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The best new year resolutions for startup founders: Offering ESOPs that actually work

ESOP

Since we launched ‘The State of ESOPs in Southeast Asia’ in mid-December 2021, I have been encouraged by the buzz of conversations on the topic of employee stock options (ESOPs).

I first discovered a strong interest in this topic when we received 60+ survey responses from startup founders, from pre-seed to Series B, within 48 hours of launching the survey in November. To date, more than 300 startups across Southeast Asia have downloaded the report to understand how to make ESOPs work for them.

Having had dozens of conversations with founders, employees and investors on this topic in recent months, I wanted to share some notable takeaways for startup founders who are thinking of designing competitive ESOPs in 2022 in order to attract and retain talent, as well as build culture.

(Thankfully, only one in three founders saw ESOPs as a way to ‘cut cost’– I am of the view that ESOPs are anything but cheap. Unlike cash which is fungible and can be earned through revenue or fundraising, company shares once given cannot be earned back.)

Make it accessible, otherwise, you are better off without

In the recent survey of 134 startups in Southeast Asia, almost half structured ESOPs strike price based on the price per share for the latest fundraising round. Furthermore, another one in two startups gives employees less than six months to exercise their options.

To put this in perspective, let’s take the example of Jane, who joins startup ABC as a senior product manager. Startup ABC offers Jane 0.5 per cent of total company shares in addition to her cash compensation, and structures ESOP prices and exercise duration in an aforementioned manner.

Also Read: SEA tech founders playbook: A to Z of becoming a fundraising legend (Part 1)

Assuming Jane:

  • Joins ABC after they have completed seed fundraising at a post-money valuation of US$4 million
  • Has vested all her options
  • Decides to leave ABC as a good leaver

Jane has six months to cough up US$20,000 to convert her stock options into shares (US$4 million x 0.5 per cent). Failing which, her stock options would be forfeited. In most countries in Southeast Asia (bar Singapore), US$20,000 could amount to almost an entire year’s salary in cash.

Furthermore, the upfront capital required to exercise stock options escalates dramatically with the startup’s stage of funding.

Stage of Funding Median post-money Valuation (USD M) Exercise Price (USD)
Seed 4 Assume employee has 0.5 per cent of total company shares $20,000
Series A 34 $170,000
Series B 110 $550,000

Source: Median valuation data from PitchBook for Southeast Asia-HQ companies

From this illustration, an employee who joins a Series B startup would need more than half a million dollars to exercise their stock options, a setup that essentially renders ESOPs prohibitive.

As more employees start to learn about ESOPs and conversations increase, startup founders can no longer play the information asymmetry game and shortchange employees. Once found out, the startup risks irreversible damage to its employer brand, and loses competitiveness in the war for talent. 

Invest in educating employees on ESOPs

To avoid situations where employees feel shortchanged on ESOPs, it is then the role of founders to invest in educating employees. We start to see promising signs that founders in Southeast Asia have stepped up to this role. More than 9 out of 10 leaders make the effort to explain ESOPs to their prospective hires, mostly before they start work.

Also Read: How does startup dilution for founders work with ESOPs and investment?

To build on these positive intentions, here’s a non-exhaustive checklist founders can work through together with employees to ensure they have a sufficient understanding of ESOPs:

  • Why are ESOPs valuable to me, as an employee of the company?
  • What are cliff and vesting, and what are the cliff and vesting periods applicable?
  • What is the strike price and what is the strike price applicable?
  • What is the exercise period and what is the exercise period applicable?
  • Are there good leaver / bad leaver provisions? In what situations will my vested options be forfeit?
  • What happens when there is a liquidity event? Do I get accelerated vesting?
  • In what priority will I receive the distributions from a liquidity event (e.g. my company’s investors will get distributions first, then the remainder will be allocated between founders and myself)?
  • Are there any restrictions on my ESOPs?
  • Who can I ask about ESOPs if I have further questions?

Step outside to understand local nuances

While the vast majority of startups we surveyed operate in more than one country, almost 4 out of 5 had headquarters incorporated in Singapore. Unsurprisingly, Singapore presents itself as a highly favourable destination for ESOPs, with clear legislation and taxation guidelines. 

