How Much Do Startups Really Pay You? The Hidden Math Behind Your Bonus

This is the salary of an average startup employee.

 

As I was galavanting through the streets of X (formerly Twitter), I ran across a tweet by Alili Nelly who, if my afande skills serve me right, is the founder of Zidallie. The tweet touched on the expectations of Kenyan employees and employers. It was hilarious and tragic at the same time the paradox of life in Nairobi’s startup scene.

Being a dude who enjoys reading internet strangers’ thoughts and judging them (silently and harshly, of course), I dove into the replies and quotes. The one that intrigued me the most came from Chepsi, who shared their own experience as an employee:

Now that? That’s a horror story. But one I’ve heard before. Many times.

Having worked in people data analytics, I’ve sat in rooms where employees were discussed purely as costs. To put it bluntly you, the employee, are just another row on an Excel sheet. My job was to track your existence, attach a few data points to your name, and prepare presentations that helped management “optimize” you.

So, how does a company go from raising a million dollars to rewarding the MVP of the year with a supermarket voucher? How does a dev accept a 80K pm salary and think they’re getting Apple stock next month? Let’s take a little walk behind the scenes into the minds of founders, budget sheets, and why your paycheck may never match your potential.

Are you a cost or a revenue generator?

Here’s the cold truth: businesses typically spend around 30% of their total revenue on payroll. In some industries like manufacturing, that figure can balloon to 60% or more. So, if your employer finds a way to reduce your cost and extract more value from you? Best believe they’ll take it in a heartbeat.

That’s why they’ll post job ads asking for entry-level candidates with 5 years of experience they want to pay entry-level, but get the skill and output of a seasoned employee. That’s why they hire interns with ridiculous expectations and pay them in tea and mandazi (which, funny enough, they also see as a cost to reduce).

 

 

Understanding where you fall as an employee is crucial especially before signing that contract. In most businesses, there are generally two categories of employees:

Let’s use Zidallie  Nelly’s startup offering safe and reliable school transportation as an example.

  • Revenue Generating Employees

At Zidallie, the revenue-generating employees are the ones directly involved in bringing in money. That includes:

  • Drivers – They move the kids from point A to B, which is the core service Zidallie charges for.
  • Sales Agents – The folks hustling to onboard schools, parents, and partners so that Zidallie has customers in the first place.

If we were to group them by department, the Fleet team and the Sales department are directly linked to revenue.

  • Cost Center Employees

At Zidallie, a revenue-draining employee might be someone like me, say Nelly hired me as a people data analyst. My job would be to analyze driver performance, flag underperformers, and maybe even recommend who to let go based on their impact on revenue. I wouldn’t be generating revenue. I’d be supporting the people who do.

Other examples of support roles? Finance, HR, compliance, admin, all absolutely essential, but they don’t bring in cash directly. In accounting terms, we’re called a cost center and cost centers are always under pressure to do more with less.

From an employer’s perspective, the goal is simple: have more people bringing in money than draining it. Personally, I like to recommend a ratio of 4 revenue-generating employees for every 1 cost center hire. That way, the business can stay lean while still running smoothly.

So, that brings us to the next big question:
How do employers actually decide what to pay you?

What’s your Worth?

Let’s face it: you don’t get to decide your worth, your employer does. The more desperate you seem, the more you’re at risk of being undervalued. I didn’t invent the system.

And when a company hires you, they’re not just thinking about the salary you’re celebrating. There’s a hidden invoice stapled to your name. Let’s unpack the underlying costs.

Here’s what your employer is actually paying for:

  • Monthly Gross Salary – the figure you get on your employment offer/
  • Laptop or Equipment – probably a used HP, not a MacBook. Costly all the same.
  • Medical Insurance – SHA at a minimum, sometimes private insurance on top.
  • NSSF (Employer Contribution) – 6% of your salary, matched by the employer.
  • Housing Levy – employers in Kenya now contribute 1.5% of your salary to the Housing Fund.
  • Training & Onboarding – even if it’s just a crash course in email etiquette.
  • Office Costs / Remote Setup – desks, coffee, internet bundles, or WFH stipends.
  • Compliance Costs – KRA paperwork, labour contracts, NITA levies, etc.
  • Annual Leave + Sick Days – they’re paying you even when you’re not working.
  • Exit Costs – severance pay, legal compliance, notice period payouts, etc.
  • Indirect Costs – like office party costs.

