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Investment Advisory 101: Key Terms Every Founder Must Know

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Starting a business is exciting, but raising money for it? That can feel overwhelming. You walk into meetings with investors, and suddenly everyone’s speaking a different language. This blog acts like a guide. At the Startup Zone, we have worked with hundreds of founders and helped them protect their vision and make the best choices for the long term.  

Why These Terms Matter More Than You Think 

Before we dive in, here’s something important: every term you’ll read represents a decision point. Each one affects how much of your company you keep, how much control you have, and what happens when things go well (or not so well). 

The founders who succeed aren’t necessarily the ones who know every legal detail. They’re the ones who understand enough to ask the right questions and know when to seek help. That’s the wisdom we want to share with you today. 

Pre-Money and Post-Money Valuation 

When investors talk about valuation, they’re simply asking: “What’s this company worth?” But here’s where it gets interesting there are two types you need to know. 

Pre-money valuation is what your company is worth before someone invests. Post-money valuation is what it’s worth after the investment. 

Here’s a real example: Imagine your startup is valued at ₹3 crores before investment. An investor gives you ₹1 crore. Your post-money valuation is now ₹4 crores. The investor owns 25% of your company (₹1 crore divided by ₹4 crores). 

Why does this matter? Because this calculation determines how much of your company you’re giving away. Many first-time founders focus only on how much money they’re getting, not on how much they’re giving up. Both numbers matter equally.

Equity and Dilution

When you start your company, you own 100% of it. But as you raise money, that percentage goes down. This is called dilution, and it’s not necessarily bad, it just means you own a smaller piece of what should become a much bigger pie. 

Think of it this way: Would you rather own 100% of a ₹10 lakh company, or 40% of a ₹50 crore company? The second option gives you ₹20 crores in value versus ₹10 lakhs. Smart dilution helps you grow. 

The key is planning for this from the beginning. Most successful startups go through multiple funding rounds. If you’re not careful about how much you give away early on, you might end up with very little by the time your company succeeds. 

At The Startup Zone, we’ve seen founders give away too much equity in early rounds, leaving them with minimal ownership when their company finally takes off. A wise approach is to think several steps ahead, not just about the money you need today. 

Term Sheet  

term sheet is like a letter of understanding between you and an investor. It’s not a final contract, but it outlines all the main points: how much they’re investing, what they’re getting in return, and the rules of the relationship. 

Think of it as a blueprint before building a house. Once everyone agrees on the blueprint, you move forward with construction. Changing the blueprint later is expensive and complicated. 

Here’s what many founders don’t realize: term sheets are usually “non-binding,” which sounds flexible. But backing out after signing one damages your reputation. Investors talk to each other, and word spreads quickly in startup circles. 

This is why you should never rush to sign a term sheet, no matter how excited you are about the money. Take time to understand every clause. Show it to experienced founders or advisors. One week of careful review can save you years of regret. 

Liquidation Preferences  

Imagine your company gets sold or shuts down. There’s some money to distribute. Who gets it first? This is what liquidation preferences determine. 

With a standard 1x liquidation preference, investors get their money back before anyone else sees a rupee. If they invested ₹2 crores, they get ₹2 crores off the top. 

Some investors ask for 2x or even 3x preferences, meaning they get multiples of their investment back first. This can significantly impact how much founders and employees receive in an exit. 

There’s also something called participating preferences, meaning investors get their money back first, AND then share in whatever’s left over. It’s like getting to eat your cake and have it too. This can be tough on founders, so watch out for this term. 

The healthier arrangement is non-participating, where investors choose: either take their preference amount or share proportionally with everyone else, whichever is more. They can’t do both. 

Convertible Notes and SAFE Agreements 

Early-stage founders often use something called a convertible note or SAFE agreement. These are tools that let you raise money quickly without arguing about what your company is worth right now. 

Here’s how it works: an investor gives you money today, and it converts into company shares later, during your next funding round. It’s like an IOU that turns into ownership. 

Why do this? Because when you’re just starting out, putting a precise value on your company is difficult. You might be pre-revenue, or you might have early traction but no clear trajectory yet. These instruments let you postpone that conversation until you have more proof of your business model. 

These agreements include a valuation cap (the maximum value at which the money converts) and a discount (typically 15-25%, giving early investors a reward for taking risk early). 

For example, if your cap is ₹5 crores but you raise your next round at ₹10 crores, the early investor’s money converts at ₹5 crores, giving them twice the shares they’d get otherwise. It’s a thank-you for believing in you early. 

Cap Table Management 

Your cap table (capitalization table) is simply a spreadsheet showing who owns what percentage of your company. It sounds simple, but it becomes complex quickly. 

At first, it’s just you and maybe a co-founder. Then you add investors from a seed round. Then you issue stock options to key employees. Then you raise a Series A with new investors. Soon, your cap table looks like a complicated family tree. 

Keeping this organized is crucial. Messy cap tables scare away future investors they see it as a red flag that you’re not detail-oriented. They also lead to disputes when memories differ about who was promised what. 

We recommend using proper cap table management software from day one. Learn more about managing your startup’s finances and maintaining clean records that will serve you through multiple funding rounds. 

