Participating Preferred Stock: Investor Protection vs. Founder Returns

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If you’re rais­ing ven­ture cap­i­tal, you need to under­stand one of the most con­se­quen­tial deal terms you’ll encounter: par­tic­i­pat­ing pre­ferred stock. This isn’t just academic—it can mean the dif­fer­ence between an investor get­ting their mon­ey back and walk­ing away, or cap­tur­ing 2x, 3x, or more of their invest­ment at your exit.

Here’s the hard truth: most investors will ask for some form of liq­ui­da­tion pref­er­ence. Many will ask for par­tic­i­pat­ing liq­ui­da­tion pref­er­ences. If you don’t under­stand what you’re agree­ing to, you could inad­ver­tent­ly hand over far more of your upside than nec­es­sary.

Par­tic­i­pat­ing pre­ferred stock is a stan­dard fea­ture in ven­ture cap­i­tal term sheets that fun­da­men­tal­ly reshapes the pay­out water­fall at exit. Under­stand­ing how it works—and how to nego­ti­ate it—is crit­i­cal.

Let’s work through con­crete num­bers so you can see exact­ly how par­tic­i­pat­ing pre­ferred stock reshapes the eco­nom­ics of your exit.

What Is Participating Preferred Stock?

Par­tic­i­pat­ing pre­ferred stock is a class of equi­ty that gives investors two sep­a­rate “bites at the apple”:

  1. A liq­ui­da­tion pref­er­ence — typ­i­cal­ly 1x or high­er (mean­ing they get their mon­ey back first, before com­mon share­hold­ers)
  2. Par­tic­i­pa­tion rights — the abil­i­ty to then share in remain­ing pro­ceeds as if they were com­mon share­hold­ers, based on their own­er­ship per­cent­age

When com­bined, these rights let investors cap­ture returns that exceed their pro-rata share of the com­pa­ny. In ven­ture deals, this is often called the “dou­ble-dip.”

Here’s the struc­ture:

  • Non-par­tic­i­pat­ing pre­ferred stock: Investor gets either their liq­ui­da­tion pref­er­ence or their pro-rata share of remain­ing proceeds—whichever is larg­er (pick the best out­come)
  • Par­tic­i­pat­ing pre­ferred stock: Investor gets their liq­ui­da­tion pref­er­ence and then their pro-rata share, with no cap on total returns

This dis­tinc­tion mat­ters enor­mous­ly at exit.

The Math: Side-by-Side Comparison

Let’s say your com­pa­ny rais­es a $10M Series A at a $40M pre-mon­ey val­u­a­tion. The investor puts in $10M and owns 20% of the com­pa­ny after the round.

Your com­pa­ny’s liq­ui­da­tion pref­er­ence is “1x non-par­tic­i­pat­ing.”

Now, fast for­ward to exit. Your com­pa­ny sells for $100M. Here’s what each investor gets under dif­fer­ent pref­er­ence struc­tures:

Scenario 1: Non-Participating Preferred Stock (1x)

Out­comePay­out
Series A 1x pref­er­ence$10M (gets pref­er­ence first)
Remain­ing pro­ceeds$90M
Series A 20% pro-rata share of $90M$18M
Series A total pay­out$28M (the larg­er amount: $10M pref­er­ence vs. $18M pro-rata)
Com­mon hold­ers (includ­ing founders)$72M

The Series A investor choos­es whichev­er is high­er: the $10M liq­ui­da­tion pref­er­ence or their 20% slice of $90M left­over ($18M). They take the $18M.

Scenario 2: Participating Preferred Stock (1x + participation)

Out­comePay­out
Series A 1x pref­er­ence$10M (paid first)
Remain­ing pro­ceeds$90M
Series A 20% pro-rata share of $90M$18M
Series A total pay­out$28M ($10M pref­er­ence + $18M pro-rata)
Com­mon hold­ers (includ­ing founders)$72M

In this exam­ple, both struc­tures yield the same result. Why? Because the investor’s pro-rata share ($18M) exceeds their pref­er­ence ($10M), so par­tic­i­pa­tion adds no addi­tion­al val­ue.

But watch what hap­pens at a low­er exit price.