 

Let’s use Chepsi’s payslip to show how his former employer valued him. He was earning a gross salary of KES 80,000 per month. But in today’s market, his net take-home would be around KES 58,212.65.

Where did the other 27% of his salary vanish to? Statutory deductions and PAYE.

 

  • National Industrial Training Levy (NITA): KES 50.00
  • NSSF Tier 1 Contribution (Employer): KES 480.00
  • NSSF Tier 2 Contribution (Employer): KES 3,840.00
  • Office Space: KES 10,000.00
  • Company Laptop Depreciation: KES 5,000.00
  • Sick Leave: KES 3,809.52 (roughly 1 day per month)

Compensation structures for revenue-generating employees and cost center employees often differ. Revenue folks usually enjoy performance-based perks like monthly sales commissions while cost center teams tend to have more fixed structures. Different teams, different math.

Increments and Bonuses

Now that we’ve broken down how companies calculate your total worth including all those hidden costs, let’s talk about how they decide to “reward” you. And by reward, we mean pay increments and bonuses or in Chepsi’s case, why they chose to give him a KES 3,500 Naivas voucher.

  1. 2 = Below Average / Needs Improvement
  2. 3 = Average / Meets Expectations
  3. 4 = Above Average / Exceeds Expectations
  4. 5 = Outstanding / Rockstar Performer

The Bell Curve Reality

Behind closed doors, there’s a lesser-known process called performance calibration. This is where senior managers and HR sit together to compare ratings across departments without your direct manager necessarily present.

  • 2–3 as “Above Average”
  • Majority as “Average”
  • A few as “Below Average”
  • At least 1 as “Low Performer”

So Why Did Chepsi Get a KES 3,500 Voucher and Not KES 2,000?

Let’s unpack the math and logic behind that decision.

  • 25% for salary adjustments (3.225 million) for current employees and team motivation
  • 15% for bonuses or “performance gifts” (1.935 million) for vibes and inshallah

  • 2 × 0.2 (Exceeds) = 0.4
  • 5 × 0.1 (Meets) = 0.5
  • 1 × 0.0 (Needs Improvement) = 0.0
  • 1 × 0.0 (Low Performer) = 0.0
  • Total = 1.2 units
  • 1 × 0.4 = 0.4
  • 3 × 0.3 = 0.9
  • 1 × 0.0 = 0.0
  • Total = 1.8 units
  • 2 × 0.7 = 1.4
  • 1 × 0.0 = 0.0
  • Total = 2.4 units
  • Total = 2.0 units
  • Bonus earned: 0.3 × KES 261,486 = KES 78,446

There are several ways to calculate your eligible bonus. Some methods link it directly to your monthly salary or annual compensation. I went with this version because, frankly, it makes the most sense and more importantly, it’s politics-proof. No room for office favorites or whispered backroom math here, just cold, clear logic.

  • Sometimes they’re given as vouchers or gifts
  • Taxes eat into cash bonuses
  • And often, the actual amount is capped or standardized (i.e. “everyone under X level just gets a fixed KES 3,500 or equivalent gift”)

Conclusion

So while Chepsi’s “mathematical bonus” may be ~KES 78,446, his actual disbursed bonus could easily have been capped at KES 3,500 in the form of a shopping voucher. It’s not about what you’re worth. It’s about what the company can afford to pay without raising eyebrows at the next investor update.

One thought on “How Much Do Startups Really Pay You? The Hidden Math Behind Your Bonus

  1. Honestly, reading this made me think about how little financial education employees get before joining a startup. If more people understood the real dynamics between revenue, costs, and compensation, there would probably be fewer horror stories like the ones you shared.

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