Wednesday, January 18, 2017
Snapchat's Disappearing Votes
When Alphabet (parent company of Facebook) Google and Facebook went
public, the founders of each, Sergey Brin and Larry Page and Mark
Zuckerberg, wanted to maintain control of their respective companies. To
accomplish, they created Class A shares, which have one vote and were
sold to the public, and Class B shares, which have 10 votes per share.
This effectively allowed the founders to control all decisions made by
the company. One drawback is that as the companies grew and needed to
issue more shares for employee stock options and acquisitions, the
number of A shares grew, diluting control of the companies. Now, Snap,
the parent of disappearing message app Snapchat, is planning an IPO and
it appears that the company is going even further: It has been reported
that the IPO will offer shares with no voting rights. All voting shares
will be retained by the co-founders Evan Speigel and Bobby Murphy, who
will retain 70 percent of the votes in the company.