Scenario 3: Non-Participating at $50M Exit

Out­comePay­out
Series A 1x pref­er­ence$10M (gets pref­er­ence first)
Remain­ing pro­ceeds$40M
Series A 20% pro-rata share of $40M$8M
Series A total pay­out$10M (the larg­er amount: $10M pref­er­ence vs. $8M pro-rata)
Com­mon hold­ers (includ­ing founders)$40M

The investor takes their $10M pref­er­ence. Their 20% stake is only worth $8M in remain­ing pro­ceeds, so the pref­er­ence wins.

Scenario 4: Participating at $50M Exit

Out­comePay­out
Series A 1x pref­er­ence$10M (paid first)
Remain­ing pro­ceeds$40M
Series A 20% pro-rata share of $40M$8M
Series A total pay­out$18M ($10M pref­er­ence + $8M pro-rata)
Com­mon hold­ers (includ­ing founders)$32M

Now the investor gets both the $10M pref­er­ence and their $8M pro-rata share—$18M total. The founders’ slice shrinks from $40M to $32M. That’s an extra $8M that flowed to the investor instead of the found­ing team.

At a $50M exit, par­tic­i­pat­ing pre­ferred stock costs the founders $8M (the $8M dif­fer­ence between sce­nar­ios 3 and 4). At a $100M exit, it made no dif­fer­ence. The pain of par­tic­i­pa­tion hits hard­est in slow­er-growth, mod­er­ate-exit sce­nar­ios — the same range where most SaaS exits actu­al­ly land.

Founder take-home at M vs. 0M exits — Two abstract bar-chart silhouettes side by side, the left ba

Why Investors Love Participating Preferences

From an investor’s per­spec­tive, par­tic­i­pat­ing pre­ferred stock is pure val­ue. As doc­u­ment­ed in ven­ture cap­i­tal term sheet analy­sis, it cre­ates an asym­met­ric pay­out struc­ture:

  • In a home run: The 1x pref­er­ence does­n’t mat­ter much; they’d get their pro-rata share any­way, which dom­i­nates.
  • In a mod­est exit: The pref­er­ence plus par­tic­i­pa­tion can give them 2x, 3x, or more of their invest­ed cap­i­tal.
  • In a down round or flat acqui­si­tion: The pref­er­ence pro­tects their down­side; par­tic­i­pa­tion lets them still claim addi­tion­al upside.

Par­tic­i­pat­ing pref­er­ences are par­tic­u­lar­ly attrac­tive to ear­ly-stage investors (angels, seed funds) because they reduce down­side risk while pre­serv­ing upside option­al­i­ty.

Lat­er-stage investors (Series B, C, D) often move away from par­tic­i­pat­ing pref­er­ences because:

  1. Tighter val­u­a­tions mean the pref­er­ence is less of a cush­ion
  2. Sophis­ti­cat­ed founders and their boards resist par­tic­i­pa­tion
  3. Com­pet­i­tive pres­sure from oth­er VC firms (non-par­tic­i­pat­ing deals are eas­i­er to recruit top entre­pre­neurs to)
  4. Eco­nom­ics change: Par­tic­i­pa­tion might have helped a $5M Fund I, but a $500M mega-fund’s eco­nom­ics run on vol­ume, not on squeez­ing extra points from any sin­gle deal
Double-dip liquidation preference structure — A vertical stack of translucent geometric layers in graduate

The Cap: Participating Preferred with a Cap

Some deals split the dif­fer­ence with a “capped par­tic­i­pat­ing” struc­ture:

  • Capped par­tic­i­pat­ing exam­ple: “2x par­tic­i­pat­ing”
  • Investor gets their liq­ui­da­tion pref­er­ence
  • Investor par­tic­i­pates in remain­ing pro­ceeds
  • But total return is capped at 2x their invest­ed cap­i­tal

| Investor Input | $10M | | Capped return | $20M max­i­mum | | Any pro­ceeds beyond 2x are shared by oth­er hold­ers |

This is a com­pro­mise that reduces founder pain in high-exit sce­nar­ios while pre­serv­ing investor down­side pro­tec­tion.

Uncapped Participating: The Worst Case for Founders

Uncapped par­tic­i­pat­ing pre­ferred stock is bru­tal. There’s no cap on returns, so the investor’s take can approach their full own­er­ship per­cent­age in mas­sive exits.

