Venture Capital Termsheets
- Term Sheet
- Stock Purchase Agreement
- Certificate of Incorporation
- Investor Rights Agreement
- Voting Agreement
- Right of First Refusal and Co-Sale Agreement
- Management Rights Letter and
- Indemnification Agreement
Some of the stuff is pretty dense so I wouldn't recommend anyone running wild with these docs without experienced counsel at your side. Likewise, I wouldn't look to these as the standard if your courting friends and family or angels. F&F/Angel deals should be much cleaner, often using a convertible debt structure to simplify negotiations and avoid significant mistakes (e.g. setting the wrong valuation/expectations) that could hamper your ability to raise institutional venture capital when you need it most. There are a host of resources/books on angel investing, some of which are collected in my Angel Investing Bible at Amazon.
I hope you find these model docs useful and take me up on reviewing them. If the VC is the only guy at the negotiating table who understands key deal terms, your deal and your company will likely suffer.
If you have (non-legal) questions after review, feel free to comment here or email me...
Comments (2)
Dan, Are you seeing a move away from certain terms and conditions that used to be the "norm" and are now too onerous for small companies to deal with?
There haven't been any significant shifts in the last couple years.
If we look back 3-4 years, full-ratchet antidilution and >1X liquidation preferences were more common than they are today. Those provisions are less acceptable today as the market has improved and some funds saw it backfire when later money decided to adopt prior round rights (including those heavy preferences and full-ratchet). What's good for the goose...
I would note that BS markets (Boston, Silicon Valley) continue to see more >1X liq pref than non-BS markets like Florida and elsewhere. I have my hypotheses as to why, but not enough data to draw any conclusions.
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