Fundraising
Master the art of raising capital. From pitch decks and investor relations to term sheets and due diligence, these articles cover everything founders need to know about fundraising strategy, negotiation, and execution.
What is a Cap Table? Complete Guide for Startup Founders
A capitalization table tracks ownership, dilution, and shareholder rights in your startup. Every founder, investor, and advisor needs a clear cap table before raising capital. It s
Understanding Term Sheets: Key Clauses Every Founder Must Know
A term sheet outlines the terms of investment. Economic terms (valuation, liquidation preferences) determine how much you own post-exit. Control terms (board seats, drag-along righ
Fundraising Readiness Checklist: Are You Ready to Raise?
Fundraising requires more than a great idea. You need product-market fit signals, clear financials, legal documentation, and a compelling narrative. Use this 25-item checklist acro
Should I Take On Investors? A Decision Framework for Profitable Small Businesses
Most fundraising advice assumes you should raise. Seven questions to determine whether equity funding is right for your profitable business. Covers what you give up, alternatives t
The E-2 Visa Investment Spreadsheet: What Actually Counts as Qualifying Spend
A practical guide for founders tracking qualifying investment expenses for E-2 treaty investor visa applications. Eight categories of qualifying spend with typical ranges, document
Down Rounds, Washout Rounds, and Navigating Startup Financial Distress
Model distress scenarios before they happen. Options include down rounds, washout rounds, debt restructuring, and acquihires. Cap table implications matter more than valuation perc
Alternative Financing: Revenue-Based Financing, Grants, and When Not to Raise Venture Capital
Revenue-based financing means no dilution, no board seats, no covenants. Payments flex with revenue. VC is one option on a financing menu, not the default. When alternatives make m
What Different VCs Actually Look For: Analyzing the Pattern in Their Checks
Pre-seed VCs invest in founders and thesis fit. Series A VCs need proof: revenue, unit economics, replicable GTM.
The Option Pool Game: How to Plan for Dilution Before It Is Too Late
An option pool is shares reserved for employees. Typically 10-15 percent depending on hiring plans.
Pro Rata Rights, Board Seats, and Anti-Dilution: What You Are Actually Negotiating
Pro rata rights let investors maintain ownership. Board seats give voting power. Anti-dilution protects investors in down rounds.
SAFE Notes vs. Convertible Notes: Which One, When, and Why It Matters
A SAFE is not debt. A convertible note is debt that converts to equity. SAFEs have no maturity, no interest, and no repayment obligation.
The Cap Table: What Every Founder Must Understand Before Taking a Single Dollar
The cap table is the ledger of who owns what percentage of your company. Every round you raise changes it. Most founders do not understand how dilution works until they have alread
How to Write an Investor Update That Keeps Your Round Warm
Most founders either never send investor updates or send them only when things are going well. Both are mistakes. A well-written monthly update keeps warm investors engaged between
Post-Raise: The First 90 Days That Determine Whether the Money Actually Works
The money just hit your account. The round is closed. Everyone celebrates. And then the most critical phase begins: the first 90 days where you deploy the capital, set the operatio
The Fundraising Timeline: What Actually Takes How Long (And Why It Always Takes Longer Than You Think)
Founders consistently underestimate how long fundraising takes. The average seed round takes 3-6 months from first outreach to money in the bank. Series A takes 4-8 months. These a
How to Build a Data Room That Closes Rounds Instead of Stalling Them
A data room is the structured collection of documents an investor reviews during due diligence. A great data room accelerates the process. A poor one, with missing documents, disor
What Happens When Investors Challenge Your Numbers (And How to Win the Conversation)
Every investor will challenge your financial model. It is not hostility; it is their job. The founders who raise successfully are not the ones with unchallenged models. They are th
How to Negotiate Valuation Without Killing the Deal
Valuation negotiation is where most first-time founders either leave money on the table or blow up a deal by being unreasonable. The best valuation is not the highest number you ca
Bridge Rounds: When They Save Your Company and When They Bury It
A bridge round is a small financing, usually $200K to $1M, designed to extend runway until a larger round closes or until the company hits a specific milestone. When used strategic
Term Sheet Red Flags: What to Watch For Before You Sign Away Control of Your Company
A term sheet is the document that defines the economic and governance terms of your funding round. Most founders focus on valuation and ignore everything else, which is how they en
How to Run a Competitive Fundraising Process Without Burning Every Bridge in Town
A competitive fundraising process means multiple investors are evaluating your company simultaneously, creating urgency and leverage that improve your terms. It is not about playin
Seed Round vs. Series A: How Your Financial Model Must Change Between Stages
The financial model that closes a seed round and the financial model that closes a Series A are fundamentally different documents. A seed model is a hypothesis: it demonstrates tha
The 30 Investor Diligence Questions You Will Get. Here Are the Answers.
Every investor diligence process covers the same core questions. The founders who close rounds faster are the ones who have pre-built the answers, not the ones who construct them u
What Creandum, Profounders, and B2Ventures Actually Look For in Your Model
Tier-one VCs are not impressed by formatting or complexity. They are looking for internal consistency, sourced assumptions, honest scenarios, and a founder who can defend every num
Not All Money Is Equal. How to Pick the Right VC for Your Stage.
Picking the right VC is not just about who will write the largest check. Stage fit, sector expertise, portfolio conflict, partner availability, and reference checks from portfolio
Convertible Notes Are Not Free Money. Here Is What Founders Get Wrong.
A convertible note is a short-term loan that converts to equity at a future financing round. It is the most common pre-seed financing instrument, and it is also one of the most mis
Venture Debt: The Startup Financing Tool Nobody Explains Properly
Venture debt is a loan product designed for venture-backed startups. It is not equity and does not dilute founders, but it comes with covenants, warrants, and a maturity date that
Raise When You Don't Need To, Sell When You Don't Have To
The single most underrated principle in startup finance is timing. Raising capital from a position of strength produces better terms, better relationships, and better decisions. Se
Running Out of Cash During a Fundraise Is More Common Than You Think. Here Is How to Not Die.
Running out of cash during an active fundraise is one of the most dangerous positions a startup can be in. It shifts all negotiating leverage to the investor and forces decisions t
Stop Polishing Your Deck. Investors Are Not Buying the Font.
Polished decks with nothing behind them do not raise rounds. Messy decks with real substance do. Investors are not buying the design. They are buying the executor, the evidence, an
You Have 93 Seconds. Most Founders Waste 80 of Them.
According to DocSend, the average VC spends 93 seconds reviewing a pre-seed pitch deck. That is not a complaint about VCs. It is a design constraint. A deck's only job is to earn t