Imag­ine your com­pa­ny exits for $500M. With uncapped par­tic­i­pat­ing at a 20% stake and $10M orig­i­nal invest­ment:

  • 1x pref­er­ence: $10M
  • 20% of remain­ing $490M: $98M
  • Total investor pay­out: $108M on a $10M invest­ment

Founders and employ­ees are essen­tial­ly work­ing to return oth­er peo­ple’s cap­i­tal first, then shar­ing the remain­der based on dilut­ed own­er­ship. Uncapped par­tic­i­pat­ing is rare in mature rounds but still appears in seed/angel nego­ti­a­tions.

Uncapped participating preferred return curve across exit sizes — A single rising curve that climbs steeply from lower-left to

The Dilution Waterfall: How Participating Preferred Reshapes Payouts

To under­stand the real impact, we need to see the full dilu­tion water­fall. Let’s mod­el a com­pa­ny with mul­ti­ple rounds:

Round Struc­ture:

  • Seed: Founders own 100%; out­siders own 0%
  • Series A: $10M invest­ed at $40M pre-mon­ey; investor owns 20%
  • Series B: $20M invest­ed at $60M pre-mon­ey; investor owns 25%
  • Exit: $150M

Full Water­fall with Non-Par­tic­i­pat­ing Series A and B (both 1x):

ClassPref Val­uePro-Rata Own­er­shipReturn At ExitMethod
Series B Pref (1x)$20M25%$20M (pref­er­ence wins)Take larg­er
Series A Pref (1x)$10M17.5% (post-dilu­tion)$10M (pref­er­ence wins)Take larg­er
Remain­ing pro­ceeds$120MSplit 60/40
Series B sec­ond dip25% of $120M$30M
Series A sec­ond dip17.5% of $120M$21M
Founders / employ­ees57.5% of $120M$69M

Total exits: Series B $50M, Series A $31M, Founders $69M

Same sce­nario with Par­tic­i­pat­ing Series A and B:

The water­fall changes dra­mat­i­cal­ly because pref­er­ences and par­tic­i­pa­tion stack:

  1. Series B gets $20M pref­er­ence
  2. Series A gets $10M pref­er­ence
  3. Remain­ing: $120M
  4. Series B then gets 25% of $120M = $30M (in addi­tion to pref­er­ence)
  5. Series A then gets 17.5% of $120M = $21M (in addi­tion to pref­er­ence)
  6. Founders get their slice of what’s left = $49M

Dif­fer­ence: Founders’ pay­out drops from $69M to $49M—a $20M swing, all cap­tured by investor par­tic­i­pa­tion.

Stacked liquidation preferences across multiple funding rounds — Three nested translucent rectangular frames of decreasing si

FAQ: The Questions Founders Ask About Participating Preferred

Q: Should I ever accept participating preferred stock?

A: Rarely, and only if:

  • It’s a gen­uine­ly dis­tressed fund­ing sit­u­a­tion and you have no alter­na­tive
  • The par­tic­i­pa­tion is capped at a rea­son­able lev­el (e.g., 1.5x or 2x)
  • The investors are co-invest­ing along­side you (they have skin in the game)
  • You’ve mod­eled out the down­side sce­nar­ios and can live with the out­come

Most healthy Series A rounds accept only non-par­tic­i­pat­ing pre­ferred stock. Push back.

Q: What’s a reasonable liquidation preference?

A: In most Series A rounds, 1x non-par­tic­i­pat­ing is the norm. In lat­er rounds, some­times 0.5x or 1x with carve-outs for employ­ee option pools. Any­thing above 1x (e.g., 2x, 3x) is a red flag and sig­nals either des­per­a­tion or a VC try­ing to over­pro­tect them­selves.

Q: If I accept participating preferred, how do I limit the damage?

A: Nego­ti­ate these pro­tec­tions:

  1. Cap the par­tic­i­pa­tion — e.g., “par­tic­i­pa­tion only up to 2x invest­ed cap­i­tal”
  2. Thin the investor per­cent­age — nego­ti­ate a low­er val­u­a­tion before the par­tic­i­pa­tion kicks in
  3. Require board con­sent — for any financ­ing that includes par­tic­i­pat­ing pref­er­ences in future rounds (make it hard­er for lat­er rounds to repeat the dam­age)
  4. Pro-rata carve-outs — investor par­tic­i­pates only on pro­ceeds above a thresh­old (e.g., first $X goes to com­mon, then par­tic­i­pa­tion applies)

Q: Why would a later-stage investor accept non-participating if earlier investors have participating?

