How to raise venture capital. The mechanics, the math, and the prep work.
Venture capital is a specific financing model designed for high-growth startups expected to deliver outsized returns. It is not a loan; investors take ownership in exchange for cash. This guide explains how VC actually works, what to do before you start pitching, the funding stages and amounts, dilution math founders should run, and how to choose investors who add value beyond the check.
Start here.
VCs invest in Delaware C-Corps. LLCs and S-Corps are not acceptable to institutional investors due to tax pass-through and stock structure limitations.
Pre-seed ($250k-$1M), Seed ($1M-$4M), Series A ($5M-$15M), Series B ($15M-$40M), later stages scale up.
Each round dilutes existing shareholders. A founder owning 100% pre-seed typically owns 50-60% after Series A and 25-35% after Series C.
Active fundraising takes 3-6 months. Full process from preparation to closing is 6-12 months.
Bootstrapped, profitable, or lifestyle businesses are not VC candidates. VCs need 10x+ outcomes; most businesses cannot deliver that.
The full picture.
Decide if VC is right for you
VC is for businesses with: (a) Large addressable market ($1B+ TAM), (b) Defensible technology or network effects, (c) Founder team with execution credibility, (d) Plan to exit via IPO or acquisition within 7-10 years, (e) Willingness to give up significant control and ownership. If any of these are not true, alternatives like revenue-based financing, SBA loans, or bootstrapping are better fits.
Convert to Delaware C-Corp
Institutional VCs invest in Delaware C-Corps almost exclusively. If you are currently an LLC or S-Corp, convert before fundraising. Statutory conversion in 36 states; merger or asset-assignment elsewhere. Allow 4-8 weeks. We handle conversions for $899.
Build the right artifacts
Pitch deck (10-15 slides covering problem, solution, market, traction, team, financials, ask), data room (financials, contracts, customer info, team bios), one-page exec summary, financial model (3-5 year), customer references. Pre-seed: less data needed. Series A+: comprehensive data room required.
Stage definitions
Pre-seed: $250k-$1M, pre-product or very early. Often friends/family + angels. Seed: $1M-$4M, early product, some users or revenue. Series A: $5M-$15M, validated product-market fit, revenue traction. Series B: $15M-$40M, scaling and unit economics proof. Series C+: growth capital toward profitability or IPO.
Dilution math
Pre-money valuation $4M + raising $1M = $5M post-money, investor owns 20% ($1M / $5M). Each round dilutes existing shareholders proportionally. Plus option pool (typically 10-15%) expansion at each round dilutes founders further. Model your end-state ownership before signing the first term sheet.
Choose investors carefully
Stage fit (some funds only do seed; some only do A+), sector fit, check size range, lead vs follower, time commitment (board seats, monthly check-ins), value-add beyond money (introductions, hiring help, M&A expertise). Bad investors cost more than no investors.
Term sheet basics
Valuation (pre-money, post-money), investment amount, equity type (typically preferred stock with liquidation preference), liquidation preference (1x non-participating standard), option pool expansion, board composition, anti-dilution protection, drag-along rights, information rights, pro-rata rights for future rounds. Negotiate the term sheet carefully; later docs flow from it.
Closing
Term sheet (non-binding) leads to legal docs (typically Stock Purchase Agreement, Investor Rights Agreement, Voting Agreement, Right of First Refusal Agreement). Legal closes in 2-4 weeks after term sheet. Funds wire after closing.
Worked example: pre-seed to Series A dilution
| Founders form C-Corp, issue 8M shares | Founders own 100% |
| Reserve 2M shares as option pool (20%) | Founders own 80% |
| Pre-seed: $500k at $4M pre, $4.5M post | Founders own 71% (80% × 89%) |
| Hire team, exercise some options | Effective dilution continues |
| Seed: $2M at $8M pre, $10M post | Founders own ~57% |
| Series A: $8M at $20M pre, $28M post | Founders own ~40% |
| After Series A | Two founders split 40% = 20% each. Started at 50% each. |
Common questions.
What is the difference between VC and angel investors?
Do I need a Delaware C-Corp to raise VC?
What is a SAFE note?
How much equity will I give up?
How long does fundraising take?
What is a term sheet?
Should I take VC money?
What does a VC do besides giving money?
Should I use a SAFE or priced equity round?
Build the foundation.
Entity, EIN, banking, cap table, contracts, books. Everything funders, lenders, and acquirers want to see.
This guide is educational. Funding decisions require professional advice from licensed attorneys and CPAs.
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