
Most SaaS founders I work with treat the term sheet as the finish line. They spent six months getting an investor to “yes,” the number on the front page is bigger than they expected, and the instinct is to sign before the offer evaporates. That instinct is exactly how founders end up with 25 years of work and nothing to show for it. A term sheet is not the finish line. It is the rulebook for every dollar that ever comes out of your company, and the valuation on page one is usually the least important thing in it.
Here is the part nobody tells first-time CEOs: the valuation gets all the attention, but the liquidation preference, the participation rights, and the board control terms decide how much money you personally walk away with when you sell. I have watched a company raise two hundred million dollars, build genuinely great software, sell for a real price, and hand the founders zero. Not a small number — zero. The customers loved the product. The founders just did not understand the math buried in their own term sheets.
This guide walks through what a term sheet actually is, the clauses that matter and the ones that do not, the difference between economic terms and control terms, a worked example showing how the same exit price produces wildly different founder outcomes depending on the term sheet you signed years earlier, and the negotiating moves that actually shift terms in your favor. By the end you will know which lines on a term sheet to fight over and which to let go — and why signing the wrong term sheet is a decision you live with for the entire life of the company.
What a Term Sheet Actually Is
A term sheet is a short, mostly non-binding document — usually two to eight pages — that lays out the key terms of a proposed investment or acquisition before the lawyers draft the long-form agreements. Think of it as the architectural blueprint signed off before anyone pours concrete. It is “non-binding” in the sense that it does not legally force the deal to close, but that framing is misleading in practice. Once both sides sign a term sheet, roughly 90% of the deal is settled. The forty-page Stock Purchase Agreement that follows is mostly the lawyers translating the term sheet into enforceable language. Whatever you conceded on the term sheet, you almost never claw back later.
The reason this matters for a SaaS CEO specifically is that your company runs on recurring revenue, which makes it financeable and acquirable in ways most businesses are not. You will likely see more than one term sheet over the company’s life — a growth equity round, a recapitalization, a strategic acquisition offer. Each one is a moment where the terms you accept silently reprice every share you own.
A few binding pieces usually do survive even in a “non-binding” term sheet, and you should read them carefully:
- Confidentiality. You cannot disclose the terms publicly. Standard, fine.
- No-shop / exclusivity. This is the one that bites. A no-shop clause says that once you sign, you cannot talk to other investors or buyers for a set period — often 30 to 60 days. That hands the other side enormous leverage during diligence, because they know you have no alternative on the table. Negotiate the no-shop window down, and never sign one before you have run a competitive process.
- Expenses. Who pays legal and diligence costs if the deal collapses.
Everything else — valuation, preferences, board seats, vesting — is economically binding in spirit even when it is technically non-binding on paper.
The Two Kinds of Terms: Economics and Control
Every clause on a term sheet falls into one of two buckets, and confusing them is the most common mistake I see.
Economic terms determine who gets how much money, and in what order, when the company is sold or liquidated. These are valuation, liquidation preference, participation, dividends, and anti-dilution. They decide the size of your check at exit.
Control terms determine who gets to make decisions. These are board composition, voting rights, protective provisions (veto rights), and information rights. They decide whether you can run the company the way you want — and, critically, whether you can even choose to sell when the economics are good for you.
A naive founder optimizes the headline valuation and ignores the rest. A sophisticated one knows that a slightly lower valuation with clean economic and control terms is almost always worth more than a higher valuation loaded with preferences and vetoes. The valuation is the number you brag about at dinner. The other terms are the number that hits your bank account.

Economic Terms That Decide What You Keep
Valuation: Pre-Money vs Post-Money
The first number on the term sheet is the valuation, and you must know which kind it is.
- Pre-money valuation is what the investor thinks the company is worth before their money goes in.
- Post-money valuation is the pre-money value plus the new investment.
The formula is simple but the consequences are not:
Post-Money Valuation = Pre-Money Valuation + New Investment
Investor Ownership % = New Investment ÷ Post-Money Valuation
Suppose an investor offers a $20M pre-money valuation and wants to put in $5M. The post-money valuation is $25M, and the investor owns $5M ÷ $25M = 20% of the company. But if they quote the same $5M check at a $20M post-money valuation, the pre-money is only $15M, and they own $5M ÷ $20M = 25%. Same dollars, same headline-ish number, five percentage points of your company gone. Always confirm in writing whether a quoted valuation is pre- or post-money before you celebrate.
