The details here remain unclear to me, and even this tweet is somewhat vague.
> I was given an offer that would explode same day. I had to forfeit all of my vested shares earned over my 3.5+ years at Windsurf. I was ultimately given a payout of only 1% of what my shares would have been worth at the time of the deal.
Was forfeiting the vested shares conditional on accepting the offer, or did he have no choice over the matter? Was the payout what he was offered as part of accepting the deal, or was that his consolation for not accepting it? The wording is genuinely unclear to me.
I literally see 3 interpretations here:
1. Offer was to forfeit shares in exchange for 1% payout, but OP rejected and still has shares
2. Offer was to forfeit shares in exchange for undisclosed payout, but OP rejected and got 1% payout instead and still has shares
3. He had to forfeit shares regardless of accepting offer, got 1% payout
(1) and (3) are both shitty offers from Google, but (2) is reasonable. Exploding offers are not uncommon in tech acquisitions. My guess is that (2) is what happened, since that's not in contradiction with prior reporting.
The company should have been worth at least the cash it had on hand, which has been reported as ~$100M. It's also been reported that all vested equity and VC shares were bought out (although apparently perhaps with a few exceptions for people who declined the offer), which meant that the employee unvested equity stakes were "undiluted" from whatever they were before (hard to judge, but maybe 5-10%), to 100%. So every employee had their stake in the company increase 10x-20x. So if the company had then decided to simply close up and distribute the remaining cash as dividends to the employees, it would be as if each employee had simply been bought out pre-deal at a $1-2B valuation. And that was the absolute worst case scenario - clearly Windsurf found a better deal with Cognition.
Pretty clear that OP signed away his shares and ended up with only 1% of what they were worth.
Presumably they told him his shares would be worthless anyway an if he didn't take this "great offer" it would expire when he left the room and he would get nothing...
...and he fell for it.
It wasn't dilution of other things people are talking about here... those things happen but this guy straight up just got had.
So sure equity is worthless... if you sign it away.
> I was given an offer that would explode same day. I had to forfeit all of my vested shares earned over my 3.5+ years at Windsurf. I was ultimately given a payout of only 1% of what my shares would have been worth at the time of the deal.
Was forfeiting the vested shares conditional on accepting the offer, or did he have no choice over the matter? Was the payout what he was offered as part of accepting the deal, or was that his consolation for not accepting it? The wording is genuinely unclear to me.
I literally see 3 interpretations here:
1. Offer was to forfeit shares in exchange for 1% payout, but OP rejected and still has shares
2. Offer was to forfeit shares in exchange for undisclosed payout, but OP rejected and got 1% payout instead and still has shares
3. He had to forfeit shares regardless of accepting offer, got 1% payout
(1) and (3) are both shitty offers from Google, but (2) is reasonable. Exploding offers are not uncommon in tech acquisitions. My guess is that (2) is what happened, since that's not in contradiction with prior reporting.