Comprehensive guide to term sheets for equity financing and convertible notes, including Series Seed and other standard forms
A term sheet is a non-binding document that outlines the principal terms of a proposed investment. It serves as the foundation for negotiation and the basis for drafting definitive legal agreements.
Except for specific binding provisions like exclusivity and confidentiality, term sheets are expressions of intent and do not create legally binding obligations until definitive agreements are executed.
Term sheets bridge the gap between initial investor interest and final documentation. They allow both parties to align on key economic and control terms before investing time and legal fees in comprehensive agreements.
Term sheets establish clear expectations on valuation, investment amount, investor rights, and founder obligations before significant legal costs are incurred.
Framework for negotiation
They provide a structured format for negotiations, ensuring all critical terms are discussed and agreed upon.
Speed to closing
With terms agreed upfront, drafting definitive agreements becomes largely mechanical, accelerating the path to closing.
Reference for legal counsel
Term sheets give attorneys clear direction on deal structure, reducing back-and-forth and legal costs.
Information rights: Financial reporting obligations
Participation rights: Pro rata rights in future rounds
Example sources:
Series Seed Term Sheet (Equity)
Y Combinator Series AA Term Sheet
NVCA Series A Term Sheet
Used for debt that converts to equity at a future qualified financing:
Principal amount: Investment size
Interest rate: Annual interest (typically 2-8%)
Maturity date: When note must be repaid or converted
Discount: Conversion discount (typically 15-25%)
Valuation cap: Maximum conversion valuation
Qualified financing threshold: Minimum raise to trigger conversion
Change of control: Treatment on acquisition
Example sources:
Series Seed Term Sheet (Convertible Note)
Techstars Bridge Term Sheet
SAFEs are so simple they typically don’t require separate term sheets - the SAFE itself serves as the complete agreement. However, some investors may want a summary term sheet covering:
The pre-money valuation determines what percentage of the company investors receive. For example:
Pre-money valuation: $8M
Investment: $2M
Post-money valuation: $10M
Investor ownership: 20%
Series Seed documents include an option pool calculation. Make sure you understand whether the option pool comes from pre-money or post-money shares.
2
Liquidation preference
Defines the order and amount of payouts in a liquidation event (sale, merger, or dissolution).Standard Series Seed terms: 1x non-participating preference
Preferred gets 1x their investment back first
Remaining proceeds distributed to common stock
Preferred can convert to common if that yields more
Avoid participating preferred with multiple liquidation preferences in early rounds - these can create misaligned incentives and complicate future financings.
3
Anti-dilution protection
Protects investors if you raise future rounds at a lower valuation (a “down round”).Series Seed standard: Broad-based weighted average
More founder-friendly than full ratchet
Adjusts conversion price based on new round size and price
Defines the size and composition of your board of directors.Typical seed stage structure:
1-2 common stock directors (founders)
0-1 preferred stock directors (lead investor)
0-1 mutual consent directors (independent)
Series Seed approach: Flexible based on round size and investor involvement
Board of Directors: 3 members- 2 elected by Common Stock (founders)- 1 elected by Series Seed Preferred (lead investor)
Protective provisions
Actions that require approval from preferred stockholders, protecting them from adverse changes.Standard Series Seed protective provisions require preferred majority approval for:
Changing rights of preferred stock
Creating new senior or pari passu securities
Paying dividends or repurchasing shares (with exceptions)
Changing authorized share numbers
Liquidating or selling the company
Changing board size
These are reasonable protections that most investors expect.
Voting rights
How each class of stock votes on company matters.Series Seed standard: Preferred votes with common on as-converted basis
Each preferred share votes as if converted to common
One vote per common share equivalent
Separate class votes only for protective provisions
This is the most common and founder-friendly approach.
Major Purchasers (typically $25K+ investors) receive:
Annual unaudited financial statements
Quarterly unaudited financial statements
Inspection and visitation rights
Small investors typically don’t receive these rights to reduce administrative burden.
Participation rights
Pro rata rights allow Major Purchasers to maintain their ownership percentage by participating in future rounds.Example: If you own 10% now, you can invest enough in the next round to maintain 10% after that round closes.These rights typically include:
Securities to Issue: Series Seed Preferred StockAggregate Proceeds: $[Investment Amount]Purchasers: Accredited investors approved by the CompanyPrice Per Share: Based on pre-money valuation of $[______] Including [X]% option pool post-money
Understanding the option pool
The option pool calculation significantly affects founder dilution.Example:
Pre-money valuation: $8M
Investment: $2M
Post-money option pool: 20%
Two calculation methods:
Post-money pool (founder-friendly):
Investor pays for 20% of their shares to fund the pool
Founder dilution: 20% from investment + portion of pool
Pre-money pool (investor-friendly):
Full 20% pool carved from founder shares before investment
Founder dilution: Higher
Series Seed documents default to post-money calculation.
Major Purchasers investing ≥ $[threshold] receive:
Annual unaudited financial statements
Quarterly unaudited financial statements
Standard information and inspection rights
2
Participation right
Major Purchasers have right to participate pro rata in subsequent equity issuances (with standard exceptions).