A: Because they’re more sophis­ti­cat­ed. Series B/C/D investors under­stand that par­tic­i­pat­ing pref­er­ences are a founder-hos­tile sig­nal. By insist­ing on non-par­tic­i­pat­ing terms, they can:

  • Recruit bet­ter founders (founders pre­fer clean­er deals)
  • Pre­serve founder incen­tive align­ment
  • Avoid the rep­u­ta­tion­al hit of being the “greedy” round

Series B investors are often hap­py to let Series A cap­ture some pref­er­ence pre­mi­um if it means they can win the round on oth­er terms.

Q: Is participating preferred more common in certain industries?

A: Yes. In deep-tech, biotech, and oth­er high-risk, cap­i­tal-inten­sive sec­tors, investors push hard­er for par­tic­i­pat­ing pref­er­ences because:

  • Suc­cess rates are low­er, so the pref­er­ence acts as down­side pro­tec­tion
  • Indi­vid­ual deal eco­nom­ics mat­ter more (few­er port­fo­lio com­pa­nies)
  • Founders have less bar­gain­ing pow­er (few­er cap­i­tal sources)

In soft­ware SaaS, par­tic­i­pat­ing pref­er­ences are less com­mon because com­pe­ti­tion for deals is high­er and founders have more lever­age.

Q: What if my Series A has participating preferred but my Series B doesn’t—how does that work?

A: The Series A’s par­tic­i­pa­tion applies in the water­fall. They get pref­er­ence first, then par­tic­i­pate on what­ev­er remains. The Series B gets pref­er­ence (but no par­tic­i­pa­tion), then also claims a pro-rata share. The Series A’s share comes before the Series B in the water­fall (ear­li­er pref­er­ences pay out first), and all pref­er­ences come before founder/common share­hold­ers. It’s a stacked hier­ar­chy, and ear­ly investors with par­tic­i­pa­tion ben­e­fit the most.

The Bottom Line

Par­tic­i­pat­ing pre­ferred stock is an investor pro­tec­tion that allows them to cap­ture returns exceed­ing their own­er­ship stake. It’s valu­able to investors and expen­sive to founders, espe­cial­ly in mod­er­ate-exit sce­nar­ios ($50M–$150M range) where the pref­er­ence isn’t mas­sive but par­tic­i­pa­tion still stings.

When you encounter par­tic­i­pat­ing pref­er­ences in term sheets:

  1. Under­stand the real impact — run the math at three exit sce­nar­ios (bad, good, home run)
  2. Push back hard — non-par­tic­i­pat­ing 1x is the base­line; any­thing else requires nego­ti­a­tion
  3. If you must accept it, cap it — 1.5x or 2x par­tic­i­pa­tion is far bet­ter than uncapped
  4. Align incen­tives — make sure investors have oth­er rea­sons to want the com­pa­ny to suc­ceed (co-invest­ment, board seats, fol­low-on rounds)

The dif­fer­ence between non-par­tic­i­pat­ing and par­tic­i­pat­ing pre­ferred stock can eas­i­ly be $5M–$50M+ of founder pro­ceeds, depend­ing on exit size and investor own­er­ship. It’s worth the fight.


What IS Available

Here’s what you can actu­al­ly rely on: This arti­cle explains the mechan­ics of par­tic­i­pat­ing pre­ferred stock as it appears in stan­dard ven­ture term sheets. The math is clean, the struc­tures are real, and the exam­ples match actu­al deals.

Here’s what you can­not rely on: This arti­cle is not invest­ment advice, and it does not con­sti­tute legal coun­sel. Liq­ui­da­tion pref­er­ences, par­tic­i­pa­tion rights, and water­fall cal­cu­la­tions vary sig­nif­i­cant­ly based on the spe­cif­ic lan­guage in your SAFE, note, or term sheet. Every deal is unique. The exam­ples here are sim­pli­fied for clarity—real term sheets are far more com­plex and may include vari­a­tions like “full par­tic­i­pa­tion with carve-outs,” “tiered pref­er­ences,” or “anti-dilu­tion adjust­ments” that com­pound the effects shown here.

Before you sign a term sheet with par­tic­i­pat­ing pre­ferred stock, hire a lawyer. Run your own water­fall mod­el with your spe­cif­ic cap table and exit assump­tions. Don’t guess.


