TechCrunch News 11月08日 22:40
初创公司如何应对大公司薪酬差距
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在人工智能竞赛的背景下,Meta和OpenAI等公司提供百万美元的薪酬,加剧了初创公司与大型科技公司之间的薪酬差距。然而,专家和创始人建议,早期初创公司可以通过制定慷慨、公平且灵活的薪酬策略来提供有竞争力的薪酬方案。Pulley的联合创始人兼CEO Yin Wu强调,初创公司不应试图与大公司直接竞争,而应在薪酬方案中尽可能慷慨,尤其是股权方面,并设立明确的问责制和绩效目标。同时,薪酬和股权策略应保持灵活性,避免法律风险和内部政治问题。建立统一的薪酬框架,并考虑员工的激励因素,是初创公司吸引人才的关键。

⚖️ **弥合薪酬差距,初创公司应采取差异化策略**:面对大型科技公司在高薪诱惑下的竞争,初创公司不应盲目攀比,而应通过制定慷慨、公平且灵活的薪酬策略来吸引人才。Pulley的CEO Yin Wu指出,初创公司应专注于提供有吸引力的股权激励,并认识到其与稳定大公司在吸引候选人方面的根本差异。

💡 **股权激励是关键,慷慨程度需深思熟虑**:在薪酬方面,尤其是股权激励,初创公司应采取更为慷慨的策略。Yin Wu建议,在公司取得巨大成功后回望,不太可能后悔给予员工过多股权,因为他们的贡献是公司成功的基石。同时,设定清晰的绩效目标和问责机制,并关注股权归属的悬崖期,以确保员工的贡献与回报相匹配。

🔄 **薪酬策略的灵活性与合规性**:初创公司的薪酬和股权策略不应一成不变,而应保持灵活性,以便随着公司的成长和市场变化进行调整。关键在于从一开始就确保公平性,为未来的调整奠定坚实基础,避免法律纠纷和内部矛盾。例如,Pulley公司为每个职位设定统一的薪酬范围,并提供处于行业前沿的股权比例,这种框架使其能够随着公司发展而调整具体的股份数量。

🤝 **公平原则是基石,吸引人才需多维度考量**:在制定薪酬方案时,公平是核心原则,这不仅有助于避免潜在的法律风险(如性别薪酬歧视),更能建立积极的企业文化。Epigram Legal的创始人Rebecca Lee Whiting强调,除了薪酬结构,理解目标候选人的激励因素至关重要。初创公司应认识到,无需一开始就追求完美,允许在后续融资阶段进行调整和优化是正常的。

Startups have never been able to offer the same sizable salaries as big tech companies. Now with companies like Meta and OpenAI willing to pay million-dollar salaries amid the AI race — the compensation divide has grown even larger.

Early-stage startups are not doomed though. If they develop a compensation strategy that is generous, fair, and flexible, they can offer competitive compensation packages and give themselves room to adjust their approach as they grow, according to founders and experts who were onstage at TechCrunch Disrupt 2025.

Startups shouldn’t try to compete with big tech companies anyway, Yin Wu, the co-founder and CEO of equity management software Pulley, said on stage at TechCrunch Disrupt in October. She added that a stable tech company and a startup don’t generally attract the same potential candidates to begin with.

Startups should instead be as charitable as they can in their compensation packages, Wu said, regardless of their inability to match a big tech company’s paycheck.

“My pretty strong opinion when it comes to equity for a startup is that you should be more generous than what you think you should be,” Wu said. “I think it is unlikely, if the company is really successful, you’re going to look back and say, ‘man, I gave away too much equity of everyone that was at my company trying to make this company really successful.’”

Randi Jakubowitz, the head of talent at 645 Ventures, agreed. Jakubowitz added that when a startup is looking to make a competitive offer, they should set clear goals for the person they are hiring to ensure that hire lives up to the compensation they are getting.

“Make sure you’re holding them accountable and make sure that you understand what the implications are from a vesting cliff standpoint,” Jakubowitz said, regarding when employees gain control over their equity stakes. “That’s where, if you don’t move quickly if someone’s underperforming, that’s equity that you’ll never get back if they are fully vested. Make sure that there’s very clear accountability. “

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The panelists also stressed that companies don’t need to get their compensation and equity strategies set in stone from the start. Startups should instead ensure their approach is fair from the beginning, so even if they do want to change, they have the proper foundation to do so without setting themselves up for legal trouble or soured office politics.

For Wu, and her company Pulley, that meant setting standards around compensation packages. Wu said the company pays a set range for each role — regardless of where a potential employee is based — and consistently builds compensation packages with equity offerings in the 90th percentile.

“Having this framework allowed us to be able to grow and say ‘great, as the company continues to do well, the actual number of shares you receive is going to differ because the value the companies differ, but that framework is still applied.”

Rebecca Lee Whiting, founder of Epigram Legal and fractional general counsel, added that having these standards will help companies avoid potential legal pitfalls down the line. For instance, it helps companies avoid offering unequal pay across candidates of different genders — which is something all companies should try to avoid ethically — but is also illegal in states like California, Whiting noted.

Whiting, Wu and, Jakubowitz all agreed that as long as founders approach building their compensation packages with fair intentions, everything else can be adjusted or changed down the line.

“I think it’s really important to think about not just that process. Think about who are the people you’re trying to hire and what is going to incentivize them to take that offer,” Whiting said. “It’s not something that you have to get right out of the gate. You will likely have to do clean up post the Series B and acknowledging that is okay. But don’t try and get it perfect out of the out of the gate when you’re hiring your first few people.”

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初创公司 薪酬策略 股权激励 人才吸引 大科技公司 TechCrunch Disrupt Startups Compensation Strategy Equity Incentives Talent Acquisition Big Tech TechCrunch Disrupt
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