HomeNewsTrendsMark Cuban turned 300 of his employees into millionaires after selling a firm for $5.7 billion

Mark Cuban turned 300 of his employees into millionaires after selling a firm for $5.7 billion

Mark Cuban said, 'In every business I’ve sold I’ve paid out bonuses to every employee that was there more than a year.' The Shark Tank judge also said that except one, none of the other companies has had a layoff right after the sale.

June 10, 2024 / 18:31 IST
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MicroSolutions, a software firm, was Mark Cuban's first company. It was sold for $6 million. (Image credit: Reuters)
MicroSolutions, a software firm, was Mark Cuban's first company. It was sold for $6 million. (Image credit: Reuters)

American businessman and Shark Tank judge Mark Cuban recently revealed that he turned 300 of his employees into millionaires when he sold an audio streaming service to Yahoo for $5.7 billion in stock in 1999.

In a post on X, the investor shared that whenever he sells a business, he always sets aside some of the proceeds to divide it among the company’s employees.

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“In every business I’ve sold I’ve paid out bonuses to every employee that was there more than a year,” Cuban wrote, adding that when he sold Broadcast.com, 300 out of his 330 employees became millionaires. "Microsolutions, I paid out 20 percent to our 80 employees. HDNet wasn't as big , but paid out about 20 percent of what I got to employees, Mavs (NBA’s Dallas Mavericks) wasn't a total exit but we paid out more than $35 million to employees."

He also said that except HDNet (now known as AXS TV), none of the other companies had any layoffs right after the sale.

MicroSolutions, a software firm, was Cuban's first company. He had sold it to CompuServe in 1990 for $6 million, CNBC reported. According to his tweet, Cuban took 20 percent of the sale price and divided it among 80 of his employees, which amounts to roughly $15,000 shared among each of his 80 employees, if distributed equally.