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7 Things No One Ever Tells You About Raising Venture Capital Financing |
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7 Things No One Ever Tells You About Raising Venture Capital Financing
by Ben Yoskovitz
There are numerous great resources out there to help you raise venture capital or angel financing. Hopefully I’ve helped in some small way with my thoughts on pitching VCs and reviewing financing options.
But there are some parts of the process that few people talk about. And they’re important; especially for startups raising money for the first time.
- Signing a term sheet is only step one. Of course there are many steps involved in getting a term sheet. You’ll submit an elevator pitch
(followed by a bunch of other things), have numerous meetings,
negotiate, etc. — all before you get the beloved term sheet. Getting a
term sheet is a significant milestone
but if you think the process is smooth sailing after that, think again.
Post-signing of the term sheet is when the real work begins!
- It might not be worth negotiating the finer points of the deal at the term sheet stage.
The fact is, everything can be changed once a term sheet is signed, so
negotiating on the finer points of it may be overkill. You may push
hard to have very specific language in the term sheet only to realize
when you get to the real agreement that it will be re-worded anyway. This doesn’t
mean you shouldn’t negotiate for what you want and believe in, but
recognize what the term sheet is: a letter of intent to invest, not a
binding or absolute contract.
- Due diligence is an “interesting” process. And for
most entrepreneurs it’s a completely foreign concept and frustrating
experience. You’ve just got a term sheet, you’re excited, you’re ready
to roll, and suddenly you get a rather extensive list of questions and
deliverables the venture capitalists would like to see. Furqan Nazeeri does a very good job of explaining due diligence. He even includes a typical list of questions/requirements that Softbank uses (where he works.)
- The paperwork is extremely detailed and extensive.
Maybe this won’t come as a surprise (because legal documentation is in
a special category unto itself), but when the closing paperwork for
your financing is in a binder so heavy it’ll collapse your desk…that’s
something! And even with good lawyers on your side to wade through
things, there’s a good chance you’ll be neck-deep in legalese.
continue at his blog....
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