Liquidation Preference: The Term That Matters Most
If you read nothing else in this article, read this section. The liquidation preference determines who gets paid first, and how much, when the company is sold. It is the single most important economic term, and it is the one founders understand least.
A liquidation preference says the investor gets their money back — or some multiple of it — before common shareholders (you and your team) see a dollar. A “1x liquidation preference” means the investor gets 1 times their investment back first. A “2x” means twice their money before you get anything. The multiple is the difference between a fair deal and a trap. The industry-standard reference documents that long-form agreements are drafted from — the National Venture Capital Association model legal documents — assume a 1x non-participating preference as the baseline, which is a useful benchmark when an investor proposes anything more aggressive.
Here is why it compounds: investors usually hold preferred stock, and the preference attaches to that preferred stock. The more capital you raise across more rounds, the taller the stack of preferences sitting ahead of your common shares becomes. This is the math behind the company that sells for hundreds of millions while the founders get nothing. The preference stack got taller than the exit price.
Simple Preferred vs Participating Preferred
Within liquidation preferences, there is a fork that changes your outcome dramatically, and the terminology is deliberately confusing. There are two flavors:
Simple (non-participating) preferred is company-friendly. There is a dollar figure tied to the original check size that the investor is guaranteed in a downside scenario. When the company does well, the investor faces a choice: take the preference (their money back), or convert to common and take their ownership percentage of the proceeds — whichever is greater. They get one or the other, not both.
Participating preferred is investor-friendly and far more dangerous for you. The investor gets paid their preference amount first, and then participates again, sharing in the remaining proceeds according to their ownership percentage. They get their money back plus their slice of everything that is left. This is sometimes called “double dipping,” and that nickname is accurate.
The table makes the difference concrete. Assume an investor put in $5M for 25% ownership with a 1x preference, and the company sells for $40M:
| Term | What the investor takes | What's left for everyone else |
|---|---|---|
| Simple (non-participating) 1x | Greater of $5M preference or 25% of $40M = greater of $5M or $10M = $10M | $30M |
| Participating 1x | $5M preference plus 25% of remaining $35M = $5M + $8.75M = $13.75M | $26.25M |
Same check, same ownership, same exit price. Participation costs the common shareholders $3.75M on a $40M exit. On larger raises with multiple participating rounds stacked on top of each other, the gap is enormous. Fight hard for simple, non-participating preferred. If you must accept participation, negotiate a cap on it — for example, participation that stops once the investor has made 3x their money.
Dividends and the Hidden Compounding Cost
Some term sheets include a dividend on the preferred stock — often quoted as a percentage like 8% per year. If the dividend is cumulative, it accrues and compounds whether or not the company ever pays it in cash, and the accrued amount gets added to the liquidation preference. An 8% cumulative dividend on a $5M check is roughly 1.47x the original check after five years — meaning the investor is owed about $7.35M before you see anything, not $5M. It looks small on the term sheet. It is not small at exit.
This is the same mechanism that played out when Warren Buffett invested in Goldman Sachs during the 2008 financial crisis. He took preferred stock with a 10% coupon, which paid him roughly $500M a year no matter what happened to the business, plus ownership upside. The people running the company hated the deal and could not wait to buy him out — because the coupon was quietly draining the firm every year. A dividend on your preferred stock works exactly the same way against you.
Anti-Dilution Provisions: The Clause That Fires When You’re Down
Anti-dilution provisions protect the investor’s ownership percentage if you later raise money at a lower valuation than they paid — a “down round.” The brutal part is the timing. These provisions do nothing when everything is going well. They fire precisely when you are weakest — a bad economy, a missed quarter, a pandemic, a regulatory change — and when they fire, they take more of your equity to keep the investor whole at your expense.
There are two main forms:
- Weighted-average anti-dilution. The investor’s effective price is adjusted using a formula that accounts for how much new money came in at the lower price. This is the reasonable, standard version. Accept it.
- Full-ratchet anti-dilution. The investor’s price resets all the way down to the new, lower price as if they had invested at that price originally — regardless of how small the new round is. This is punishing and transfers a large chunk of equity to the existing investor. Resist it.
