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Equity-based compensation — Northern California’s universal answer to engendering loyalty in employees — is a useful tool but a complicated one. This was one of several hard truths heard by attendees during BayBio’s recent Lunch & Learn event by RoseRyan. Accompanied by compensation consultancy Radford, RoseRyan hosted this packed event on February 26 at BayBio’s headquarters in San Francisco.

To retain top talent these days, companies have a variety of stock-based methods, which are accompanied by their share of accounting, tax, and legal issues. What strategy a company picks today for rewarding employees could affect how smoothly it can transition to another version of itself later on, either as a public entity or as an acquisition target.

During their comprehensive overview of what private companies need to realize as they structure and maintain their comp plans, Kelley Wall, a director at RoseRyan who leads the firm’s Technical Accounting Group, and Kyle Holm, an associate partner at Radford, hit upon the following hard truths.

1. Your company will have to up the ante as it matures.
Startups tend to begin with just stock options and then work their way up to restricted stock or restricted stock units and eventually performance-based awards. Each compensation type comes with its own set of pros and cons. For example, stock options do not lead to immediate dilution whereas restricted stock does. Employees may favor restricted stock for the fact it will give them ownership right away, but tax consequences upon vesting can be troublesome.

And while performance awards encourage goal-based behavior, they are not without their challenges. With these type of awards, companies have to regularly determine the probability of employees meeting their performance targets and adjust their stock-compensation expense accordingly, which can create some volatility in earnings. And it may be difficult for early-stage companies to adequately assess performance targets — any modifications of those targets down the road will result in modification accounting and likely additional compensation expense.

2. Modifications can be messy.
Modifications will happen. The roles of employees change, employees come and go, and employees’ individual targets for reaping the benefits of a pay plan will evolve. And so will the way the company accounts for compensation. Situations where accounting changes come into play include: giving a terminated employee an extended period to exercise their options beyond what was initially agreed upon; changing performance-based metrics; and hiring consultants and allowing them to continue to hold the stock options they were granted as consultants. In general, any change to an award or an award holder’s status should trigger a review of accounting modifications.

3. Your payment systems are only as accurate as the data you’ve put into them.
Wall acknowledged this truth seems fairly obvious but cautioned that lack of data integrity continues to trip up companies. Too often companies lean too heavily on outside lawyers and accountants without realizing those service providers can’t keep up with changes within a business if they don’t know about them.

The fact is the majority of stock-based compensation data has some underlying issues. For instance, RoseRyan has seen a company with vesting stock options for employees who left five years ago — which led to an overstatement when the information was uncovered. To make sure the data surrounding their equity plans are clean, companies need a system of checks and balances — such as reconciling awards granted with board minutes at least once a quarter and having a process to tie employee terminations to the equity records.

4. You have a lot to consider about your equity plans if an IPO is in your future.
One of the hardest truths hits in the time leading up to a public offering. This is when tough questions arise over all the decisions that have been made beforehand, Holm warned, and even more difficult choices will need to be made. Those who have a stake in the company will shift their focus from their percentage of ownership to the actual value of their shares. Companies going through the transition will need to determine whether they should consider amending their stock plans. They’ll also need to define their post-IPO equity pool size. And they’ll need to take a look at how they communicate beyond one-on-one pay agreements. It’s also a good time to consider what information will be publicly disclosed in your registration statement. For one, details about pay plans for the most highly paid senior leaders will be publicized, not only to investors and securities regulators but employees as well. There’s also a lot of information regarding the plans and award details included in SEC filings, and newly-public companies are burdened with additional disclosures around stock valuation.

While equity-based compensation comes with issues, Wall noted, managers can provide robust pay plans that do what they’re supposed to — retain top talent — as long as they operate with their eyes wide open with an awareness of how changes and new decisions will have consequences.

This post originally appeared here, on BayBio’s website.

Keep your employees motivated with stock-based compensation, the thinking goes, and you will be rewarded with high productivity and gains in your company’s growth track. What managers often fail to consider is that if they make mistakes along the way—and we’ve seen many when it comes to equity-based compensation plans—they could actually end up with low employee morale, putting a crimp in the pace of the performance-aligned goals they have set up.

Whenever a company has to amend awards previously made or restate their financial statements because of adjustments in equity-based comp, employees will naturally have concerns—even when the change has little, if any, financial impact on them.

The risk of dents in morale is just one of many consequences RoseRyan has observed while helping clients with issues in their equity-based pay strategies. You’d be amazed at the range of problems we have seen—many of them due to honest mistakes. In our experience, 9 out of 10 companies have had some issue with their underlying stock data that affects their stock-based compensation expense.

To prevent such problems at your company, consider these three tips the next time you evaluate your stock-based compensation strategy (we’ll get into more detail about this topic at our February 26 luncheon called Compensation for Private Companies: The Ins and Outs of Equity, which will be held at BayBio with Kyle Holm, associate partner at compensation consulting firm Radford).