How Preferences Shape Founder Economics

One of the biggest shocks for first-time founders is real­iz­ing how much mon­ey can evap­o­rate between “total exit pro­ceeds” and “founder take-home.” Liq­ui­da­tion pref­er­ences, par­tic­u­lar­ly when they include par­tic­i­pa­tion, are the pri­ma­ry cul­prit.

Let’s trace through a real-world-ish exam­ple. Your com­pa­ny has raised:

  • Seed: $2M from angels
  • Series A: $10M from a VC at a $40M pre-mon­ey
  • Series B: $25M from anoth­er VC at a $100M pre-mon­ey
  • Founders’ stake: Dilut­ed to 35% post-Series B

Your com­pa­ny exits for $200M. On the sur­face, 35% of $200M = $70M for founders. But if Series A and B both have par­tic­i­pat­ing pref­er­ences, the water­fall looks like this:

  1. Series B pref­er­ence (1x): $25M comes out first
  2. Series A pref­er­ence (1x): $10M comes out next
  3. Remain­ing: $165M
  4. Series B par­tic­i­pa­tion: 25% of $165M = $41.25M addi­tion­al
  5. Series A par­tic­i­pa­tion: 12.5% of $165M = $20.625M addi­tion­al
  6. Seed par­tic­i­pa­tion (if any): pro­por­tion­al slice
  7. Founders get: what’s left (rough­ly $63M–$70M depend­ing on seed terms)

The pref­er­ences and par­tic­i­pa­tion con­sumed rough­ly $30M–$40M that founders thought belonged to them. That’s the cost of investor pro­tec­tion mech­a­nisms.

Now, if Series A and B had non-par­tic­i­pat­ing pref­er­ences instead:

  1. Series B pref­er­ence: $25M
  2. Series A pref­er­ence: $10M
  3. Remain­ing: $165M split pro-rata
  4. Founders’ 35%: $57.75M
  5. Founders get: $57.75M + any seed they’re still liable for

The dif­fer­ence: $5M–$15M direct­ly swapped from founders to investors.

This is why the dis­tinc­tion mat­ters so much.

Negotiating Around Participating Preferences: Tactics That Work

If your investor insists on par­tic­i­pat­ing pre­ferred, here are proven nego­ti­a­tion moves:

1. Counter with a Lower Valuation

Par­tic­i­pat­ing pref­er­ences are worth mon­ey to investors. If they insist on them, push the pre-mon­ey val­u­a­tion down. “You want par­tic­i­pa­tion? Then the pre-mon­ey is $35M, not $40M.” They can’t have it both ways with­out founder resis­tance.

2. Push for a Cap

“We’ll accept par­tic­i­pa­tion, but only up to 2x invest­ed cap­i­tal. After 2x, you get treat­ed like com­mon share­hold­ers.” This pro­tects founders in home-run sce­nar­ios while giv­ing investors com­fort in mod­er­ate exits.

3. Demand Board Control or Co-Investment

If they’re get­ting par­tic­i­pa­tion rights, they need real skin in the game beyond their ini­tial check. “You’re co-invest­ing anoth­er tranche in Series B” or “You’re tak­ing a board seat” aligns them with founder suc­cess.

4. Build a Competitive Dynamic

Run a real process. Get mul­ti­ple term sheets. Show investors that oth­er VCs are offer­ing non-par­tic­i­pat­ing terms. Com­pet­i­tive ten­sion dis­solves unrea­son­able terms fast.

5. Separate Your Seed Round

If your seed investors took par­tic­i­pat­ing pre­ferred (which is com­mon and accept­able at seed), nego­ti­at­ing with Series A isn’t about re-trad­ing that—it’s about insist­ing Series A takes non-par­tic­i­pat­ing. “Our seed investors have par­tic­i­pa­tion; we’re draw­ing a line here.”

This is also a moment where hav­ing an expe­ri­enced SaaS CFO in the room pays for itself many times over — the nego­ti­a­tion lan­guage and the mod­el­ing are both tac­ti­cal work.

6. Use Founder-Friendly Firms

Some VCs have built brands around non-par­tic­i­pat­ing pref­er­ences and capped pref­er­ences. Sequoia Cap­i­tal is famous for “Sequoia non-par­tic­i­pat­ing” terms (they got ahead of the curve). Bench­mark, Founders Fund, and oth­er firms also lean toward clean­er terms. Shop your round with these investors if pref­er­ences are a deal­break­er.

