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Secrets of Sand Hill Road

Page 33

by Scott Kupor


  on confidentiality, 285

  on conversion/auto-conversion to common shares, 160–165, 280

  on co-sale agreements, 181

  on D&O insurance, 183, 284

  on dividends, 154–155

  drag-along provisions in, 182–183, 252, 284

  on employee and consultant agreements, 187

  and go-shop provisions, 239

  on information rights, 282

  on legal counsel and fees, 286

  on liquidation preference, 155–159, 279

  and no-shop provisions, 187–188, 239, 285

  on preferred shares, 141–142

  on price per share, 147–149, 278

  on pro rata investments, 178–180, 283

  on protective provisions, 173–177, 281–282

  and recapitalizations, 281, 282

  on redemption rights, 159

  on registration rights, 178, 282

  on right-of-first-refusal, 180–181

  sample, 141, 277–286

  on stock purchase agreement, 284

  on stock restriction, 180–182, 283

  on vesting, 183–187, 284

  on voting rights, 167–169, 281

  Tesla, 110

  timing in startup world, importance of, 14

  Tiny Speck, 137

  Trados case, 220–231

  and common shareholders, 221–222, 223

  and conflict of board, 222–226

  decision on, 227–228

  distribution of proceeds from acquisition, 221

  and entire fairness rule, 222, 226–229

  guidelines stemming from, 225–226

  and management incentive plan, 221, 226–227

  takeaways from, 228–231

  transfer restrictions, 98–99

  Uber, 102, 172–173

  United States and venture capital, 3, 271, 275

  university endowments, 54–55, 56–57, 71

  unrelated business income (UBIT), 93–94

  use of proceeds, 278

  vacation policies, 244–245

  VA Linux, 264–265

  valuation, 118–123

  and antidilution provisions in term sheet, 165–167

  and convertible notes, 144

  pre- and post-money, 147–149

  of very-early-stage startups, 153–154

  valuation marks, understanding, 76–83

  venture-backed companies

  economic impact of, 3–4, 41

  exiting options of (see acquisitions; initial public offerings)

  five largest US market capitalization companies, 25, 41

  and information asymmetry, 5, 140, 275

  VC’s relationship with, 2–3, 4–5

  venture capital (VC)

  and ability to raise new funds, 67–68

  as asset class, 29–30

  batting average of, 37–40

  cardinal sins of, 44, 50–51, 179–180

  competition for, 271–272

  distribution of returns for, 30–32, 31, 35, 38, 40

  and dot.com boom/bust, 64–65

  early years in Silicon Valley, 19–20

  as endorsement of a company, 43–44

  equity financing as basis of, 26–27, 28

  and evolution of VC industry, 270–273

  extensions of last round of, 233

  and institutional investors, 40–41

  life cycle of, 7–8, 114–115, 268

  and life cycle of fund, 152

  measuring success of, 36–40

  median ten-year returns in, 30

  and multiple funds, 67

  potential replacements for, 273–274

  relationship of LPs to, 69–71

  reserves set aside by, 66–67

  restricted nature of, 35–36

  risks inherent in, 39

  rounds of, 34–35, 66–67, 115–117, 138–139, 151–152

  signaling in, 32–33, 35, 37

  size of industry, 40–41

  and state of fund, 83–84

  three professional roles in, 29

  and Yale University endowment, 62–63, 64–65

  as zero-sum game, 33–35

  venture capitalists

  average duration of relationship with, 5, 115

  creating incentives for, 114–115

  as dual fiduciaries, 201–202

  exit of, following IPO, 266–267

  and failure to invest in winners, 33

  funding from (see difficult financings; raising money from venture capitalists; term sheets)

  goals of, 114–115, 126, 139

  and information asymmetry, 5, 140, 275

  and opportunity costs, 43–44, 83, 212–213, 223

  over-involvement with company, 203

  and pitches (see pitching to venture capitalists)

  role of, 2–3, 29, 274–275

  vesting

  accelerated, 99–101, 186–187, 250–251

  and acquisitions, 250–251

  and founders, 95–97, 99–101, 183, 186, 205–206

  and general partners (GPs), 89

  and term sheets, 183–187, 284

  VMware, 132

  voting

  on authorization of new classes of stock, 176

  on corporate actions, 176

  protective provisions on, 173–177

  voting rights, 167–169, 281

  WARN statutes, 243–244

  waterfall valuation method, 77, 78–79

  Waymo, 187

  whaling industry, 53

  winding down the company, 243–246

  working capital, 150

  Yale University endowment, 54, 59–65

  Y Combinator (YC), 20–21

  zero-sum game, venture capital as, 33–35

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  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Scott Kupor is the managing partner of Andreessen Horowitz. He has overseen the firm's rapid growth to one hundred fifty employees and more than $7 billion in assets under management. He is also a cofounder and codirector of the Stanford Venture Capital Director's College and teaches venture capital and corporate governance courses at Stanford Law School and the Haas School of Business and Boalt School of Law at UC Berkeley. He is vice-chair of the investment committee for St. Jude Children's Research Hospital and was previously the chairman of the board of the National Venture Capital Association.

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