Zynga stock options fired

Zynga stock options fired

Posted: SantaFXe On: 10.06.2017

There is no joy in Cityville -- the mighty Pincus was called a lout. Zynga this morning woke up to a front-page story in the Wall Street Journal, accusing the social gaming company and its CEO Mark Pincus of strong-arming employees into giving up previously-granted stock options.

zynga stock options fired

It's a major black mark for Zynga, which expects to go public later this month. Before continuing, please understand that I am not accusing the WSJ of getting its facts wrong. Instead, I'm suggesting that it drew the wrong conclusions from those facts. At issue here were stock option grants given to early Zynga employees. Most of the grants were designed to vest over a four-year period, which is fairly standard within Silicon Valley. There is no promise as to what the shares may ultimately be worth, but start-up employees are an optimistic bunch that often left higher-salaried jobs with more established companies.

The Real 'Scandal' Over Zynga Stock Options Is Over Misleading Reporting | Techdirt

Once an employee's options vest, he or she is generally entitled to keep them whether or not they remain employees although companies sometimes have the right to buy back stock at a pre-determined price.

Unvested options disappear if an employee leaves -- either voluntarily or involuntarily. At Zynga, however, Mark Pincus apparently likes to do things a bit differently. Rather than simply firing under-performing employees and handing unvested options over to the replacement, Pincus often likes to find another position within Zynga where the employee might still be able to contribute.

But because that new position was often lower down the corporate totem poll, Pincus basically wanted to cut the person's compensation by reducing his or her number of unvested options vested options were not touched.

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As far as WSJ is concerned, this is a grievous abuse of power. By renegotiating, Pincus is breaking his word. And possibly the company's contractual obligations. It's a non-unionized startup, where the CEO is well within his rights to simply fire an under-performing employee and recover unvested options.

In fact, that's what happens at most companies. The difference at Zynga is that Pincus seems intent on retaining talent, even if that talent either didn't live up to initial expectations or didn't adequately match up to the changing needs of a fast-growing company.

Since when are CEOs not allowed to decide certain employees are overpaid? Perhaps Pincus should have shown a bit more humility by giving up some of his own options under the theory that he was at faulty for the original hiring decision. But, from looking at Zynga's offering documents, liquidity doesn't really seem to be a major problem.

For example, the company issued over 33 million in new stock options in , according to regulatory filings. Pincus was not among the recipients.

zynga stock options fired

In retrospect, however, Zynga could have avoided this entire mess. And I don't just mean by firing people instead of renegotiating with them.

zynga stock options fired

Instead, it could have tied some of its options to performance metrics rather than time metrics. This is a company that largely organizes itself by product group i.

Zynga to employees: Give back our stock or you'll be fired - CNET

Such products have easily-measured metrics, including revenue, users, frequency of use, etc. Why vest options just based on ongoing employment, when you could also include product-specific performance objectives? But, again, that's Monday morning quarterbacking. What Zynga did may sound bad on newspaper, but is little more than morally-acceptable business as unusual.

Fortune has obtained an email sent today by Pincus to Zynga employees, related to the WSJ story. Sign up for my daily email newsletter on deals and deal-makers: Etsy Is Reorganizing Its Workforce, Which Includes More Layoffs. Fortune eBay Promises to Match Prices Against Amazon, Walmart, and More.

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