The reason this matters so much for SaaS founders is the optimism trap. Founders are visionary and passionate; it does not occur to them that something will go wrong, so they happily give away protections they assume will never trigger. Investors know this, and they price it in. Assume things will go wrong at some point, because over a company’s life they almost always do, and negotiate these clauses as if you will need them — because you might.

The Waterfall: How the Same Exit Pays Founders Differently
Investors and bankers talk about the waterfall — the spreadsheet that shows, when the company sells, who gets paid what and in what order. Money flows from the top of the waterfall (the most senior preferences) down to the bottom (common shareholders), and whatever is left when it reaches the bottom is what you and your team split. Knowing your waterfall cold is the most important financial literacy a founder can have, and the lack of it is what wipes founders out.
Let me show you why two founders with the same exit price can walk away with completely different amounts. Both companies sell for $60M. Both founders started owning 100% and raised the same $15M total. The only difference is the terms they signed.
Founder A raised $15M across rounds on simple, non-participating 1x preferences, ending up owning 45% of the company on a fully diluted basis.
Founder B raised the same $15M but on participating 1x preferences with an 8% cumulative dividend, accrued over an average of four years, ending up with the same 45% ownership on paper.
| Founder A (clean terms) | Founder B (loaded terms) | |
|---|---|---|
| Exit price | $60M | $60M |
| Investor preference paid first | Investors convert to common (better for them) | $15M preference + ~$5.4M accrued dividends = $20.4M off the top |
| Remaining proceeds | $60M shared by ownership | $39.6M shared by ownership |
| Investors' participation | None — they took their 55% | Investors also take 55% of the remaining $39.6M = $21.78M |
| Founder's take (45%) | 45% of $60M = $27M | 45% of $39.6M = $17.82M |
Same company, same exit, same ownership percentage on the cap table — and a $9.18M difference in what the founder personally keeps. That gap is not created at exit. It was created years earlier, on the term sheet, in clauses the founder may not have fully read. Now extend this to a company that raised $200M across many participating rounds with ratchets, and you can see how a real sale produces a founder check of zero. The waterfall ran dry before it reached the bottom.
For more on how acquirers value the underlying business that feeds this waterfall, see the guide on SaaS company valuation and SaaS valuation multiples.
Control Terms: Who Actually Runs the Company
Economics decide what you keep. Control terms decide whether you get to make the decisions — including the decision to sell at a moment that is good for you.
Board Composition
The board of directors governs the company, hires and fires the CEO, and approves major decisions including a sale. The term sheet specifies how board seats are allocated. A common structure when a single investor leads a round is that they take one board seat, sometimes plus an observer seat (a non-voting attendee, often used to season their junior staff). The most common ask is one seat plus a handful of veto rights — not full control.
The number that matters is the balance. As long as founders and founder-friendly independents hold the majority of board seats, you control your destiny. The moment investors hold a majority — or hold enough seats combined with protective provisions to block you — you have handed over the steering wheel even if you still own most of the equity. Watch the board math as closely as the cap table.
Protective Provisions (Veto Rights)
Protective provisions are a list of actions the company cannot take without the preferred investor’s consent. The most common and most consequential is: you cannot sell the business without the investor’s approval. Read that again. Even if you own the majority of the company and an acquirer offers a price you love, a single veto right can stop the sale — typically because the investor’s return target has not been hit yet.
Other common protective provisions cover raising new debt, issuing new senior stock, changing the size of the board, or amending the charter. Some are reasonable guardrails. The sale-approval veto is the one that can trap you in your own company for years, so understand exactly what triggers it and negotiate carve-outs where you can — for example, an automatic approval if the sale price exceeds a defined threshold that guarantees the investor a strong return.
Founder Vesting
Most term sheets impose vesting on the founders’ own shares — meaning you earn your equity back over time (often four years) even though you already own it. This feels insulting the first time you see it, but it serves a real purpose: it protects the company and the other founders if a co-founder walks away early. Negotiate for acceleration provisions — particularly “double-trigger” acceleration, where your unvested shares vest immediately if the company is acquired and you are terminated without cause. Without it, an acquirer can fire you the day after closing and you forfeit the equity you had not yet vested.
This is not paranoia. Roughly half of founders are removed within one to two years of an acquisition. Plan for the possibility that the buyer does not want you long-term, and make sure your equity is protected if that happens. Equity-management platforms like Carta publish data on standard startup financing provisions across thousands of rounds, which is worth reviewing to see what is genuinely market versus what is being pushed onto you.