Vesting Schedules and Cliff Periods 

Here’s a scenario that terrifies investors: you and your co-founder each own 50% of the company. Six months after they invest, your co-founder quits but walks away with their entire 50% stake. Now you’re running the company alone, but half of it belongs to someone who’s no longer involved. 

This is why vesting exists. Instead of owning all your shares immediately, you earn them over time typically four years. There’s usually a one-year cliff, meaning if you leave before the first anniversary, you get nothing. After that, you earn shares monthly. 

Vesting protects everyone. It ensures founders are committed long-term. It’s fair to investors who are betting on your continued involvement. And it’s fair to other team members who stay and build value. 

Most investors won’t fund you without founder vesting. Don’t see this as mistrust, see it as standard practice that protects the business everyone’s building together. 

Pro-Rata Rights 

Pro-rata rights give existing investors the option to invest in your future rounds to maintain their ownership percentage. 

For example, let’s say an investor owns 15% of your company. You’re raising a Series A that would dilute them to 10%. With pro-rata rights, they can invest enough additional money to stay at 15%. 

From a founder’s perspective, this has pros and cons. Pro: investors who truly believe in you can double down, and they already know your business. Con: it takes up room in future rounds that could go to new investors with different expertise or networks. 

The wisdom here is balance. You want loyal investors who support you through multiple rounds, but you also want to bring in fresh perspectives and capabilities. Consider pro-rata rights as part of your overall funding strategy, not in isolation. 

Drag-Along and Tag-Along Rights 

Drag-along rights mean that if majority shareholders (usually investors) want to sell the company, they can force minority shareholders (often founders and employees) to sell too. 

Why does this exist? Imagine someone wants to buy 100% of your company, but a small shareholder refuses to sell. The deal falls through, and everyone loses out. Drag-along rights prevent this scenario. 

Tag-along rights work the opposite way. If founders want to sell their shares to someone, other shareholders can “tag along” and sell their shares on the same terms. 

These rights create fairness. Major shareholders can’t block important opportunities, and minor shareholders can’t be left behind when others cash out.

Anti-Dilution Provisions 

Sometimes companies raise money at lower valuations than previous rounds. This is called a down round, and it’s painful for everyone, especially early investors who paid a higher price. 

Anti-dilution provisions protect investors from this situation.  

There are two types: full ratchet and weighted average. 

Full ratchet is harsh on founders. It adjusts the investor’s price to match the new, lower price, as if they’d invested at that valuation from the start. This can massively dilute founders. 

Weighted average is gentler. It adjusts the price based on a formula that considers how much money was raised and at what price. The dilution is spread more fairly among all shareholders. 

Here’s our guidance: avoid full ratchet anti-dilution if you possibly can. It can destroy founder ownership in down rounds. Weighted average is the more balanced, fair approach that’s become standard in healthy investor-founder relationships. 

Board Composition and Voting Rights 

Your board of directors makes major decisions about company direction. Investment terms specify who gets board seats typically some founders, some investors, and sometimes independent members. 

A founder-controlled board has more founder seats than investor seats. An investor-controlled board is the reverse. A balanced board has equal representation plus an independent member as a tiebreaker. 

You also need to understand voting rights. Some decisions require board approval, others require shareholder votes, and some major decisions might require approval from specific classes of investors. 

The wisdom we’ve learned: controlling your board matters immensely. It determines whether you can execute your vision or constantly need permission. Many successful founders maintain board control through early rounds, only giving it up when the company is mature and needs more governance structure. 

Due Diligence Process 

Due diligence is when investors investigate everything about your company before finalizing their investment. They’ll examine your finances, legal documents, contracts, intellectual property, team backgrounds, and more. 

This process can feel invasive, but it’s necessary. Investors are betting significant money on you they need to verify everything you’ve told them is accurate. 

The best approach? Be organized from day one. Keep clean financial records, properly document all agreements, ensure your IP is correctly assigned to the company, and maintain transparent communication. 

At The Startup Zone, we help founders prepare for due diligence by showing them what investors will look for. Being prepared not only speeds up the process but also demonstrates professionalism that builds investor confidence. 

Working with The Startup Zone 

Reading about these terms is valuable, but true understanding comes from application and guidance. Every founder’s situation is unique, and generic advice can only take you so far. 

The most successful founders we work with share certain characteristics: they ask questions, they seek guidance from those who’ve walked the path before them, and they understand that raising money is just one part of building something meaningful. 

These terms we’ve discussed today will appear in your term sheets and investment documents. You’ll negotiate around them, make trade-offs, and hopefully make decisions that serve your long-term vision. 

But remember: your company is more than a cap table or a valuation. It’s a mission you believe in, problems you’re solving, and people you’re serving. Never let fundraising become more important than the business itself. 

Conclusion   

Understanding investment terms is foundational, but it’s just the beginning. You’ll need to learn how to build relationships with investors, craft compelling pitches, manage your finances wisely, and navigate the emotional rollercoaster of entrepreneurship. 

We created The Startup Zone to be a source of wisdom for founders navigating these challenges. Whether you’re preparing for your first pitch or managing your third funding round, we’re here to share knowledge that’s been tested in real situations by real founders. 

Explore our resources on fundraising strategies for Indian startups, learn from founder stories, and access practical templates that will help you through every stage of growth.

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