Juxtaposed against the often-murky and non-straightforward legislations and tax guidelines, ESOPs outside of Singapore are comparatively more complicated. Employees in these jurisdictions are often employed under local subsidiaries, where the issuance of ESOPs in relation to the parent company needs to be established. A case in point was the recent reporting on how Grab employees in Vietnam had to liquidate their ESOPs prior to their SPAC listing due to local laws. 

Founders may be well-served to develop a nuanced understanding of ESOPs across key markets, especially those outside of Singapore. A two-pronged approach of firstly, speaking to trusted investors and fellow founders for firsthand learnings, followed by verification with legal and tax counsel, can help sidestep costly ESOP pitfalls.  

Know your competition well

With growing awareness and conversations around ESOPs among both founders and employees, it is critical to know what competition looks like. 

In The State of ESOPs in Southeast Asia report, we shared the ESOP ranges offered to leadership, senior and junior employees. In the follow-up conversations, we learnt there was a deeper desire for founders to have a more granular understanding of how ESOP varied across maturity– after all, a Series B startup may be better placed to offer higher cash compensation than one without any external funding, hence compelling the latter to offer more ESOPs at the same seniority. 

As such, we have segmented the ESOPs offered to employees across both roles and stages of funding. As ESOPs are most often associated, set up or topped up during new rounds of fundraising, we think this can be a handy guide for founders to understand what the landscape looks like. 

Also Read: SEA tech founders playbook: A to Z of becoming a fundraising legend (Part 2)

 

Dare to differentiate, and share about it

While our report laid out the state of ESOPs in Southeast Asia as-is, founders should not be afraid to deviate from the ESOP canon and dare to create differentiation to stand out in the competitive landscape today. 

An advantage can be as simple as establishing monthly vesting structures (only one in three startups do so today, with the others vesting less frequently), or even a change in the typical cliff + vesting period.

Also Read: 12 legal considerations when drafting your ESOP

While the norm is for a 12-month cliff followed by a 36-month vesting period (adding up to 48 months), an increasing number of startups have decisively shortened this period and even removed the cliff altogether.

Hence, founders must not be afraid to lay out these differentiators and proactively share about it throughout the recruitment process, not leave it in an ESOP policy that is mostly unread.

ESOPs can be the lethal weapon in a startup’s arsenal to win the war for talent. Thoughtful structuring of employee stock options can not only move the conversation away from a negotiation of the numbers (cash, bonus, basis points) to a more holistic, thoughtful conversation but also be an organic promotion channel for prospective employees. Ultimately, the goal is to align the risks and rewards between founders and employees – and a well-crafted ESOPs plan might just be able to do that.

The production effort for the report was supported by Svested, RDF Strategies and BYRD Creative.

Editor’s note: e27 aims to foster thought leadership by publishing views from the community. Share your opinion by submitting an article, video, podcast, or infographic

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Image credit: momius

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ErudiFi raises US$15M debt funding from Helicap to provide affordable tuition instalment plans to students

ErudiFi Co-Founder and CEO Naga Tan

ErudiFi, a startup offering tech-enabled education financing solutions in Southeast Asia, has secured a debt facility of US$15 million from Singapore-based fintech company Helicap.

The startup will use the funding to support the needs of students across the Philippines and Indonesia by offering them affordable tuition instalment plans.

This round comes close to a year after ErudiFi bagged US$5 million in Series A capital, co-led by Monk’s Hill Ventures and Qualgro in February 2021.

Also Read: How edutech is solving the global teacher’s crisis

Launched in 2018, ErudiFi helps students secure funding for higher education through partnerships with leading universities and vocational schools. It operates as Danacita in Indonesia and Bukas in the Philippines.

As of December 2021, ErudiFi claims to have served more than 12,000 students and partnered with over a hundred educational institutions in Indonesia and the Philippines.

“Our partnership with Helicap enables us to further our mission of expanding access to education in Southeast Asia. The need for an affordable financing solution is greater than ever, with the ongoing pandemic leading to an increasing number of Filipino and Indonesian youths deferring further studies due to financial constraints,” said Naga Tan, CEO and Co-Founder of ErudiFi.

David Z. Wang, Co-Founder and CEO of Helicap (the parent company of Helicap Investments and Helicap Securities), said: “Education financing is a huge opportunity in Southeast Asia, and ErudiFi continues to shape and expand its trusted relationships with universities and partner institutions.”

