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Ask HN: How much equity should I give my new co-founder?

7 points by zeynalov 11 years ago · 8 comments · 2 min read


I'm solo-founder and everything goes good for now. But I'm very stressed now and I think it would be better if I would have a co-founder. Our startup is ready and already launched 2 month ago. I found a good guy, that I think he can help me to grow our startup. Now he asks what part of my startup I'm going to give him.

I can't decide how much percent equity should I give him.

He is startup-savvy guy, knows SEO, online marketing strategies, online business growth-hacking etc. No coding skills.

Our startup is SaaS but our business model isn't on recurring revenue. Clients make one time payments.

Margin profit now: 80% revenue (team= me(founder)+3 employee+ 2 long-time freelance developers + tax)

Real revenue in first 2 months:

Oktober - 1st month – 1230 $

November - 2nd month – 9820 $

Revenue Prediction :

3rd month – 11000$

4th month – 20000 $

5th month – 25.000 $

6th month – 35.000$

7th month – 40.000$

8th month – 45.000$

9th month – 50.000$

10th month – 55.000$

11th month – 70.000$

12th month – 80.000$

13th month – 90.000$

December 2015 – 14th month – 100.000$

Total Revenue on end of 2015: 662.050 $

hakanderyal 11 years ago

There isn't a formula that will work for everyone. It heavily depends on the company, it's niche, it's potential of growth, personalities of owners, and much more.

If you are looking for a simple formula, here is one that I see regularly on HN:

Will you pay him a salary, or just equity?

If it's just equity, %50, with vesting.

If it's salary, than between %0 and %50, with vesting.

alain94040 11 years ago

You do not give us enough data to help you. What difference will that person make?

A real cofounder should get 10-50%. But first, you should work together for 1-3 months minimum. Once you know you are a good fit, vesting will protect you. Remember that 40% vesting over 4 years isn't that much if you fire your cofounder after one year for lack of performance. That's really just 10% equity for a full year of work, not bad for you. And if it works out, everyone is happy.

smt88 11 years ago

Don't agonize over it too much. Be generous. Are you paying him a salary as well?

s0x 11 years ago

I wouldn't give him any equity. Since it sounds like you can afford it, why don't you just hire him on a contract basis and pay him hourly?

notahacker 11 years ago

Is the projected revenue based on what you expect to make with or without the assistance of a marketing-focused cofounder?

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