Understanding Your Term Sheet Options

Written by Alida Miranda-Wolff
Published on Nov. 24, 2015

Understanding Your Term Sheet Options

Your Guide to Convertible Notes, Safes, and Equity

Up until now, our ongoing term sheet series has focused on how to read anequity term sheet and a convertible debt term sheet. But before you learn to read term sheets, you need to know what your financing options are. Specially, as an entrepreneur, what kind of deal structure makes the most sense for your business? Below, find a quick-read overview of three different financing options: convertible notes, safes, and equity. Note that while understanding your options independently is critical to solid decision-making, you should also consult a lawyer with a venture financing specialty before you commit to one type of raise over another.

Convertible Note: At it’s most basic, a convertible note is an investment vehicle structured as a loan that will convert to equity in a future round. The intention of a convertible note is not debt collection, but instead to create a path to equity conversion that comes with some additional benefits to compensate for investor risk. Namely, convertible notes can come with caps or discounts that make them more appealing to investors.

A convertible notes can make sense in the early stages because they are faster and more cost-effective, which may help newer companies with limited cash reserves. A convertible note, however, defer critical decisions, including a major one around valuation, to later rounds. As a result, they are often not used after the early-stages.

Safe: The safe, or simple agreement for future equity, was designed and created by YCombinator as an alternative to convertible notes. Unlike a convertible note, a safe is not a loan and therefore does not collect interest or have a maturity date. There are fewer terms in a safe since there are no maturity dates or interest rates to negotiate. As a result, the main term up for negotiation is the valuation cap.

 

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The safe is best used in the earliest stages because it does not address some of the most critical terms, including valuation, liquidation preferences, and participation rights. Instead, it defers conversations and negotiations around those terms to the next round. The safe, since it does not have a maturity date, does not account for circumstances when a company succeeds but does not have a liquidity event.

Equity: Even if you decide that a convertible note or safe makes sense for you, if your business continues to seek future rounds of capital, you will eventually end up in an equity round. Basically, when you enter into an equity agreement, you are agreeing to give up a certain percentage of ownership of your company in exchange for investment. The details of how much ownership you give up and for what price are part of negotiations and represented in a cap table.

An equity term sheet will inherently be more complex than the kinds you would encounter in the first two examples since they defer many key terms to this phase. While there are many important terms you’ll negotiate in this transference of funds for ownership, the three most important will bevaluation, liquidation preference, and board composition.

There are advantages and disadvantages to all three financing options. However, it’s important to remember that safes and convertible notes make more sense in the very early stages and that both are working with the assumption that you will be raising an equity round in the future.

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About Hyde Park Angels
Hyde Park Angels is the largest and most active angel group in the Midwest. With a membership of over 100 successful entrepreneurs, executives, and venture capitalists, the organization prides itself on providing critical strategic expertise to entrepreneurs and the entrepreneurial community. By leveraging the members’ deep and broad knowledge of multiple industries and financial capital, Hyde Park Angels has driven multiple exits and invested millions of dollars in over 40 portfolio companies that have created over 850 jobs in the Midwest since 2006.

About the Author
Alida Miranda-Wolff
Alida Miranda-Wolff is Associate Manager at Hyde Park Angels. Her role includes creating and executing marketing and communications strategies, planning and managing events, fostering and maintaining community and industry partnerships, and managing membership. Prior to joining Hyde Park Angels, Alida served as a manager, data analyst, and publication specialist at a multibillion dollar industrial supply corporation. She has led one of the most successful Kickstarter campaigns in Chicago history and worked with half a dozen startups in various marketing, content creation, and project management roles. Alida believes in creating valuable, spreadable multimedia content, and has done so as a freelance writer for several print and online publications.

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