This approach is awesome, but (I am not a lawyer, this is not advice!) one drawback is that the whole concept of an option is that it's optional. If the company succeeds, you exercise your option and spend that money to get a much larger return. If you must buy the option, and the company does not succeed, then you've spent the money and it's gone. You've lost the "option" aspect of an option.
And of course, yes, the company may say "we're spending our money to buy this for you, don't worry" the truth is money is money. Someone (company or you) is buying the option early, thus having less money to spend on other things.
Alternatives could be the company pays you that money, so it's yours to spend as you see fit. Including, someday, buying the option if you want.
And of course, yes, the company may say "we're spending our money to buy this for you, don't worry" the truth is money is money. Someone (company or you) is buying the option early, thus having less money to spend on other things.
Alternatives could be the company pays you that money, so it's yours to spend as you see fit. Including, someday, buying the option if you want.
Hope that helps!