upon signing the employement contract, especially considering what looks like gross underperforming (if not blunt misbehaviour).
His vesting in 2 weeks? Too bad, this literally shouldn't matter to your decision.
Maybe this is a non-issue.
Is there some wisdom being applied in their lack of enthusiasm for the task at hand?
Maybe there's some purchase or acquisition that's turning their part of the task Sisypheaan?
Perhaps they have some illness, or family issue?
These are all obviously important questions to answer before you retaliate.
It's very important how you communicate your decision to the rest of the company. You don't want slackers or troublemakers or parasites to infest your company; but at the same time, you want to respect the dignity of everyone.
Job done.
Employee is happy, employer is happy.
If so, that keeps your cap table clean, which has value, but still pays the employee for their time.
You know the mistake you made in waiting too long to decide to fire, so I won’t harp on that.
As an employer, it is never a bad thing to look a little generous (I said a little) when you terminate someone. This eliminates (or at least lessens) potential liabilities, as with severance pay.
Presumably you have employment contracts setting out conditions. Follow the contract. Get legal advice. Fire immediately and let them do their worst.
If your employment contract didn't cover confidentiality then more fool you.
If the employment contact allows, fire the guy now, make it a condition of his termination that his/her 'vest" will happen but be held in trust for 6 months subject to conditions of confidentiality etc.
There are half measures: giving them a PIP with a month to improve, letting them vest early, etc.
But these risk sending a bad message to other employees.
Firing people right before cliffs has the potential to drive away employees.
- low effort at work
- minimal hours
I joined a team after acquisition that had such an employee, and they were all disappointed that she got fired after the cliff and received some equity.
Perhaps make that distribution immediately vest too. Then no one can claim you're firing just to avoid vesting stock.
Thank everyone for doing such a good job collectively.
Shows you don’t have any patience with seriously poor performance despite feedback. You are going to be nobody’s fool
But also shows your motive wasn’t to claw back anything, and you will be generous with workers who perform their jobs professionally.
Also shows some creative adaptive leadership problem solving.
Anyway, that is one thought
Everybody already knows they aren't doing any work.
Years from now you'll be glad you did. Be generous rather than mean.
Any controversy? Explain he was terrible. You have to deserve equity. That’s what the vesting period is for.
I'd say "Let them go without vesting"!
As you say, seems like the person has become the toxic component of the team & doing -ve work. If I were to guess, you didn't let them go earlier because of the "hope" you had & benefit of doubt. You could have let go of this person long time ago & not bothered abt all this but you wanted to give leeway. This person completely took advantage of the leeway.
Since you have a very small team, it must be close-knit as well. Hold a Townhall, show the evidence of what all you say i.e. slack message, github commits, emails etc. Your employees are not dumb. Explain how, the person to be fired wasn't cheating just the company or the founders but also rest of the team. You letting him go with esops is UNFAIR to the team, compensation for the work not done.
This will be the last time you justify your decisions to the team. Never let this happen again by investing in a stronger & more objective feedback system, if you have made your mind to let someone go, let them go ASAP.
I am sure Someone else must have been picking their off their slack, reward that person; don't keep the esops back, give it back to them team to the people who took care of the work that this person was supposed to. You letting him go with esops demonstrates your unfairness to the rest of the team; people who might have joined late & have none or much less esops contributing more.
This won't be the first time it happens & soon you will let go off someone with esops, which creates a contrast to show everyone that what happened is not usual practice at the company but a one time thing happening only under exceptional circumstances like this.
At last, expect a fallout, 1-3 people, talk to these people in private, give them more details & context than you gave in the Townhall. And if they go, they go because you would encounter the same entitlement as the person you are letting go off, sooner or later in one thing or the other.
Another option is no esops but give then a settlement, a % of a value of ESOPs if you can to be a bit more fair.
Also, depends upon the amount as well; if it's meagre, let it be. If significant, then you can't let it get away.
And Yes it can create a mess on the cap table as you grow larger. With bigger rounds you will have more due diligence & justifications to provide; close the chapter ASAP & move on!
and the best part for the last, you let them go, they are gonna create a ruckus within the team before/while/after they leave. Doesn't matter they leave with or without equity i.e. if they don't already plan on quitting right after vesting. They will contest the firing unfair anyway, and maybe fight you on the rest of the esops yet to be vested as well. You will face the flak then as well.
Each minute you keep the person in your mind, it costs your company an opportunity loss & mindspace + time loss to you.
PS - When I was first suggested to fire this person by my co-founder, I couldn't imagine doing it; thought our tech would collapse because of all the lost knowledge etc. Then we fired them & 2 more people left. Within 45 days, we are doing better than ever, had one of the most productive month in last 8 months but that's a story for another time.
Just being around a long time isn’t something worth rewarding IMHO. If they did something / a lot of effort early on, but are now going off the edge then that would be a different story.