At the HBS VC Alumni event I was at last week (no â I didnât go to HBS â I was a panelist) I heard a great line from a wise old VC who has been a VC about as long as Iâve existed on this planet.
âVCs only need three rights: Up, Down, and Know What The F*** Is Going Onâ
If youâve read Venture Deals: How To Be Smarter Than Your Lawyer and Venture Capitalist, you already know that Jason and I agree with this statement. And even though a term sheet might be four to eight pages long and the definitive documents might be 100 pages or more, other than economics, there are really only three things a VC needs in a deal.
Up: Pro-rata rights. When things are going well (up) a VC wants the ability to continue to invest money to maintain their ownership.
Down: Liquidation preference. When things donât go well (down), a VC wants to get their money out first.
Know What The F*** Is Going On: Board seat. Beyond demonstrating that older VCs also swear in public, many people believe that with a board seat comes great power and responsibility. In reality it mainly gives one the ability to know whatâs actually going on, to the extent that anyone knows whatâs actually going on in a fast moving startup.
As I was writing this up, I remembered that Fred Wilson had a post about this a while ago. I searched his blog (using Lijit and the term pro-rata) and quickly found a great post titled The Three Terms You Must Have In A Venture Investment. He attributes this to his first VC mentor, Milt Pappas, and the three terms are the same ones referenced above. Itâs a great post â go read it.
Entrepreneurs â donât get confused by the endless mumbo-jumbo. If you havenât read Venture Deals: How To Be Smarter Than Your Lawyer and Venture Capitalist grab a copy. Or read blogs. Or do both. And VCs â donât forget what terms you really care about â focus on making it simple.