House Committee Advances ERISA Litigation Reform
On a party-line vote on March 17, the House Committee on Education and Workforce passed the ERISA Litigation Reform Act, a bill that would make it more difficult for plaintiffs to move through the ...
In partnership with the Employee Ownership Expansion Network (EOX)
This page is for anyone who wants to learn more about employee ownership, especially if you want to explore whether employee ownership might be the right fit for your company or your clients.
You likely found this page as a link from our colleagues at the Employee Ownership Expansion Network (EOX). EOX can connect you with your state's employee ownership center to help get you in touch with nearby business owners and others with expertise in employee ownership. This page will give you the top resources we at the NCEO offer to answer your questions about employee ownership.
For a general overview, see our article How an Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP) Works.
For a step-by-step guide to assessing an ESOP for your company, check out our ESOP Pre-Feasibility Toolkit.
Recommended books:

Selling to an ESOP and Financing the Deal
A detailed guide for owners, managers, and advisors of closely held businesses who are considering a sale to an ESOP.

This concise book explains the rules, uses, benefits, and other aspects of employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs).
Join our EOT Peer Gatherings: Online meetings for companies that have or are considering an EOT. Participants share experiences, discuss challenges, and gain insights from different parts of the employee ownership community.
For an overview of how EOTs work, see our Introduction to EOTs.
Recommended book:

Using an Employee Ownership Trust for Business Transition
Learn how EOTs work, whether one is right for your company, and how they are created, financed, and governed.
See our overview of the types of equity compensation or a webinar on direct employee ownership.
Recommended books:

Describes models for direct employee ownership, with technical details plus case studies.

The Decision-Maker's Guide to Equity Compensation
How to find and implement an equity compensation strategy that works for your company.

Equity Compensation for Limited Liability Companies (LLCs)
A guide to creating equity compensation arrangements for LLCs.
Who Should Own Your Business After You? is a brief introductory booklet designed for business owners who want to start exploring if employee ownership might be the right fit for them and their companies. Real business owners explain why and how business owners sold their business to their employees. It provides an overview of the five main forms of employee ownership in the United States: employee stock ownership plans or ESOPs, worker cooperatives, employee ownership trusts (EOTs), direct share ownership, and being acquired by a company that is already employee-owned. Readers will leave knowing what paths to explore and tools to learn more.
On a party-line vote on March 17, the House Committee on Education and Workforce passed the ERISA Litigation Reform Act, a bill that would make it more difficult for plaintiffs to move through the ...
As employee ownership trusts (EOTs) have grown in popularity in the US and abroad, the intersection and overlap between EOTs and steward ownership have become increasingly important. The post below ...
In a recent NCEO webinar titled What's Driving Your ESOP Valuation?, Andy Manchir and Dan Roach of KSM walked through the forces shaping year-end 2025 ESOP valuations and what ESOP companies can do ...
Employees in companies with ESOPs share the rewards of work through ownership, but most ESOP companies also share some of their annual profits with employees. My new paper "How ESOP Companies Share ...
In the new report A Nation at Risk to A Nation at Work: The Case for a National Talent Strategy, the Bipartisan Policy Council urges Congress and the administration to improve incentives for employee ...
We'll break down the accounting concepts that trip up your clients, explain why ESOP financials look different from traditional company books, and help you develop a process for identifying and explaining these items before your clients' accountants have to.
Discuss sellers of stock and others who customarily have not been named as defendants alongside ESOP Trustees are being sued in lawsuits relating to ESOPs.
This session focuses specifically on new plan formation and first-year operations.
You can unsubscribe at any time, and you can sign up for the mailing list for the Illinois Employee Ownership Center at the same time! Sign up below.
There’s no better way to learn about employee ownership than seeing it up close, and your in-state employee ownership exists to do exactly that.
We'd be glad to speak with you about your interest in employee ownership and recommend next steps, from in-person events to webinars, from our directory of professional service providers to talking with your peers in our networking groups.