Ninjacart, a business-to-business marketplace for agricultural produce, said on Tuesday it has implemented a ₹100 crore (about $13.4 million) employee stock ownership plan (Esop). Current and former employees with vested Esops as of December 2021 are eligible to sell all their vested Esops.
The move is aimed at helping the startup attract and retain good talent while bolstering the company’s vision of building technology and infrastructure for farmers, resellers, retailers, consumers, and supply chain participants.
This is Ninjacart's second Esop buyback, the first one was in 2019. The latest Esop buyback announcement follows Flipkart and Walmart announcing a fresh round of joint strategic investment in Ninjacart worth $145 million in December 2021.
According to Thirukumaran Nagarajan, co-founder and CEO of Ninjacart, the move is aimed at recognising the work of "our current and previous employees who stood by us and helped us achieve every milestone with their extraordinary effort". "This Esop buyback programme is a small gesture of our gratitude towards our employees because, without them, we will not be where we are today. Esop buyback plans offer people a true chance at wealth creation and it allows employees to participate in the company's success which has only been possible through their hard work and loyalty," he said.
In 2019 December, the company raised funding from Walmart and its Indian e-commerce arm Flipkart, and did a follow-on round of funding in October 2020. It also secured $90 million from US-based investment firm Tiger Global Management in April 2019. Ninjacart's other investors include venture capital firms Accel, US-based Qualcomm Ventures, Russia’s HR Capital, Japanese venture capital firm-cum-accelerator Mistletoe, Infosys co-founder Nandan Nilekani’s NRJN Trust and South Korea-based Neoplux, the venture arm of Doosan Corp.
Ninjacart, operated by 63Ideas Infolabs Pvt Ltd, was founded in 2015. It began as a hyperlocal grocery delivery company and then shifted to a business-to-business setup. Farmers can sell vegetables and fruit directly to business establishments such as shops, retailers and restaurants via the startup’s platform. Ninjacart says it works closely with the farmers and has till date helped over 1,00,000 farmers across 150 villages to generate better revenue.
The company says it is looking to "acquire more skilled professionals, develop a healthy working environment for its employees, and hire people with leadership characteristics", going forward.
To be sure, startups such as Ninjacart are bending backwards to sweeten deals for in a bid to hire and retain employees in this competitive market. Last year, 32 Indian startups spent close to ₹3,000 crore, or about $440 million, to buy back Esops, according to a VCCircle analysis in December. In comparison, 12 companies reportedly bought back close to $50 million worth of Esops from their employees in 2020.
Esops are usually allocated to qualifying employees of the company at the time of hiring, during appraisals or at the time of reward program announcements. They have a vesting period during which the employees cannot sell their holdings, but, once the vesting period is over, the company may facilitate a buyback option or the employees may choose to sell their shares as part of the secondary offering during the time of a fundraising exercise in the company to liquidate their holdings.
Esop buybacks became popular in 2021 as startups fought hard to retain and hire talent. One in three start-ups that announced Esop buybacks during the year also turned unicorns. The names included Browserstack, upGrad, Sharechat, Zetwerk, Meesho, Licious, Vedantu, Moglix, PharmEasy, Acko, and Cred.
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