【融资系列】 Term Sheet 谈判的艺术
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termsheet财经 |
recently got some comments on a blog post I did a while ago from
Yoichiro “Yokum” Taku, a partner at Wilson Sonsini Goodrich
& Rosati and the blogger behind Startup Company Lawyer,
on my post about evaluating one or more term
sheets.
Yokum gave me the following feedback:
At first glance, my initial feedback is that you have overvalued the RORFR/Co-sale and (non-cumulative) dividend rights.
All deals have a ROFR/Co-sale and they are rarely invoked as a practical matter. West coast deals have non-cumulative dividends, which makes a dividend preference meaningless. Also, I think that the relative weighting of liquidation preference and anti-dilution is a bit off. I think that liquidation preference is significantly more important than anti-dilution.
This got me thinking that I should repost my original treatise
and see what folks think.
——————————————————————————————————–
By the time I was in the 9th grade, I had been playing chess for
a few years (as in I knew the rules) but I didn’t play seriously
and more often than not I lost.
What was it in that book that allowed me to take advantage of
the situation?
What does this have to do with negotiating term
sheets?
In my view there are 12 important terms on a typical Series A /
B term sheet.
Term
Rich
King
1. Investment / price
10
-
2. Board of directors
-
8
3. Option pool refresh
10
-
4. Preemptive rights
1
3
5. Andi-dilution protection
5
-
6. Registration rights
1
1
7. Drag along rights
1
5
8. Right of first refusal / co-sale
5
-
9. Dividend right
5
-
10. Liquidation preference
7
-
11. Protective provisions
-
8
12. Redemption
1
-
Here a 10 means it is really important to get as favorable a
result as possible on this term, a 1 means it is not so important
and a “-” means it doesn’t apply (i.e. a zero).
The next part of this post is to provide a range of typical
results for each term which will give you a means to rank each term
in each term sheet with a “1,3 or 5″ where 1 is “unfavorable”, 3 is
“fair” and 5 is “favorable.”
- Investment/price.
I think there are two ways you can rank price. One is to rate it relative to your expectation and another is to rate it relative to similar companies (in terms of stage, geography, sector, etc.). If you don’t have comparables, you can fairly easily get them, for example Dow Jones puts out a quarterly survey of VC deal terms which includes pre-money valuation (send me an email if you want a copy). If you’re less than 80% of your benchmark, that’s probably unfavorable, if you are within +/- 20% than that’s fair and if you’re over 120%, then it’s favorable. - Board of directors.
This term comes down to simple math. If you give up and don’t have control of the board, that’s unfavorable, if it’s tied, call it fair and if you control it, that is quite favorable. BTW, the reason I didn’t rate the board control a “10″ on the “king” scale is because even when you give up control, your board members are bound by fiduciary obligations to the firm, i.e. they can’t do whatever they want. - Option pool refresh.
Often time this will show up as a separate term in the term sheet, however it is actually just another bite at the apple in terms of price. Traditionally there is a refresh pre-deal so that after the round the company can execute on its hiring plan without needing to expand the pool for 12-18 months. You will have to develop your hiring budget if you haven’t already. Given that benchmark and your hiring equity budget, I’d say less than 12 months is favorable, 12-18 months is fair and more than 18 months is unfavorable. - Preemptive rights.
As you know, preemptive rights give your investor the right to invest in future rounds. This is of moderate economic value, however you are giving up some control of future financings. There is remarkably little variation in how this term gets negotiated, probably because of its relatively low importance in the grand scheme. I’m told the only area that gets negotiated is whether the investor has an “overallotment right” whereby they can take a portion or all of the pro rata of another investor in the same series who didn’t participate. That said, unless something unusual is in your term sheet, it’s probably a 1 for rich and 3 for king. - Anti-dilution protection. Anti-dilution is a
pretty important economic term.
In terms of the range of possibilities, no anti-dilution would be a 5, broad-based weighted average would be a 3 and full-ratchet would be a 1. I think the vast majority of deals end up as broad-based weighted average. Very few deals avoid it altogether, but it can be done, particularly in later stage or very hot deals. - Registration rights.
Reg rights have some economic value and in theory you do give up some control, but in reality they’re close to worthless. You can push on these and most investors will give in when pressed. You can negotiate when the right kicks in and cutbacks. But bear in mind that investors will love it if you waste time negotiating this because it is not an important term. Unless something unusual is going on, I’d rate this a 1 on both dimensions. - Drag along rights.
Most deals include drag along rights and like many of the other terms, the key is in the voting thresholds. I rated this a 1/5 on the rich/king scale. In terms of economics the issue is with regard to a sale of the company where the preferred stock, because of special rights, is indifferent to a deal that would be better for Common. However, the bigger issue is on the control side of the equation where you could get dragged into a sale that you don’t want to do. So in terms of rating both the economic and control sides, I would say that if the thresholds are such that a single investor can unilateral drag along, that’s a 1, if it takes 2 or more investors that’s a 3 and if it takes investors plus either a neutral party or Common (you) then it’s a 5. - Right of first refusal / co-sale. I rated this
a 5 because this is essentially a “lock-up” on the founders stock
which seriously affects liquidity and thus value.
It doesn’t really affect control issues. If you read the actual section of the stock purchase agreement that describes this term it’s several pages of bureaucratic procedures for a sale that in the real world you can’t imagine ever occurring (which they don’t). As a result, the only real counter party for selling common stock is the other investors or the company with the investors approval and they’re all quite likely to low ball. Unfortunately, I’ve never heard of avoiding this term completely, so in terms of how to rate it, I’d say that if you can negotiate a right to sell some portion (say 20% on an annual basis) you’re at a 5 otherwise if it’s a standard lockup then you’re at 3. - Dividend right.
I rate this a 5 on the economic scale. In terms of the range, there is no dividend which is a 5, then there is a simple interest dividend which I’d say is a 3 and a 1 would be a compounding dividend. For some reason, the dividend rate has been 8% ever since I’ve seen term sheets. You can negotiate the rate, but the bigger battle is whether you pay a dividend and how the rate compounds. - Liquidation preference.
This is a very important economic term that doesn’t have any importance in terms of control. The issue here is during a sale, how do investors get paid out. I’d say about 1/3 of deals have a preference at 1X but no participation, another 1/3 have a preference with a cap and participation and the balance a preference with no cap plus participation and that’s pretty much how I’d rate it, i.e. 5 for 1X preference/no participation, 3 if with a cap in the 2-4X range and 1 if with no cap and participation. - Protective provisions.
This is very important from a control perspective but not so economically. While there are a ton of these protective provisions, the key ones relate to sale/merger of the company and future rounds of financing. As with other control rights, the key is in the voting thresholds so I’d assess this the same as 7 (drag along rights). - Redemption.
Finally, we get to number twelve, redemption rights. This is an almost worthless economic right. I’ve never seen or heard of this being exercised and most investors will acquiesce if you push on this. Unless you see something unusual, I’d rate this a 3.
Ultimately the individual rating combined with the overall
importance of each term will allow you to create a weighted average
total for each term sheet on both the rich and king
dimensions.

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