The trust is the shareholder; employees are beneficiaries. In a US Employee Ownership Trust (EOT), the trust buys and holds the company's shares for the benefit of employees. Employees are beneficiaries, not shareholders of record, so the usual shareholder rights (like voting to elect directors) sit with the trust, not with each person. The shares are typically voted by a "directed" corporate trustee that acts on instructions from the trust's stewardship body rather than deciding on its own.
Governance lives in the trust instrument. US EOTs are usually a perpetual purpose trust, and their governance is flexible and customizable. Most use a three-part structure:
- Trust stewardship committee — safeguards the trust's purpose, owes a duty to the trust agreement, and directs the trustee.
- Corporate board — runs the business as in any company (strategy, budget, senior hiring and firing). The EOT layer sits on top through share ownership.
- Trust enforcer (or trust protector) — an independent backstop who can act if the purpose is violated. Because purpose trusts have no individual beneficiary to enforce them, an enforcer is commonly required by state law; whether it is mandatory depends on the trust type and state. This role is often where a founder stays involved, so a "founder seat" usually comes through trust roles rather than perpetual share ownership.
Employee voice is real but typically representative rather than direct: the trust agreement can let employees nominate or elect committee members, propose board candidates, and vote on certain designated issues. Most EOTs use representative governance rather than one-person-one-vote on everything, though the model can be drafted closer to either end.
Why not just make employees voting shareholders who elect the board? The answer is the asset lock. Holding shares in trust for a defined purpose is what keeps the company from being easily sold and keeps it employee-owned long term. If each employee held freely votable, transferable shares, you reintroduce exactly what the EOT is built to prevent: stock that can be accumulated, concentrated, or pushed toward a sale, and a board answerable to whoever controls the votes at the moment. The structure deliberately separates benefit and voice (which employees get) from transferable equity (which it keeps out of individual hands). For contrast, in a closely held ESOP employees also usually have only limited voting rights and do not elect the board; the trustee votes the shares. EOTs take a similar "trust votes the shares" approach but anchor it to a permanent purpose rather than to retirement accounts.
One tax caution: do not import UK rules. The UK grants a capital-gains exemption to owners who sell a controlling stake to a qualifying EOT and conditions it on the trust holding majority voting and economic control; the US has no equivalent EOT capital-gains break, so US governance is not tax-conditioned the same way and stays flexible.
This is general education, not legal or tax advice; the specifics (what rights beneficiaries hold, how the board is filled, whether a founder seat persists) live in your trust agreement and bylaws, so confirm with an attorney experienced in employee-ownership transitions.
If you have set up a US EOT or worked through these choices, you can add detail or correct anything here, especially how the enforcer requirement and board-election rights played out in your trust and state.