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Keep Term Sheets Simple for Quicker Cash to Spend

Startup Professionals Musings

The first capital a young company receives usually takes the form of common stock, the same class of shares the founders hold. Venture capitalists and later round investors like the preferred convertible shares. These “IV drip” financings may reduce risk for investors, but put more pressure on founders.

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A Primer on Angel Investment ‘Simple Term Sheets’

Startup Professionals Musings

The first capital a young company receives usually takes the form of common stock, the same class of shares the founders hold. Venture capitalists and later round investors like the preferred convertible shares. These “IV drip” financings may reduce risk for investors, but put more pressure on founders.

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The Seeds Have Changed: An Epilogue to The New Venture Landscape

K9 Ventures

Another thing I noticed was that I was now referring companies that I had invested in at a “pre-seed” (capitalization intentional) stage over to folks who would previously be considered my peer venture funds doing Seed-stage investments. Seed is the New A. The seed round has ballooned. Implications for Founders.

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Keep Term Sheets Simple for Quicker Cash to Spend

Gust

The first capital a young company receives usually takes the form of common stock, the same class of shares the founders hold. Venture capitalists and later round investors like the preferred convertible shares. These “IV drip” financings may reduce risk for investors, but put more pressure on founders.

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The Silliness Of Recapping Seed Rounds

Feld Thoughts

The new money comes in at a pre-money valuation of $100, but includes a complete refresh of founder equity to 40% of the company. So the new investment gets 60%, the founders get 39.9%, and the $1m of seed money gets 0.1%. But in this cycle, I hadn’t seen it in a seed round. Sure – it happens.

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Startup Fairy Tales and Other Tall Tales That Venture Capitalists Tell

Growthink Blog

With this seed capital – more often than not totaling between $100,000 and $1,000,000 - the company accomplishes a number of key technical milestones, gets a beta customer or two, and then goes on a "road show" to venture capitalists around the country for capital to “scale” the business.