How to Evaluate a Startup Offer When You're Coming From Enterprise
Someone at a well-funded startup just slid you a term sheet. The mission sounds real. The team is sharp. The equity package has a lot of zeros. And after twelve years inside a Fortune 500 org chart, part of you is ready to move.
Here's what nobody tells you: most senior enterprise executives are terrible at evaluating startup offers. Not because they're not smart. Because they're applying the wrong framework. You've spent your career in a world where comp is largely transparent, equity is modest but predictable, and the company will almost certainly exist in five years. Startups operate on completely different physics.
This is how to run the evaluation properly - before you sign anything.
The Total Comp Calculation Most People Get Wrong
Before you compare a startup offer to your current package, you need to know what you're actually comparing. Most people look at base + equity and stop there. That's a mistake.
Your enterprise compensation has layers that don't show up in an offer letter. Annual bonus. Employer 401(k) match. Stock grants that vest quarterly. Health coverage premiums you've stopped noticing. Tuition reimbursement. Life insurance. The fully loaded cost of replacing your current package is almost always 30-40% higher than base salary.
Build a spreadsheet. Not a mental model - an actual spreadsheet. Line-item your current package. Then line-item the startup offer. Include:
- Base salary (annualized)
- Target bonus (% of base, not just "up to")
- Equity: vested current value vs. startup FMV
- 401(k) match + retirement contributions
- Health, dental, vision (employer premium contribution)
- RSU vest schedule (what you'd leave on the table)
According to Carta's 2024 equity report, only 47% of startup employees who receive options actually exercise them. The #1 reason: they couldn't afford the tax bill at exercise. Understand your strike price and the AMT implications before you say yes.
How to Actually Read an Equity Package
You're being offered 50,000 options. Sounds like a lot. Means almost nothing without four more numbers.
Here's what you need to ask for, in writing, before you evaluate any equity offer:
Your 50,000 options as a percentage of the cap table. If there are 100 million shares fully diluted, you own 0.05%. If there are 10 million, you own 0.5%. Order of magnitude difference in outcome.
This gives you the current fair market value. Multiply by your shares to get a paper value. That's your starting point - not what you'll see on exit, but a baseline for comparison.
If investors have a 2x liquidation preference, they get their money back twice before common shareholders (you) see anything. At a modest exit, common equity can be worth zero even if the company "sells for $100M."
Standard is 90 days. Some startups have moved to 10-year windows. If it's 90 days and you leave or get let go, you may have to come up with tens of thousands of dollars immediately or forfeit everything. Non-negotiable information before you sign.
Run the "1% rule" as a quick gut-check: would 1% of this company's realistic exit value be life-changing money? If the company needs to exit at $1B for your equity to matter and it's currently valued at $50M Series A - you're pricing in 20x growth just to break even on risk. Know what exit size you need, and ask the founders what they're building toward.
One more thing. Preferred vs. common shares. You almost certainly have options to purchase common shares. Investors own preferred. That's not automatically bad - but in any exit below a certain threshold, preferred shareholders are made whole first. Model out your outcome at three exit scenarios: 1x current valuation, 3x, and 10x. Be honest about which is realistic.
What Enterprise Execs Systematically Underweight
There's a reason a lot of enterprise-to-startup moves fail within 18 months. It's not competence. It's a mismatch in operating context that nobody talked about honestly during the interview process.
Enterprise gave you air cover. Armies of specialists. Defined processes. A brand that opens doors. At a 50-person startup, you are the process. You are the specialist. And the brand recognition is whatever you can generate in the next quarter.
The biggest mistake I see is when executives interview for a startup role the way they'd interview for a Fortune 500 role. They get hired for what they've built. They fail because they can't build it again from scratch with one-tenth the resources.
- Operator-turned-VC, First Round Capital portfolioThe questions you should be asking in your final round conversations:
- "What does my team look like in year one, and what headcount am I budgeted for in year two?" - Red flag if they dodge this.
- "Who was in this role before me, and why did they leave?" - Get the actual name and look them up.
- "What does the board expect from this role in the first 90 days?" - Misalignment here destroys executives fast.
- "Walk me through the last time a major initiative failed. What happened?" - How they answer tells you more than any case study.
- "Show me your last three months of board deck revenue charts." - Real numbers beat polished narratives every time.
A McKinsey study on executive transitions found that 40% of senior hires fail within 18 months. The leading cause in startup settings: unclear scope of authority and misalignment on what "success" looks like in year one. Define it before you sign.
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The Due Diligence Most Candidates Skip
You are making a financial bet on this company. Treat it like one.
The information asymmetry in startup hiring is massive. Founders and hiring teams are selling. You're buying. Most of what you hear in interviews is best-case framing. Your job is to find the gap between the pitch and reality before you commit.
Here's a practical due diligence checklist for a Director+ hire:
Ask directly: "How many months of runway do you have at current burn?" If they've raised a Series B and last round was 18+ months ago, ask when they expect to raise next and what the funding environment looks like. You don't want to join 6 months before a forced down round.
