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| --- | ||||
| layout: post | ||||
| author: Nathan Schneider | ||||
| title: "Startups Need a New Option: Exit to Community" | ||||
| summary: "Why are we building disposable companies?" | ||||
| tags: [internet-of-ownership] | ||||
| --- | ||||
|  | ||||
| Founders create startups for all sorts of reasons. Often, the motivation | ||||
| is a mix between the founders' desires to do well for themselves and to | ||||
| do something worthwhile for others. Dreams of greatness might figure in | ||||
| there too. Rarely, however, is the overriding reason to build a company | ||||
| people want to get rid of. But that is what the startup pipeline is | ||||
| designed to produce. | ||||
|  | ||||
| When a startup company takes early investment, typically the expectation | ||||
| is that everyone is working toward one of two "exit" events: selling the | ||||
| company to a bigger company or selling to retail investors in an initial | ||||
| public offering. In either case, the startup is a hot potato. One group | ||||
| of investors buys in order to sell to another group of investors who buy | ||||
| in to sell to the fools down the road. There's something sort of | ||||
| pyramid-scheme-ish about all this. The exit event, also, is often the | ||||
| beginning of the end of any positive social vision that the company | ||||
| might have held. | ||||
|  | ||||
| What if startups had the option to mature in a way that gets them out of | ||||
| the investors' hamster wheel? | ||||
|  | ||||
| In the coming months, I will be exploring strategies and stories that | ||||
| could help create a new option for startups: Exit to community. In E2C, | ||||
| the company would transition from investor ownership to ownership by the | ||||
| people who rely on it most. Those people might be users, workers, | ||||
| customers, participant organizations, or a combination of such | ||||
| stakeholder groups. The mechanism for co-ownership might be a | ||||
| cooperative, a trust, or even crypto-tokens. The community might own the | ||||
| whole company when the process is over, or just a substantial-enough | ||||
| part of it to make a difference. | ||||
|  | ||||
| When a startup exits to community, founders should see enough of a | ||||
| reward that they feel their risk and hard work was worth it. Investors | ||||
| should see a fair return for their risk. Most importantly, the key | ||||
| stakeholders should know the company is worthy of their trust and | ||||
| ongoing investment because they co-own it. For a social-media company, | ||||
| this might mean that users have a meaningful say in how their private | ||||
| data is or isn't used. For a gig platform, it might mean that the gig | ||||
| workers co-determine their working conditions and what is done with the | ||||
| profits they produce. These kinds of outcomes could help prevent the | ||||
| massive accountability crises that now beset today's most successful | ||||
| venture-backed startups. | ||||
|  | ||||
| One way to begin exploring E2C could be by identifying a subset of | ||||
| startups in venture capital portfolios that lie in "zombie" | ||||
| territory---somewhere between failure and exit-ready. Investor owners | ||||
| would benefit from having a new way of liquidating investments that | ||||
| would otherwise lie dormant. In some cases, the community might be in a | ||||
| position to buy the company with cash on hand---especially if it came | ||||
| back to them in later savings or profits. In other cases, E2C might be | ||||
| financed externally on the expectation of future growth, as is generally | ||||
| done for employee-ownership conversions using an Employee Stock | ||||
| Ownership Plan. Startups might also plan ahead for E2C by identifying | ||||
| particular guardrails that keep this option open as they negotiate their | ||||
| early rounds of financing. As with the ESOP---and with [the venture | ||||
| capital industry | ||||
| itself](https://logicmag.io/scale/the-unicorn-hunters/)---a targeted | ||||
| policy intervention may be necessary to make this kind of financing | ||||
| attractive enough to be feasible. These possibilities and more are the | ||||
| kinds of things I've been thinking about and would like to think about | ||||
| with others. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Why not, you might ask, just begin these startups under community | ||||
| ownership? This is certainly an option, and it's one that I have | ||||
| enthusiastically supported through the \#PlatformCoop community and | ||||
| through co-founding the Start.coop accelerator. But getting going under | ||||
| community ownership doesn't seem like the right approach in many cases. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Ambitious startups are a risky endeavor, and it may not be fair to | ||||
| distribute that risk with early-stage participants. Also, startups | ||||
| usually need to make a few dramatic pivots early in their life, and | ||||
| having a large community of co-owners would make those hard decisions | ||||
| more difficult than if a small, high-trust group of founders is in | ||||
| charge. Centralizing the risk and responsibility early on is a | ||||
| reasonable strategy for startups. Later, once the company has found its | ||||
| market and its footing, the transition to accountable community | ||||
| ownership will better suit the nature of the business. With E2C, we get | ||||
| the best of both worlds---the dynamic startup, then the accountable, | ||||
| sustainable public asset. | ||||
|  | ||||
| For me, this vision came together in conversations with social | ||||
| enterprise lawyer [Jason Wiener](http://jrwiener.com/team/jason/) (who | ||||
| has participated in some exits to community), along with sources of | ||||
| inspiration that include [Zebras Unite](https://www.zebrasunite.com/), | ||||
| [Louis | ||||
| Kelso](https://osf.io/v7fe2/?view_only=2ffd750b4ba54001beb5a459d61faff0), | ||||
| [platform cooperativism](https://platform.coop/), and the | ||||
| [steward-ownership](http://steward-ownership.com/) network. Now it is | ||||
| time to bring more people into the conversation. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Our team at the [Media Enterprise Design | ||||
| Lab](http://cmci.colorado.edu/medlab/) at the University of Colorado | ||||
| Boulder is looking for collaborators on this work. This includes | ||||
| entrepreneurs, activists, investors, policy advocates, researchers, and | ||||
| more. Do you want to join us? [Let | ||||
| ](mailto:medlab@colorado.edu?subject=E2C)[us](mailto:medlab@colorado.edu?subject=E2C)[ | ||||
| know](mailto:medlab@colorado.edu?subject=E2C) what you'd want your E2C | ||||
| to look like. | ||||
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