In a move that feels both radical and inevitable, a British entrepreneur has handed the keys to his company to the very people who built it. The decision to sell to the employees rather than a private equity firm or a corporate giant is a quiet revolution in ownership, one that challenges the traditional hierarchies of capitalism. The entrepreneur, who prefers to remain anonymous, cited a growing disillusionment with the ‘extract and exit’ model that dominates the startup ecosystem.
Instead, he chose to embrace the Employee Ownership Trust (EOT), a structure that transfers majority ownership to a trust for the benefit of all employees. It is a model that has quietly gained traction in the UK, with over 500 companies now under EOT control. What does this mean for our digital future?
It signals a shift towards a more democratic economy, where control is not concentrated in the hands of a few but distributed among the many. For technologists like myself, it is a fascinating experiment in scaling human-centric systems. The EOT model aligns with the principles of decentralisation we see in blockchain and DAOs but grounded in real-world governance.
Employees become stakeholders in the truest sense, incentivised not just by wages but by a shared purpose. It is a powerful counterpoint to the gig economy, where labour is atomised and disposable. The results seem promising: higher productivity, lower turnover, and a culture of collective responsibility.
Of course, it is not without its challenges. Complexity in structuring, tax implications, and the need for cultural change can be daunting. But as we face a future where automation threatens to displace millions, models like the EOT offer a path to more equitable prosperity.
It is technology serving humanity, not the other way around. The entrepreneur’s decision to sell to his staff is a quiet act of defiance against a system that often values speed and scale over stability and fairness. It is a reminder that the purpose of business is not just profit but purpose.
As we design the next generation of digital tools, from AI to quantum computing, we must ask: who holds the power? The answer, increasingly, is the people who do the work.