Ask for the last 12 months of ARR (Annual Recurring Revenue, i.e., subscription income) growth on a month-over-month basis. Not a summary - the actual chart. A company growing 5% per month is very different from a company that grew 80% last year and has been flat for six months. Both can tell the same fundraising story.
Who are the lead investors? Have they backed companies through downturns before? Do they have reserves to follow on? A founder-friendly Tier 1 fund is different from a growth fund that needs 3x returns in 4 years and will push the company toward a quick exit or a risky IPO. These decisions directly affect your equity outcome and your job security.
For any SaaS or subscription business, ask about net dollar retention (NDR - meaning the percentage of revenue retained from existing customers including expansions, minus cancellations). Best-in-class is 120%+. Under 100% means the company is losing more than it keeps from existing customers. No amount of new sales fixes that long-term.
Talk to former employees before accepting. Not just the references the company gives you - find them yourself on LinkedIn. Look for VPs and Directors who left in the last 24 months. One 30-minute conversation with someone who was in a similar role will tell you more than ten rounds of interviews. Ask specifically: "What was the hardest part of working there?" and "What would you have needed to know before joining?"
A Simple Risk Framework for the Move
Not all startup risk is equal. A pre-revenue Series A is a different bet than a Series D company with $80M ARR heading toward an IPO. Calibrate your expectations - and your equity demands - accordingly.
Here's a rough risk tier model for Director+ evaluations:
- Tier 1 (High risk / High ceiling): Seed to Series A, under $5M ARR, pre-product-market fit. You need 0.5-1%+ equity to justify the risk. Salary will be below market. Take this if you can afford 2+ years of lower cash comp and genuinely believe in the mission and founders.
- Tier 2 (Moderate risk / Real upside): Series B/C, $10-50M ARR, proven product, scaling go-to-market (GTM means how a company sells and distributes its product). Comp should be 80-100% of market, equity 0.1-0.5%. This is the sweet spot for most senior enterprise moves.
- Tier 3 (Low risk / Limited upside): Series D+, $100M+ ARR, preparing for IPO. Salary at or above market, but equity is late-stage and heavily diluted. Less entrepreneurial upside, more career stability. Closer to a public company move than a "real" startup.
Neither Tier 1 nor Tier 3 is wrong. But be honest about which risk tier you're evaluating and whether your comp demands match that tier. The most common mistake: expecting Tier 3 salary with Tier 1 equity. Founders see through it immediately.
The median time from Series B to exit is 7.2 years (PitchBook, 2024). At that timeline, your equity is likely to experience 2-3 additional funding rounds, each diluting your stake by 15-25%. Model in dilution when projecting equity outcomes. What looks like 0.3% today could be 0.1% by the time there's an exit.
What to Do This Week
If you have an offer on the table or are actively evaluating a startup role, here's a concrete action plan:
Current package fully loaded vs. new offer fully loaded. Include all benefits, bonuses, retirement, and what you'd forfeit in unvested equity at your current company. The gap is usually bigger than you expect.
Fully diluted share count, your percentage, last 409A valuation, liquidation preferences, and exercise window post-termination. Any company unwilling to share this is a yellow flag. It's standard practice at credible startups.
LinkedIn search: "[Company name] former VP/Director." Filter for people who left in the last 18-24 months. Send a direct message asking for a 20-minute call. Most will talk. The information you get is worth more than any other due diligence step.
"What does success look like for this role at 6 months, 12 months, and 24 months - and can you walk me through how the board thinks about this function?" Listen for specificity. Vague answers mean vague expectations. Vague expectations end careers.
Use the actual cap table numbers you've requested. Model exit at 1x, 3x, and 10x the current valuation. Account for dilution from future rounds. How does each scenario compare to staying in your current role for three more years? That comparison is the real decision.
The best time to negotiate startup comp is before you sign - not after you start. Once you're in, leverage drops to near zero. Negotiate base, equity, signing bonus, accelerated vesting on change of control, and an explicit 90-day success definition. Most startups expect negotiation at the Director+ level. Asking is not a red flag. Not asking is leaving money on the table.
The startup vs. enterprise decision isn't about which is better. It's about whether this specific offer, at this specific company, at this specific stage, is worth the specific tradeoffs. Run the numbers. Ask the hard questions. And make the decision with eyes open.
If you're not sure how your current profile is reading to startup hiring teams - or whether your executive positioning is filtering you out before you ever get to the offer stage - the Career Audit surfaces that in 90 seconds.
For a broader view of how AI is reshaping executive hiring decisions, see our analysis on AI displacement trends by role. And if you're evaluating multiple paths, your LinkedIn positioning may be costing you conversations before the offer stage ever arrives.
Find your blind spot in 90 seconds.
41% of professionals have a critical blind spot filtering them out. Find yours free.