Anonymous wrote:Options are usually for non-liquid stage of companies and are valued at $0 until IPO other liquidity event, unless the company has a standing buyback offer.
This isn't true whatsoever. Typically, options are priced at the most recent funding valuation for a private company.
Practically, your options aren't worth anything until you can turn it into actual $$$s which would happen through an IPO or acquisition or your company becomes high profile enough to have private shares trade on the private secondary markets (there are several).