What Do You Owe Your Employees?

Most business owners hope to reach the day when someone offers to buy their business. If that day comes, the payoff isn't just financial. It's validation for years of risk-taking, sleepless nights, personal guarantees, and sacrifices that most employees never see. But that success can raise an uncomfortable question: What exactly do owners owe the people who helped them get there? Should employees share in the proceeds when a business is sold? Does an owner have an obligation to find a buyer who will protect the culture and the jobs that have been built over the years? Or is the owner's responsibility fulfilled by paying people well, treating them fairly, and creating a great place to work so long as the business is theirs to run? This week, Jay Goltz, Liz Picarazzi, and Ted Wolf wrestle with those questions—and not always from the same perspective. They agree that employees deserve respect and appreciation. But they also point out that employees weren't the ones who pledged their homes as collateral, absorbed the losses, or spent years wondering whether the business would survive. In other words, where should owners draw the line between gratitude and obligation? Plus: As Liz expands Citibin beyond New York City, should her marketing reflect that shift? Or should she lean into her hometown roots and emphasize that if her trash bins can make it there, they can make it anywhere? Liz also explains her plan to capture some recurring revenue.