Nathan Schneider + Jason Wiener
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We think it might.
Principal at Jason Wiener|P.C., “a boutique law and business consulting practice providing expertise to social enterprises and mission-driven business models”
Assistant Professor of Media Studies at the University of Colorado Boulder, leader in the “platform cooperativism” movement; co-organizer of the original conference and co-editor of the collective manifesto, Ours to Hack and to Own
A growing movement to build democracy into the operating system of the internet, from worker-led startups to #BuyTwitter
How many companies in a given VC or angel portfolio either:
Is there latent value in your portfolio that a strategic co-op conversion can unlock?
Can we do better than a 1/10 success rate for liquidity?
% of convertible note portfolio
# of growing portfolio companies with no strategic buyer
# of mature portfolio companies ready to exit
A new market of potential buyers
Users, workers, or other stakeholders buy the company from early investors
The company benefits from the trust and loyalty that come through co-ownership and democratic governance
Early investors benefit with a fair return
All can celebrate the social benefit
Identify candidates in fund portfolios for co-op conversions
Co-op capital partners finance buyout with exit to future co-owners
New co-owners pay off bridge capital with revenue from their business
Consider a portfolio company, TechCo, that is growing rapidly and not yet profitable, but the founder doesn’t want to exit. A mission-aligned private-equity buyer with co-op experience negotiates a buy-out with committed exit to user-ownership. There is little to no likelihood of a convertible note converting. The fund prefers to extend the note rather than claim the principal with accrued interest.
(Adapted from Indie.vc)
or, why is this not utopian?
A North Boulder solar pv company converted from a partnership to a worker-owned cooperative. Jason was in house counsel during the process.
A thriving, women-led stock-photo platform co-owned by hundreds of photographers, competing effectively in a competitive online market.
Successful Boulder technology services firm and social innovator converted from a partnership to a worker cooperative in early 2017, preserving flexibility and boosting a high-integrity brand.
Founded as a cooperative in 1846, it’s no accident that nobody accuses this company of “fake news.” Today it models the potential for co-ops in large-scale media.
At the 2017 annual meeting, Twitter shareholders voted on a widely publicized proposal to study the possibility of co-op conversion. Is this as crazy as it sounds?
We want to build pathways for entrepreneurs and investors to embrace cooperative models—and a fairer internet for everyone.
The Internet of Ownership
Directory of the platform co-op ecosystem
Ours to Hack and to Own
A collective manifesto on platform cooperativism
Nathan Schneider nathan.schneider@colorado.edu |
Jason Wiener jason@jrwiener.com |