3
Expenses
Company reimburses purchaser counsel for flat fee of $[5,000-15,000].
This is standard for seed rounds. The flat fee caps your legal cost exposure for investor counsel.
4
Key holder matters
Founders and key employees must:
Have 4-year vesting (with 1-year cliff typical)
Include “Double Trigger” acceleration on change of control
Assign all IP to the company before closing
5
Future rights
Series Seed automatically receives rights given to later series (with appropriate economic adjustments).This protects early investors from being disadvantaged by later rounds.
Convertible notes are debt instruments that convert to equity at a qualified financing. They’re popular for early-stage rounds because they defer valuation negotiations.
Principal Amount: Total investmentInterest Rate: Typically 2-8% annually
Usually simple interest (not compounded)
Accrues from issuance date
Converts with principal at qualified financing
Investment: $100,000Interest: 5% per annum (simple)Time to conversion: 18 monthsTotal converting: $107,500
Maturity date
The date by which the note must be repaid or converted, typically 18-24 months from issuance.What happens at maturity?Three common approaches in Series Seed documents:
Automatic conversion to equity (most common)
Converts at pre-set valuation cap
Avoids forcing repayment or default
Holder option to convert
Noteholder chooses conversion or repayment
Company may prefer extension
Repayment with approval
Majority holders can demand repayment
Puts pressure on company to raise or exit
Make sure your maturity date gives you enough time to raise a qualified financing. 12 months is typically too short; 24 months is safer.
Qualified financing
The equity round that triggers automatic conversion.Typical threshold:500K−1.5M in new investment
Excludes notes converting in the round
Must have “principal purpose of raising capital”
Can’t be insider round to game the threshold
Conversion mechanics:
Qualified Financing: Series A at $1.00/shareNote discount: 20%Note conversion price: $0.80/share$100,000 note balance converts to:$100,000 ÷ $0.80 = 125,000 shares
Conversion discount
Rewards note holders for early risk by giving them a discount to the qualified financing price.Typical range: 15-25%
20% is most common for seed notes
Higher discounts for earlier, riskier investments
Lower discounts with a strong valuation cap
How it works:
Qualified financing price: $1.00/share
Note discount: 20%
Note conversion price: $0.80/share
Note holders get 25% more shares (1/0.8 = 1.25x)
Valuation cap
Sets a maximum effective valuation for conversion, protecting noteholders if your valuation increases significantly.Example:Note terms:
Valuation cap: $6M
Discount: 20%
Qualified financing:
Price: $2.00/share
Valuation: $12M pre-money
Outstanding shares: 6M
Conversion price calculation:Option 1 - Using discount:
2.00×801.60/shareOption 2 - Using cap:
6Mcap÷6Mshares=1.00/share ✓ (better for investor)Note converts at $1.00/share (the cap price)
Notes typically convert at the lower price between the discount and the cap, giving noteholders the better deal.
Change of control
Defines what happens if the company is acquired before a qualified financing.Common approaches:
Automatic repayment (most common)
Company repays principal + interest
Optional: +20-50% premium on principal
Holder choice
Noteholder elects: (a) repayment or (b) convert to common at cap
MFN provisions ensure that if you issue notes with better terms while existing notes are outstanding, prior noteholders automatically get those better terms.
How MFN works:
You issue Note A: 5% interest, 20% discount, $5M cap
Three months later, you issue Note B: 5% interest, 25% discount, $4M cap
Note A’s MFN triggers: Note A automatically adopts 25% discount and $4M cap
Why investors want MFN:
Protects against being disadvantaged by later notes
Prevents company from offering better terms to later investors
Creates parity among all noteholders
Founder consideration:
Limits flexibility in later negotiations
May need to offer same terms to all or not improve terms at all
Research standard terms for your stage, geography, and investor type. The documents in the Startup Starter Pack represent market-standard terms.Resources:
Identify your top 3-5 most important points. You won’t win every negotiation point.Example priorities:
Keep option pool at 15% (not 20%)
Four-year vesting with one-year cliff (not monthly from day one)
Broad-based weighted average anti-dilution (not full ratchet)
Founder maintains board control until Series A
Standard protective provisions only
3
Explain your reasoning
When pushing back, explain why:
“We need a 15% option pool because we only have 2 of our 8 key hires made”
“One-year cliff is important because the first year is when we’ll know if this works”
“We’d prefer to add an investor board seat at Series A when we’ll have more resources to support board meetings”
Reasoning is more persuasive than simple rejection.
4
Use your lawyer effectively
Your lawyer can:
Provide market context for each term
Play “bad cop” when needed
Negotiate technical language
Spot issues you might miss
Have your lawyer review the term sheet before you sign it, not after. Term sheet provisions largely dictate the final documents.
5
Document everything in the term sheet
If you negotiate a point, make sure it’s reflected in the term sheet. Oral agreements don’t bind lawyers drafting documents later.Get amendments to the term sheet in writing before proceeding to definitive documents.
If you used Series Seed or other standard forms in your term sheet, definitive documents should be largely mechanical. Major surprises indicate a problem.