|
|
|
|
|
by Mikho
1160 days ago
|
|
Thanks. Good read. I'd say legal fees don't influence the cap table and, hence, founders' share unless founders pay them with equity. So, it's a matter of the way the investments are spent, not the cap table structure. But definitely spending relatively big chunk of money on legal at an early stage leaves less money to use for the primary purpose and later dilutes founders' share with inevitable new financing. |
|
Start with the fact the company will be worth a billion (all the gains are outliers and you have to play to win), and then inductively work out costs backwards.
Objective function: Let’s assume every productive hour in the first year linearly increases your returns, so spending 5 weeks chasing investors reduces returns by $100 million. Every angel dollar returns 30x, so the marginal cost of $30k legal fees is actually $9 million (ignoring other non-trivial factors!)
Constraints: you must have certain things (money, employees, legal documents, advice) so the outcomes are extremely sensitive to the constraints. We talk about a constraint like legal fees, but removing that constraint should theoretically have a massive impact on viability, IPO price, and founder returns. It isn’t linearly a few percent ($x kilodollars of a $x megadollar investment).
Startup economics for founders are highly unintuitive and non-linear, with exponentials over time causing thought failures. You have made me realise I don’t have a good feel for this AT ALL.
Addendum: one of the sentences on siliconhillslawyer.com talks about smart VCs counter-intuitively forcing money to be wasted in early rounds. It gives the VCs more leverage with founder negotiations about equity ownership when the money runs out and another round is needed.