How to Actually Negotiate a Term Sheet
Knowing the terms is half the battle. Getting better ones is the other half. A few moves that work:
- Run a competitive process before you sign anything. The single biggest source of leverage is having more than one option. Investors and acquirers behave very differently when they know you can walk to a competitor. This is also why the no-shop clause is so dangerous — it deliberately removes that leverage.
- Ask for multiple structures, not yes/no. Rather than presenting a single deal and forcing a binary answer, go back with several structures you would be comfortable with — different valuations, preference terms, or earn-out arrangements that all hit the other side’s target. It turns the conversation from “no, I don’t like it” into multiple choice, which is far more productive. The goal is a structure that lets both sides hit their numbers — a genuine win-win usually exists if you look for it.
- Get a great attorney and, for larger deals, a banker. This is not the place to save money on advisors. A specialist who negotiates these term sheets all day knows what is standard, what is aggressive, and what to trade. Getting a clear, written list of the exact terms you want before you receive a term sheet is itself something a good advisor helps with. Never sign something you do not fully understand — get help understanding it first.
- Know your walk-away math. Build your own waterfall model for each proposed term sheet. Know exactly what you take home at several different exit prices under each structure. If you cannot model it, you cannot negotiate it.
The whole point is to think like the person on the other side of the table. They have modeled their return down to the basis point. Until you have modeled yours, you are negotiating blind.
When a Term Sheet Isn’t the Right Move At All
Before you optimize a term sheet, ask whether you should be raising at all. The best way to grow a SaaS business is through operating cash flow — making money from customers and reinvesting it. That has been true for two thousand years and remains the most reliable path. Outside capital should accelerate a business that already works, never paper over poor unit economics.
If your unit economics are not yet sound, fix those before you raise — review SaaS unit economics and your LTV/CAC ratio first, because no term sheet improves a business that loses money on every customer. And if you do need capital but want to keep more control, debt can be an option for companies with strong recurring revenue; see venture debt and SaaS debt financing for the trade-offs. For founders weighing the broader decision, venture capital vs bootstrapping lays out the full picture, and SaaS exit strategy covers where all of this is ultimately headed.
The reason to understand term sheets is not to raise more money. It is to make sure that when capital does come in, you keep enough of your company that the years of work are actually worth it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a term sheet legally binding?
Mostly no, but partly yes. The economic terms (valuation, preferences) are generally non-binding until the long-form agreements are signed. However, certain clauses — confidentiality, the no-shop/exclusivity period, and who pays expenses — are usually binding the moment you sign. And in practice, the economic terms rarely change after a signed term sheet, so treat all of it as if it were binding.
What’s the most important term to negotiate?
The liquidation preference, and specifically whether it is simple (non-participating) or participating. This single distinction can swing a founder’s exit proceeds by millions on the same sale price. Fight for simple, non-participating, 1x preferences. Everything else is secondary to getting this right.
What is a fair liquidation preference for a SaaS company?
A 1x non-participating preference is the market standard and the fair benchmark. A 1x participating preference is investor-favorable but sometimes accepted in competitive rounds — if so, push for a participation cap. Anything above 1x, or full-ratchet anti-dilution, is aggressive and should be resisted unless you have no alternatives and understand exactly what you are giving up.
Can I negotiate the valuation on a term sheet?
Yes, but it is often not where the real money is. A higher valuation with participating preferences, a cumulative dividend, and full-ratchet anti-dilution can leave you worse off than a lower valuation with clean terms. Model the waterfall under each structure before deciding which valuation is actually “better.”
How long does a term sheet take to turn into a closed deal?
Typically 30 to 90 days from signed term sheet to closed deal, depending on diligence and legal complexity. The no-shop period is usually set to roughly cover this window, which is exactly why you want it as short as possible — it limits how long you are locked out of your alternatives.
Should I sign a term sheet without a lawyer?
No. The cost of a specialist attorney is trivial compared to the lifetime cost of a bad term. A good lawyer knows which terms are standard, which are aggressive, and what to trade for what. For larger transactions, add a banker. Never sign a term you do not fully understand — and if you do not understand a term, that is the signal to get help, not to sign faster.

