Continuing with yesterday’s post titled Dilution With Every Round of Financing, it’s instructive to walk through an example as a founder. Before the example, I like to highlight the stories of ultra-successful entrepreneurs that have taken their company public, and the vast majority own less than 20% of the equity at time of IPO (e.g. Marketo’s founder had 6.6% and Cvent’s founder had 16%) . Now, 20% of $500 million is still a massive number, but it’s a far cry from what people might otherwise think the entrepreneur owns.
Here’s an example walkthrough of dilution over several rounds of raising money:
- Two entrepreneurs come together and start a company, splitting the equity in half (so, each has 50% of the equity)
- Angel investors are excited about the working product and early customers, deciding to invest $300,000 for 20% of the business (the entrepreneur now owns 40%)
- Recruiting great early employees requires equity, so 10% of the shares are set aside for an employee stock option pool (the entrepreneur now owns 36%)
- Venture capitalists buy into the big vision, value the $1 million in recurring revenue milestone, and purchase 30% of the business for $3 million as part of a Series A round (the entrepreneur now owns 25%)
- Expansion of the employee base requires a new stock option plan, diluting everyone further by 15% (the entrepreneur now owns 21%)
- Growth is explosive and investors compete to be part of the $10 million Series B round, buying 25% of the business (the entrepreneur now owns 16%)
- Sales are skyrocketing and the paradox of more growth consuming more capital sets in requiring a $30 million Series C for 30% of the business (the entrepreneur now owns 11%)
So, after an angel round, three rounds of venture capital, and a couple employee stock option pools, the entrepreneur owns 11% of the company, and they haven’t gone public yet. Of course, the company is doing great and it’s better to own a slice of a watermelon than the majority of a grape.
What else? What are some other thoughts on founder dilution over multiple rounds of financing?
Leave a reply to David Cummings Cancel reply