Since 2018, Helicap has facilitated more than US$100 million in investments that improve access to financing for underbanked populations in Southeast Asia. As a signatory of the United Nations-supported Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI), Helicap Investments uses its proprietary credit analytics technology to make high-impact investments and bridge the US$500 billion financing gap in Southeast Asia.

Also Read: Edutech is surging, but here are the 3 issues it is facing

According to HolonIQ, edutech is a growing sector in Southeast Asia, and the region has managed to raise a total of US$480 million in investment for startups operating in this sector over the last five years.

In Southeast Asia, there are many edutech startups such as Topica (Vietnam), Taamkru (Thailand), Ruangguru (Indonesia), and Classruum (Malaysia) that are helping plug the educational gap by increasing the quality or access to education.

Ready to meet new startups to invest in? We have more than hundreds of startups ready to connect with potential investors on our platform. Create or claim your Investor profile today and turn on e27 Connect to receive requests and fundraising information from them.

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Temasek unit Heliconia leads digital container haulage platform Haulio’s US$7M Series A round

Haulio_Series A funding_news

Haulio Co-Founders CEO Alvin Ea (R) and CPO Sebastian Shen

Singapore-headquartered digital container haulage platform Haulio has secured US$7 million in a Series A funding round led by Temasek unit Heliconia Capital.

New investors that joined the round are Ondine Capital (China), Cornerstone Ventures (Taiwan), FuturePlay (South Korea), Newtown Partners via the Imperial Venture Fund (South Africa), and XA Network.

Existing investors, including B7 Capital, ComfortDelGro, iSeed SEA, Iterative (US), and PSA unboXed, have also participated.

The fresh funds will be used to strengthen Haulio’s haulage capabilities, service quality, and product engineering and development. The startup is also following its regional growth ambition throughout Southeast Asia.

As per a press statement, Haulio is actively hiring top talent in strategic business functions to support its growth plans in markets like Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Vietnam.

Also read: The first-mile container logistics is ripe for digital disruption. Here’s how Haulio is doing it

Founded in 2016 by CEO Alvin Ea and CPO Sebastian Shen, Haulio connects hauliers and shippers.

“Container shipping volumes are on the rapid rise, so there needs to be greater optimisation and streamlining of haulage trips, given the increasing shortage in equipment and drivers,” said Ea. “The complex and fragmented nature of our business continues to be a challenge, especially when container haulage has been a vertical that often gets left behind.”

Haulio boasts of having onboarded 90 per cent of Singapore’s hauliers and established presences in Indonesia and Thailand. In Thailand alone, it has aggregated more than 3,000 hauliers. For shippers, Haulio provides prime mover and trailer rental and leasing service and embedded financing.

In 2021, it partnered with fintech players such as Funding Societies and Aspire to offer faster pay-out and supply chain financing and with ComfortDelgro and Goldbell to offer leasing of prime mover trucks.

As of now, Haulio claims to have transacted more than two million containers, with over 50 per cent of the transactions completed in 2021 alone. The startup expects to triple its revenue by the end of 2022 as the global supply chain rebounds.

Haulio said it also helps reduce the carbon emissions from container trucking and unnecessary transportation of empty containers due to its effective job matching and resource pooling. So far, it claims to have optimised over 200,000 containers, saving over 3,000 metric tonnes of carbon emission.

Last year, Haulio raised an undisclosed amount in pre-Series A funding. In 2018, it netted US$741,710 in seed round.

According to a market study by Quince Market Insights, the global first- and last-mile delivery market reached US$ 493.2 million in 2021 and is expected to exhibit a CAGR of 13.8 per cent over the forecast period 2021 to 2030. Asia is set to grow as the top player in the global maritime trade arena, especially in the SEA region with trade volumes expected to increase by 130 per cent in 2023 to US$5,653 billion.

Ready to meet new startups to invest in? We have more than hundreds of startups ready to connect with potential investors on our platform. Create or claim your Investor profile today and turn on e27 Connect to receive requests and fundraising information from them.

Image Credit: Haulio

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Fintech startup Fraction bags US$3M to turn real estate into fractional NFTs

Fraction_funding_news

[L-R] Fraction Co-Founders Shaun Sales (CTO) and Eka Nirapathpongporn (CEO)

Hongkong- and Thailand-based fintech startup Fraction has bagged US$3 million in a pre-Series A financing round led by East Ventures, it announced today.

