Key highlights
- Investors now care about profitability, not just growth. That means founders must carefully evaluate which capital structure aligns with their vision
- Hidden control mechanisms in term sheets include protective provisions, drag-along clauses, anti-dilution protections, liquidation preferences, and board composition terms
- Sometimes dilutive equity isn’t the answer: venture debt, revenue-based financing, and organic growth can preserve ownership whilst funding expansion
- Understanding industry-standard documents helps founders benchmark terms and spot unfavourable provisions
- Ask these questions before signing any term sheet: questions about governance, economics, future flexibility, and investor alignment
Picture this: you close a $5 million growth equity round. The celebration lasts a week. Fast forward eighteen months, and you’re sitting in a boardroom where your investors just outvoted you on a strategic pivot you’ve been planning for months. The protective provisions you barely skimmed during negotiations now govern every major decision you make.
It plays out in this or a similar fashion more often than you’d think. Raising capital accelerates growth, but it can also hand the steering wheel to someone else. The difference between funding that fuels your vision and funding that derails it comes down to understanding what you’re actually signing.
The spectrum of capital: from bank loans to private equity
Before even thinking about raising growth capital, it is good to know where each funding source sits on the control spectrum.
Bank debt
Preserves full ownership. Traditional lenders provide capital at fixed interest rates in exchange for collateral and personal guarantees. You retain 100% equity but accept strict covenants. This works for established businesses with steady cash flows and tangible assets, but fails for cash-burning startups.
Venture debt
Venture debt sits between bank loans and equity. Lenders provide term loans over two to five years with minimal equity dilution (most frequently just 0.5% to 2% in warrants). It is becoming increasingly more popular to preserve more equity alongside an equity growth raise. As an example, a company raising growth capital in a $8 million Series A round might add $2 million in venture debt six months later, stretching the runway for less dilution. The trade-off? You need existing venture backing and predictable revenue to service debt payments.
Venture capital
What people typically think about straight away when raising growth funds is venture capital.
VCs operate at a different scale entirely. According to Carta data, Series A rounds now see a median dilution of around 20%. With many rounds, this can quickly dilute founders substantially. Taking VC money also typically restructures governance through protective provisions giving investors veto rights over major decisions, board seats, anti-dilution protections, and regular reporting obligations.
Growth equity
This type of financing targets the sweet spot between venture capital and private equity. Firms typically take 10% to 40% stakes plus board representation in companies that are already generating stable and substantial revenue and have a proven business model. Unlike early-stage VCs betting on potential, growth investors back proven business models that need capital for specific expansion initiatives.
Private equity
Private equity is usually a form of founder exit. Founders tend to cede control, with most transactions leading to professional investors assuming operational control. PE firms typically hold investments for five to seven years or longer, acquiring majority stakes using equity plus substantial debt. For founders, this usually means a liquidity event where you may stay in a management role with earnout provisions, but control shifts to the PE sponsor.
A comparison of capital types
| Capital Type | Typical Dilution | Control Impact | Best For | Typical Terms |
| Bank Debt | 0% | Low (covenants only) | Established businesses with collateral | Fixed interest, 3-7 year term, personal guarantees |
| Venture Debt | 0.5-2% (warrants) | Low | VC-backed startups extending runway | 3-5 year term, interest + warrants |
| Venture Capital | 15-25% per round | High | High-growth tech startups | Board seats, protective provisions, anti-dilution |
| Growth Equity | 10-40% | Medium-High | Profitable, scaling companies | Board seat, some protective provisions |
| Private Equity | 50-100% | Very High (majority control) | Mature companies, founder exit | Full operational control, 4-7 year hold |
The control mechanisms that actually matter
Valuation gets all the headlines. However, the provisions buried in the term sheet are what actually shape the life of a founder.
