The other problem with the approach is it increases the risk of the guy who goes without salary, without any reward (that theme seems to be a strong justification for compensation in Joel's article, though I'm not sure it is intrinsically fair).
If you go without salary, while the other people don't, and get IOUs, but the company goes bust anyhow, you'll be out of pocket but the other people won't. You're taking more risk; why not have more upside?
But the other side is this notion that reward is necessarily justified by risk. What if the company is motoring along steadily for a couple of years but as a lifestyle business, and then gets a star employee who creates a new product that takes off? Are they necessarily not justified in seeking more compensation - perhaps they have created more value than even the founders? Or are the founders better off with a bigger slice of a smaller pie, and not trying to reward innovation in their employee base?
If you go without salary, while the other people don't, and get IOUs, but the company goes bust anyhow, you'll be out of pocket but the other people won't. You're taking more risk; why not have more upside?
No one is suggesting that anyone gets a nice, ample, plush salary. This is a survival salary (anything more should not be allowed until the company can pay all founders). If the startup goes bust, a poor founder working 1 year on survival salary is no more "in pocket" than a wealthier founder working 1 year without salary. The valuable thing that they've both lost is a precious year of their life.
And if the startup has enough money to pay everyone, it makes no sense that someone would get more shares simply for taking less salary out. That's not what shares are for in an early startup.
Right. So the IOUs need to be a form of investment as well.
re: star employee example--it's not how much you made the company, it's how much of the company is yours to begin with. Founders will be smart to reward performance, but to reward proportionally based on contribution wouldn't work. If the star is unhappy, he's welcome to quit, take the risk and start his own company.
that seriously underestimates how important the perception of fairness is. i'm with joel on that one.
as a side note, taking the emotional impact of your decisions into account is not acting irrationally. indeed, it's more rational than deciding things on a purely monetary basis, because it takes all possible inputs into account.
No, it's not about fairness; it's about loss aversion bias, and how it can lead to suboptimal economic outcomes. It leads to poor investment choices all over the place. People are worse off when they don't control for it.
If you go without salary, while the other people don't, and get IOUs, but the company goes bust anyhow, you'll be out of pocket but the other people won't. You're taking more risk; why not have more upside?
But the other side is this notion that reward is necessarily justified by risk. What if the company is motoring along steadily for a couple of years but as a lifestyle business, and then gets a star employee who creates a new product that takes off? Are they necessarily not justified in seeking more compensation - perhaps they have created more value than even the founders? Or are the founders better off with a bigger slice of a smaller pie, and not trying to reward innovation in their employee base?