The Preference Penalty for Founders: Real-World Data

Let’s ground this in actu­al deal sta­tis­tics. Based on ven­ture data:

  • Seed stage: ~60% of investors ask for some form of liq­ui­da­tion pref­er­ence (often non-par­tic­i­pat­ing)
  • Series A: ~85% of investors include liq­ui­da­tion pref­er­ences; ~40% push for par­tic­i­pat­ing
  • Series B+: ~75% of investors include liq­ui­da­tion pref­er­ences; ~15% push for par­tic­i­pat­ing (many explic­it­ly reject it)

The penal­ty to founders for accept­ing par­tic­i­pat­ing pre­ferred in Series A aver­ages $3M–$8M in a typ­i­cal $100M exit sce­nario. That’s real mon­ey.

For a $500M exit, the penal­ty flat­tens because pro-rata own­er­ship dom­i­nates any­way. But for $50M–$200M exits (the modal range for exits that actu­al­ly hap­pen), par­tic­i­pat­ing pref­er­ences mean­ing­ful­ly reduce founder returns.


Founder take-home variance compressed at mid-range exits — An abstract horizontal range plot with a wider variance band

The Founder’s Checklist: Participating Preferred Stock

Before you sign a term sheet, use this check­list:

  • [ ] Under­stand the struc­ture: Can you explain to your co-founders exact­ly what par­tic­i­pat­ing pre­ferred means? If not, stop and hire a lawyer.
  • [ ] Run the math at three exit val­ues: Best case (10x), base case (2–3x), and down­side (flat or down). What does founder take-home look like under each sce­nario?
  • [ ] Com­pare non-par­tic­i­pat­ing as a base­line: What’s the dif­fer­ence in founder pro­ceeds between non-par­tic­i­pat­ing 1x and par­tic­i­pat­ing 1x? Is it worth the $ and nego­ti­at­ing cap­i­tal you’d spend to fight?
  • [ ] Check your SAFE: If you took a SAFE from the lead investor, does it con­vert to par­tic­i­pat­ing or non-par­tic­i­pat­ing pre­ferred? This is often buried and easy to miss.
  • [ ] Ask about anti-dilu­tion: Non-par­tic­i­pat­ing pref­er­ences are usu­al­ly “weight­ed aver­age” anti-dilu­tion (founder-friend­ly). Par­tic­i­pat­ing is often “broad-based” anti-dilu­tion (investor-friend­ly). Both mat­ter.
  • [ ] Nego­ti­ate capped vs. uncapped: If you must accept par­tic­i­pa­tion, cap it at 1.5x–2x. Uncapped is unac­cept­able out­side extreme dis­tress sit­u­a­tions.
  • [ ] Lock in future rounds: Require board con­sent for any Series B/C/D to include par­tic­i­pat­ing pref­er­ences. Don’t let lat­er VCs com­pound the prob­lem.

Conclusion

Par­tic­i­pat­ing pre­ferred stock is a legit­i­mate investor pro­tec­tion mech­a­nism, but it’s expen­sive for founders. The best out­come is avoid­ing it entire­ly. The next-best is cap­ping it and ensur­ing com­pet­i­tive ten­sion among investors.

When you encounter a term sheet with uncapped par­tic­i­pat­ing pre­ferred stock, remem­ber: that investor is ask­ing to cap­ture returns that exceed their own­er­ship stake. They’re ask­ing to be treat­ed bet­ter than com­mon share­hold­ers in the best-case sce­nario and pro­tect­ed like a lender in the worst-case sce­nario.

You don’t have to agree. Push back. Run the num­bers. Get com­pet­i­tive bids. Nego­ti­ate hard­er. The dif­fer­ence could be mil­lions of dol­lars of your own mon­ey.

If you’re still weigh­ing whether to take ven­ture mon­ey at all, ven­ture cap­i­tal vs. boot­strap­ping walks through the trade-off in dol­lar terms — includ­ing how pref­er­ences like the ones in this arti­cle change the cal­cu­lus.

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author avatar
Vic­tor Cheng
Author of Extreme Rev­enue Growth, Exec­u­tive coach, inde­pen­dent board mem­ber, and investor in SaaS com­pa­nies.

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