A minority investor holding just 20% equity can frequently block major decisions if protective provisions grant them veto rights. Standard venture documents typically include vetoes over changes to the charter, issuance of new securities, company sales or mergers, board composition, debt above specified thresholds, and related-party transactions. An idea for a strategic acquisition can be stopped by investor disagreement. A down round can be blocked entirely. For founders reviewing these terms, our team offers expert term sheet advisory services to navigate these complexities.
Information rights
Information rights seem reasonable on the surface. But when multiple investors each have separate reporting requirements, small teams can end up spending more time producing reports than running the business. It is good practice to standardise formats and distribute them simultaneously.
Drag-along clauses
The provisions force minority shareholders to accept company sales when majority holders approve them. As an illustrative example, investors holding say 75% of equity want to sell, the sale completes even if other shareholders disagree. It is helpful to use minimum price thresholds so drag-along rights only trigger above certain valuation multiples and to push for liability protections that cap the exposure.
Anti-dilution provisions
These clauses protect investors against raising future capital at lower valuations.
Full-ratchet structures are the most damaging: they reset an investor’s conversion price to match any lower raise in a “down round”, effectively increasing their ownership without new capital.
By contrast, weighted-average anti-dilution adjusts proportionally based on the actual size and price of the new round. It is more founder-friendly and is now the accepted market standard at most institutional investors.
Full-ratchet should be a non-starter for founders.
When dilutive equity makes sense
Equity makes strategic sense when speed is genuinely the priority. Winner-takes-all markets demand capital to move fast. Capital-intensive businesses in hardware, biotech, or deep tech often have no real alternative.
The other case is strategic value beyond the cheque. If a particular VC brings introductions to enterprise buyers that could transform the sales pipeline, or a corporate venture arm provides technical expertise one can’t access independently, the dilution might be worth it.
The non-dilutive alternatives more founders should know about
Many founders raise equity not because it’s strategically optimal but because they don’t know alternatives exist.
Revenue-based financing
This alternative suits businesses with predictable recurring revenue. A firm can raise capital by committing a percentage of monthly revenue, typically 3% to 8%, until they have repaid a multiple of the original amount. Owners keep full ownership, maintain full control, and are often also allowed to repay faster if the business accelerates.
Venture debt
As mentioned in the previous section, venture debt can help to extend the runway between equity rounds whilst minimising dilution. It works best for founders that have existing venture backing and sufficient cash flows for interest payments.
Bank debt and SBA loans
If a company generates steady cash flows and has tangible assets to pledge as collateral, bank debt is likely the cheapest capital available.
Organic growth and bootstrapping
This is the option many founders love as it preserves complete ownership and control. If a business generates sufficient cash flow to fund growth from operations, bootstrapping effectively means growing at a steady pace without external pressure. It works best when market timing is not critical and maintaining complete control matters more than speed.
Questions worth asking before signing any termsheet or agreement
The term sheet arrives via email. The investor expects a response within a week. In that compressed window, understand not just the headline valuation but the provisions that will govern your company for years.
On control: what protective provisions are included, and which decisions require investor approval? How will board composition change? Are there drag-along provisions, and what exceptions apply?
On economics: is the liquidation preference participating or non-participating? What anti-dilution structure applies? Model your exit scenarios before agreeing to anything.
On future flexibility: do investors have pro rata rights in future rounds? Are there restrictions on secondary sales of founder shares, including rights of first refusal?
Need help and advice with capital raise? Reach out to us
Capital is a tool. Used well, it accelerates growth and opens doors. Used carelessly, it erodes control and constrains your options for years.
Boutique M&A advisory firms like Acquinox Advisors work with founders navigating these complex decisions, helping evaluate financing alternatives, negotiating favourable terms, and structuring transactions that preserve control whilst fueling growth. Specialist advisors familiar with valuation and financial modelling can help you model exit scenarios under different term sheet provisions, whilst M&A process expertise helps you understand how early-stage funding decisions affect eventual exit outcomes. If you’re currently weighing financing options or reviewing a term sheet, our team works with founders at every stage of this process. Reach out to us and let’s talk through what makes sense for your situation.

