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Don't Give Away Ownership Easily

Unfortunately, you can't always retain full ownership of your company. If that's the case, here are some potential hazards to watch out for.
Posted by Tim Berry | October 31, 2007
URL: http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/186776

In a previous column , I suggested that you need to be realistic about getting outside investment for your new business. I'd like to take this column to deal with some of the basics of who owns a company, why they own it and how much they own. I'm scared by some of the questions that come through my e-mail on points related to this. So I'd like to dedicate this column to laying some foundations.

The best way to own a company is to own it fully. You started it, you own it, and you run it. You don't have to decide anything by majority rules.

You bring in others only for good reasons--and reluctantly. There are a few good reasons to expand ownership:

If your case doesn't fall into one of those three scenarios, you probably don't want to share your company. Don't let myth, manipulations or relationships get in the way of this cold truth. Let me make some specific recommendations based on a somewhat collective summary of e-mails and questions I get:

If you have done either of these things, you're in dangerous territory. You should know that companies with more than one founder who aren't crystal clear from the very beginning about who owns what and how much are almost certain to end up with ugly and divisive fights over ownership. You must never assume that your partners and team members understand that you own the majority because you did something or paid a certain amount. That's deadly.

Write it down, early on, before there's real money involved, while you're still talking. I tend to think the idea is worth nothing; the money involved is worth a lot; and the work involved--so-called "sweat equity"--ought to be converted into money immediately. If you work for free to start a company, make sure your team members agree on how much your work is worth, by hour, day, week or month, and when it's going to be paid. Or, if it's to be converted to ownership, determine at what rate and when and according to what document. These things not only have to be talked about; they have to be written down and signed.

Don't think it's any better or easier with friends or family investment. In some ways it's harder because it's more difficult to stay at arms length about problems down the road, and often harder to get things written out clearly in the beginning.

Unfortunately, there's no formula for determining how much each founder of a small business owns. There's some mix of work, money, know-how, experience, equipment already owned and, maybe, the idea. You have to agree on what's fair or you're doomed.

In these cases, most companies end up managing this as shares, like shares of stock. When founding the legal entity, the lawyer formalizes how many total shares there will be and how many shares each founder owns. There's a lot of legal weight to that, so pay attention.

If you need serious outside investment, then all bets are off. Buckle your seat belts and get advisors you trust who have done it before. Expect to see a lot of shares going in a lot of different directions. Advisors, professionals, brain trust, investors--a lot of people can end up with shares in these companies. When you need to go back and get more investment, everybody's ownership gets diluted. Founders of companies that go public often end up having surprisingly small shares of the final company.

If you aren't in any of the first three categories I mentioned, use your savings or borrow the money. Be careful, plan well, but own it yourself. Leave Uncle Ralph and Cousin Millie out of the equation, please.

Tim Berry is the president of Palo Alto Software Inc., based in Eugene, Ore., which produces business planning software. He is also the author of 3 Weeks to Startup and The Plan-As-You-Go Business Plan, published by Entrepreneur Press. Follow him on Twitter: @Timberry