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Module 9 : Equity Financing

The Equity Financing Process

Author
Team CrossValWeek 3

 

How Businesses Raise Capital by Selling Ownership

Equity financing isn’t a simple transaction — it’s a structured, multi-stage process that can take months of preparation, negotiation, and execution.

Understanding how the process works helps founders and businesses navigate fundraising efficiently, protect ownership, and align with the right investors.

In this chapter, we’ll walk step-by-step through how equity financing typically unfolds — from getting ready internally to managing the relationship after the deal closes.

Overview of the Equity Financing Process

Raising equity capital follows a logical sequence:

  • Preparation
  • Offer structuring
  • Investor outreach
  • Negotiation
  • Closing
  • Post-funding integration

Skipping or rushing any stage risks poor terms, mismatched investors, or long-term challenges.

Step 1: Preparing for Fundraising

Before talking to investors, businesses must:

  • Finalize clean, audit-ready financial statements
  • Develop a strong, defensible business plan and financial model
  • Understand current valuation (or at least a defensible range)
  • Identify how much capital is needed and why (use of funds)

This preparation signals credibility and increases your chance of securing the right deal.

Common preparation tasks include:

  • Legal cleanup (IP rights, corporate structure, existing contracts)
  • Building a fundraising data room (pitch deck, financials, legal docs)
  • Crafting a clear, compelling investor pitch

Step 2: Building the Investment Offer

You must define what you are offering to investors:

  • Type of security (common shares, preferred shares, SAFE, etc.)
  • Target valuation or terms
  • Governance structure (board seats, voting rights)
  • Exit expectations (M&A, IPO, secondary sale)

The clearer and fairer the offer, the smoother the negotiations will go.

Step 3: Finding and Engaging Investors

Finding the right investors is as critical as finding capital itself.

Options include:

  • Angel investors (early-stage)
  • Venture capital firms (growth-stage)
  • Private equity (later-stage)
  • Strategic corporate investors
  • Crowdfunding platforms

Investors look for alignment on:

  • Growth potential
  • Return timelines
  • Industry focus
  • Management team strength

Building relationships early (before you’re desperate for funding) increases trust and speeds up the process.

Step 4: Negotiating Terms

Once investors show interest, the term negotiation phase begins.

Key negotiated items often include:

  • Valuation (pre-money and post-money)
  • Equity percentage being sold
  • Liquidation preferences (investor payback priority)
  • Anti-dilution protections
  • Board composition and voting rights
  • Investor rights (information rights, tag-along rights)

Term sheets are often issued at this stage — non-binding outlines of agreed principles, pending final due diligence.

Step 5: Closing the Deal

After agreeing on terms:

  • Legal teams draft the Shareholders’ Agreement and Subscription Agreements
  • Due diligence is completed (financial, legal, operational)
  • Funds are transferred upon signing
  • Shares or equity instruments are formally issued

At this point, investors officially join the cap table (ownership register) and often become involved in major company decisions.

Step 6: Post-Funding Management

After the funds arrive, the real work begins:

  • Capital must be deployed according to the agreed strategy
  • Financial reporting obligations to investors must be maintained
  • Strategic alignment with investors should be actively managed
  • Future rounds, exits, or liquidity plans are prepared over time

Good post-funding management preserves trust, enables future rounds, and avoids governance friction.

Final Thoughts

Equity financing is about much more than raising money — it’s about choosing partners, sharing future success, and managing complex relationships carefully.

Businesses that prepare thoroughly, negotiate intelligently, and execute clearly position themselves for faster growth without losing unnecessary control.

In the next chapter, we’ll break down the Advantages and Disadvantages of Equity Financing — helping you decide if this path truly fits your business model and goals.

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