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And that's the risk/bargain those employees accepted when they took the job at Figma rather than some public company with predictable equity comp.

Look, it sucks, I get that. I was an employee at a successful startup that did end up going public and made me a bunch of money. But I also worked at three other startups that didn't go anywhere and my options/stock ended up being worthless. I also worked at a "boring" public company with equity comp that amounted to a pretty small (but helpful!) quarterly bonus.

I accepted each of those jobs knowing what I was getting into, and knowing that I probably wouldn't see any kind of big payday (the one where I did was life-changing, but if that hadn't happened, I'd still be fine, financially). That's the nature of the beast. It's disappointing when it doesn't work out, but don't play the "some of them have kids" card: people need to plan their finances based on normal, expected outcomes, not on the moonshot.

And regardless, Figma still seems like a great company, with great products. Employees will still likely do really well, whether through a different acquisition or by going public. They'll just have to wait longer.



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