Last updated: 13 August 2024.
It’s that time of the year again, summer’s fading fast and business owners are heads down trying to make the rest of this year count. The way you finish the year will mean everything to your employees, as that’s how their Christmas bonus is usually calculated.
However, you’ve likely been grappling with how you can break out of this short-term thinking about the business and create a smarter incentive for everyone.
Do any of these resonate?
Giving shares to your employees can be an incredibly powerful motivator and something that can have a much greater impact on their life, longer term, than a cash bonus today that will be forgotten in the aftermath of New Year's Eve.
Like most business owners considering giving equity, you’ve likely been grappling with questions and concerns like these:
What’s the real value to the business?
I’m worried I’ll give shares and the team won't value it.
I’ve heard it will cost more than the bonuses I intend to pay just to set up the scheme.
It’s going to take a lot of time, admin and paperwork to get set up.
There is certainly some truth to these concerns, however, there are also a lot of misconceptions. Let me try to clear a few things up so you can decide what will be more powerful for your business in the long run…
Well, the data is pretty conclusive here. It’s known as the "Ownership Effect".
Supported by a host of research, it shows that when someone owns even a small piece of equity (shares) in a business, their relationship with that business changes: they bring more to the table, emotionally, and psychologically and demonstrate enhanced commitment.
It simply makes commercial sense for even the most hardnose of business owners and competitive of industries.
Over and over again, we see those that share, outperform their peers and win. It's why most Silicon Valley VCs, and their European peers like Index Ventures, recommend that founders have an employee option scheme.
"We adapt and apply best practices from Silicon Valley to our startups in Europe, to prime them for success. One of the key ingredients is employee ownership."
They’ve seen the impact it has on creating successful businesses, time after time. Here are three key business benefits:
A happier workforce and a happier place for you to turn up to each day. By allowing your employees to share in the success of what you create together you all get on the same page and focused on the same goal.
The UK employee ownership index (an index of companies which have 3% or more of their issued share capital held by or for the benefit of employees other than main board directors) has outperformed companies that don’t share ownership consistently since 2003.
The labour market is fiercely competitive. Major corporates, internet companies and consultancies are all vying for the top candidates, particularly for technical roles.
Smart people want to feel a sense of purpose about the work they do. No greater creator of agency than a real sense of ownership in what they are helping to create.
This is certainly a valid concern. Too many businesses go down this route and get only a fraction of the value because it’s communicated poorly.
Critical to the success of any scheme is the communication that goes with it. Outline why you are doing it, and what it means for them and the business.
Posting them a share agreement document to sign and return and then never mentioning it again does not promote this. Not thinking about cliffs and vesting schedules also doesn’t help.
Three things to think about so you and the team get the most out of sharing ownership and keep engagement high:
That used to be true. Traditionally, you’d fork out anything up to £10k just to get a scheme set up and in place. However, that’s no longer the case.
Technology now does a lot of the hard work, reducing the extortionate fees that used to be paid. Tools like Vestd completely remove the heavy upfront fees and allow business owners to pay monthly like all the other services they use.
With scheme plans starting at just £150/m with no hidden extras, cost is no longer a barrier.
Yes and no. If you do things the traditional route then yes, you are setting yourself up for a huge amount of work to get the scheme in place and then manage it.
However, that needn’t be your reality. Software can now do most of the heavy lifting and the process can be 100% paper-free making your admin virtually zero.
This is understandably a concern for business owners. However, the reality is it’s due to a misunderstanding of how a share scheme would work.
Shares given through share schemes are almost always given some degree of “conditionality”. That means you can set criteria which must be met for the person to qualify for receiving the shares such as remaining an employee or a specific delivery.
With share options, this is the ‘vesting period’ and with growth shares, you would have a ‘conditional period’, during which the shares can be cancelled.
The criteria would typically consist of:
Number of shares: How many will they get.
Time horizon (or vesting/conditional period): When will they get them.
Performance conditions: What they must do before the shares are fully theirs.
This might include things like staying with the business for a minimum period. Minimum deliverables you’d expect from the person in that role. Etc.
So, as a business owner you have good protection should an individual leave or not deliver. You’ll never end up giving employees shares (or rights to shares) if they have not fulfilled what was agreed upon.
If, like a lot of business owners, you’ve been thinking of setting up a share scheme, however, have been put off by the potential workload and costs, then I hope this article has helped clarify some of the main misconceptions.
And I hope you’ll join the thousands of UK SMEs that have chosen a smarter way to incentivise their team.
Grab your copy of the only share scheme guide you’ll ever need it’s free, takes only 10 minutes to read and will help you understand how to put a share scheme in place at your business… before Christmas!
And when you're ready, get some time in the diary with one of our share scheme specialists. Consultations are free and there's no obligation to join Vestd after.