The round also saw participation from Indonesia’s Emtek Group, Singapore-based Thakral (consulting and technology services company), V Ventures (Singapore), and unnamed regional investors.

With this, Fraction will establish its first fractional real estate offers powered by non-fungible tokens (NFTs) and distributed ledger solutions based on the Ethereum blockchain. 

Besides, the company also plans to expand into various asset classes, services and countries, with the goal of democratising access to investments and money for millions of people who are now unable to participate in these wealth-generating activities.

Fraction previously secured an undisclosed seed round from conventional finance and technology investors such as Singha Ventures, Tanarra Capital, and Skystar Capital.

Also read: Demystifying NFTs and DeFi

Founded in 2018, Fraction enables people to own and transact pieces of real estate in the form of NFTs that have a “real-world legal link” to the property. Its offerings include ‘initial fraction offering’ (IFO) of real estate tokens, a secondary market trading platform of fractional tokens between investors, and related intermediary services covering the complete end-to-end journey.

“We can now enable true financial inclusion letting small investors participate in attractive asset classes that were previously inaccessible,” said Eka Nirapathpongporn, Co-Founder and CEO of Fraction.

With Fraction’s plug-and-play platform, individuals and companies can invest, sell and manage fractional ownership of anything — from a small stake in a city condominium, beachfront resort, or art piece, to managing a private fund, assets and investors.

As per a press statement, Fraction obtained the initial coin offering (ICO) portal license (subject to activation approval) from the Securities and Exchange Commission of Thailand (SEC).

Real estate is one of the largest markets on earth with a value of US$326 trillion in 2020, per a Savills report. London-born advisory and accountancy network Moore Global predicted that the tokenised real estate market would be on track to become a US$1.4-trillion market.

Ready to meet new startups to invest in? We have more than hundreds of startups ready to connect with potential investors on our platform. Create or claim your Investor profile today and turn on e27 Connect to receive requests and fundraising information from them.

Image Credit: Fraction

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M&A roundup: boAt buys SG startup KaHa, DeClout acquires Ascent Solutions

SG IoT startup KaHa snapped up by Indian wearables brand boAt

India-based Imagine Marketing, the parent of wearables brand boAt, has acquired Singapore based smart IoT product development company KaHa.

The acquisition will enable Imagine Marketing to augment its wearable product offerings in terms of the concept, design, electronic firmware, algorithm development, Android/iOS applications, new feature integration, social engagement and analytics.

This acquisition will also allow Imagine Marketing to scale up its smart and holistic wellness wearables ecosystem.

Also Read: The IoT opportunity is right outside your door

Founded in 2015, KaHa has capabilities in developing products in the IoT space. It has a technology-focused platform for wearables through patented AI and ML capabilities, end-to-end smart wearable solutions (hardware and software), and data-driven smart IoT platforms, providing solutions and analyses for multiple use cases.

KaHa has developed its proprietary COVE IoT platform. With in-built artificial intelligence and machine learning algorithms, COVE provides users with actionable intelligence and personalised experiences across a range of consumer verticals: health & wellness, sports & fitness, digital payment and safety. The platform includes electronics design, printed circuit board assembly, application frameworks for iOS and Android, cloud services, data analytics and smart after-sales service tools.

KaHa has offices in Singapore, China, India.

DeCloud picks majority stake in blockchain firm Ascent Solutions

Singapore-headquartered DeClout has announced the completion of 70 per cent of Ascent Solutions, a company specialising in IoT and blockchain solutions.

Ascent Solutions is an Internet of Things (IoT) smart connectivity firm that provides digital solutions for smart city infrastructure and end-to-end visibility and intelligence across the entire supply chain for both governments and private sectors.

Since its incorporation in 2010, it has developed iTrust, a blockchain and IoT solution for trade financing in 2018, and implemented a real-time IoT monitoring solution to track in-transit petroleum products for the Ghana authorities in January 2020.

Also Read: How play-to-earn is fueling the next wave of blockchain adoption

Headquartered in Singapore and established in 2010, DeClout invests in, incubates and scales companies to become global or regional market leaders. The group’s companies comprise of fast-growing trade technology firm GUUD, ICT solutions provider Aeqon, green-tech service provider ARCO, neutral hosting solutions provider dhost, and its corporate venture arm DeClout Ventures.

DeClout is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Exeo Global, the regional headquarters of Stock Exchange-listed Exeo Group.

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