Be obsessive about looking for modifications: Some modifications are obvious (say, repricing a stock option); some modifications are less so (say, allowing a consultant to keep options after you hire that person as an employee). Keep an eye out not only for board decisions but also for management decisions, material transactions, and liquidity events. The rule is, any change to the award or the award holder’s status should trigger consideration of accounting modifications.

Identifying that you have a modification is just the first challenge; the accounting can be tricky as well. How you account for the modification will depend on the type of modification. Variations include measuring the incremental value only, accelerating the expense, or valuing the new award and reversing the value associated with the original award. You also need to be sure you’re entering the modification in your equity system in a way that captures the appropriate modification accounting.

Make sure performance-based awards are on everyone’s radar: Performance-based awards are great tools for both retaining employees and motivating goal-driven behavior. But there is accounting risk here as well. With performance-based awards, companies must assess the probability of achieving the metrics at each reporting date and adjust the expense accordingly. This step often doesn’t happen. Maybe the board minutes lay out the performance goals associated with an award, but the stock administrator gets only a spreadsheet of grants to administer, with no indication that vesting is contingent. Or maybe the stock administrator is aware of the performance targets but doesn’t flag performance-based grants in the equity system, so the accounting team doesn’t know they exist. Such miscommunication can lead to overstated stock-based compensation expense.

Tie your 409A valuations to major grant dates: For private companies, the rule of thumb is to obtain a 409A valuation of your stock at least once a year, and in conjunction with major events such as financings, significant transactions, or material changes to the business. Some companies instead tend to do their 409A at the end of the year, just because they’re doing other valuations and financial decompressions at the same time. But think about this example, from one of our clients that approved a major grant to executives and employees in June 2011, six months after valuing its common stock at $1.25 per share for its annual 409A. By that point, the value of the stock had increased significantly—to $3—based on several design wins and other economic factors. While that’s a nice problem to have, they suddenly faced additional stock-based compensation expense and time-consuming updates to their equity system, among other issues.

It’s easy to think your equity-based compensation is under control; however, we have found time and again that it’s an ever-evolving tool that needs tending to, as your headcount grows, the complexity of your company expands, and situations evolve.

Get in the mode of reevaluating your pay strategy during the RoseRyan February 26 Lunch & Learn seminar about equity in South San Francisco. It will be geared toward private companies. Click here to register. And for more details about these best practices as well as some others to consider, also check out the RoseRyan intelligence report I wrote called Stock options: do you have a problem?.

Kelley Wall leads RoseRyan’s Technical Accounting Group, which provides technical accounting and SEC expertise to public and private companies on complex accounting matters and implementation of new accounting pronouncements. 

Here’s a situation that might sound familiar: your midsize tech startup is growing so fast that you’re scrambling to bring new people on board just to keep up with demand. Talent doesn’t come cheap, and you’ve lured the best with a wide variety of stock-based compensation deals. The trouble is, your lean finance team lacks the in-house resources needed to handle a high volume of complex equity transactions and doesn’t have time to set up automation.

The solution: a RoseRyan equity expert. We excel at helping innovative companies meet the challenges of explosive growth and position themselves for their next leap. See our latest project profile to learn more about how we implemented an efficient spreadsheet system that enabled our client to manually manage equity grants as their company grew from just four employees to nearly 700.

Also check out what else we can do on our startup and emerging growth services page.

We know that making time to attend a seminar is tough in our over-scheduled lives. And reading presentation slides is rarely an ideal way to connect the dots of complex subjects. Maybe you’d like to expand your knowledge while wearing your sweats and eating popcorn? Well, now you can.

We’ve made getting guidance easy—with our videos, you can take in valuable information while propping your feet up on your desk or walking your way to fitness at your mobile workstation, if you insist on multitasking.

Check out videos of our three most recent seminars:

IPO Bound? New Strategies, New Ideas and Tips for Success

IPO ahead? Learn the dos and don’ts at key stages and get legal, finance and auditor perspectives on how to get your house in order, tell your business story, nail your S-1 and hit your runway. (This program provides great business advice, even if an IPO’s not in your future.)

Equity Compensation: End-to-End Strategies for Private Companies

Whether your plans are for growth or a lucrative exit, don’t let thorny equity compensation design and execution issues ground them. Get legal, HR, accounting and industry perspectives on setting yourself up for success, avoiding common pitfalls and planning for an M&A deal or IPO.

Valuation Metrics and Drivers in Today’s Economy

Whatever your goals, a high valuation is a top priority. Demystify the valuation equation and understand market variables, business model economics, and analyst and investor perspectives; develop a valuation strategy; and avoid mistakes and deal breakers.