Venture Capital Blog

Business Valuation for VC Funding: Pre- and Post-Money Explained

Funding 101: Understanding Pre- and Post-Money Valuation

For entrepreneurs seeking venture capital, understanding pre-money valuation and post-money valuation is essential for successful fundraising. These valuation concepts help determine the equity exchanged for investment and shape long-term outcomes. 

Accurately navigating company worth calculation ensures founders can make informed decisions and secure favorable terms in funding rounds

This guide explains these key valuation concepts, their impact on ownership, and strategies to minimize dilution, empowering founders to approach negotiations with confidence.

Pre-Money Valuation

Pre-money valuation refers to the valuation of a company before new external funding or investments are injected. It essentially represents the company's worth at a given moment based on factors such as:

  • Market Potential: Size of the addressable market and potential for growth.
  • Team Experience: The expertise and track record of the founding team.
  • Traction: Current revenue, user growth, or key partnerships that demonstrate progress.
  • Competitive Landscape: The strength and differentiation of the company’s position relative to competitors.

There are several different ways to come up with pre-money valuations, including:

  • Comparable Company Analysis (CCA) involves comparing the company to similar peers and competitors in the same industry. 
  • Discounted Cash Flow (DCF): To calculate this, you estimate future cash flows and discount them to present value.
  • Precedent Transactions: Similar to CCA, this involves looking at the valuations of similar companies during recent acquisitions or funding rounds.

Due to the many factors involved, the subjectivity of how people weigh them, and how they differ between different companies and industries, there’s no universal formula for calculating pre-money valuations.

However, retroactively calculating the pre-money valuation based on the post-money valuation is trivial:

Pre-money Valuation = Post-money Valuation − Investment Amount

That begs the question: If pre-money valuation is so subjective, who is it meaningful for?

Well, it’s absolutely critical for founders because it directly influences the amount of equity they must give up to secure investment. A higher pre-money valuation means founders have to give up less equity to raise the same amount of funds.

For example, if a company has a pre-money valuation of $5 million and raises $1 million, the founder will have diluted their equity by 16.7%. But, if the pre-money valuation were only $4 million, the founder’s equality would have diluted by 20%.

Pre-money valuations are also important indicators to these potential stakeholders:

  • Startup Advisors: To guide founders through fundraising.
  • Venture Capital Firms: For investment decisions and negotiations.
  • Lawyers and Legal Teams: For drafting and reviewing term sheets.

However, it’s important to keep the limitations of pre-money valuations in mind to make smart decisions:

  • Subjectivity: This can vary based on market perceptions or investor assumptions.
  • Limited Financial Data: As typically happens in the seed stage, startups often lack extensive financial records.
  • Doesn't Account for Dilution: Future dilution is not considered due to additional rounds of funding.
  • Comparison Difficulties: Benchmarking against other companies in the early stages is hard.

Post-Money Valuation

How much is a company worth after investment?

Post-money valuation represents the total value of a company after receiving an investment. So, it reflects the company’s new worth after the investment is factored in and directly influences the ownership stakes of both existing shareholders and new investors.

As you might have guessed, it’s easily calculated by adding the investment amount to the pre-money valuation:

Post-money Valuation = Pre-money Valuation + Investment Amount

Another, more roundabout way, of calculating post-money valuation is if you know the amount of shares a particular investor received for a certain amount:

Post-money valuation = Investment dollar amount ÷ percent investor receives

So, let’s say that an equity firm invested $1 million for 10% of a company. That would be:

Post-money valuation = 1,000,000/0.1 = 10,000,000 or $10 million

Remember that the pre-money valuation is before any investment takes place. Since the extra $1 million pushed the valuation to $10 million, the pre-money evaluation would be $9 million in this situation.

Post-money valuation is crucial in determining two things

  1. How much ownership stake an investor receives, and
  2. How much dilution occurs for existing shareholders.

In the above example, the existing shareholders’ ownership is diluted by 20%. In a way, it means that everyone’s “say” is 20% less, regardless of how much their total ownership stake is.

As long as one can agree on the pre-money valuation, the post-money valuation is much more clear-cut. For that reason, it’s an essential metric for the following entities:

  • Board of Directors: To assess company value and growth post-investment.
  • Private Equity Firms: For evaluating investment returns and exit strategies.
  • Employees: For understanding stock options’ worth.
  • Financial Analysts: To analyze the company’s financial standing.

However, despite this, a post-money valuation may also not be the full picture. There is still some nuance that can get lost by just looking at the pure numbers:

  • Overlooks Performance: It doesn't reflect a company's day-to-day efficiency or operational success.
  • Misleading Ownership Dilution: Ownership percentages can seem artificially inflated, not capturing the true impact of future dilution.
  • Investor Preferences Ignored: It fails to account for specific investor preferences, like liquidation preferences, that could affect actual payouts.
  • Inflated Future Valuations: Relying too heavily on post-money figures may cause unrealistic expectations of future funding rounds.

Equity Dilution

Understanding equity dilution

We’ve already touched on equity dilution while explaining the previous concepts, but let’s take a closer look at what it means for startups, founders, investors, and shareholders.

Whenever a company issues new shares, equity dilution occurs because there are more shares in circulation, meaning each share is a smaller percentile of the total number. The knock-on effect is that it reduces the ownership percentage of existing shareholders.

For example, if you buy 10 shares out of a possible 50, you have 20% of all shares - or 20% “ownership.” But, if 50 new shares are issued, which means there are now 100 total shares, you only have 10% “ownership.”

This typically happens whenever there’s a new fundraising round to give new investors the opportunity to buy equity in the company. As a result, both founders and earlier investors lose some ownership.

The formula for equity dilution is as follows

Dilution = 1 - (Original Shares / New Total Shares)

For example, if a founder holds 60 shares in a company with 100 shares outstanding, but the company issues 50 new shares, the founder's ownership decreases:

Dilution = 1 − (60 / 150) = 1 - 0.4 = 0.6 or 60% ownership reduction.

So, what does equity dilution mean for founders? Well, it basically boils down to the following:

  • With a decreased effective stake in the company, founders will enjoy a lower share of future profits or liquidation proceeds.
  • Founders will have less say over key decisions regarding the company, especially if it falls below majority levels.

While that seems all doom and gloom, there are strategies that can help mitigate the impact of equity dilution:

  • Negotiate Favorable Terms: Secure investor-friendly terms that preserve founder control, like retaining voting rights or board seats.
  • Raise in Smaller Rounds: Spreading out fundraising rounds over time can reduce the immediate impact of dilution while allowing the company to grow in value.
  • Employee Equity Pools: Allocate shares for employees from the pool rather than from founder shares to minimize dilution.
  • Warrants or Convertible Debt: Use financial instruments like warrants or convertible notes to delay actual equity issuance.

Negotiation and Decision-Making

Negotiating the VC deal for your business

So, as you can deduce by now, there are many factors to consider beyond a simple valuation of your company. Any deals you make can directly influence the long-term control, financial outcomes, and trajectory of your startup.

Focusing solely on achieving high valuations can lead to erosion, a loss of key decision-making control, or unfavorable exit scenarios. 

With that in mind, here are important considerations during term sheet negotiations:

  • Liquidation Preferences: If a liquidation preference is too high, founders and employees may see little return even in successful exit scenarios, as investors get paid first.

  • Anti-Dilution Provisions: Founders risk losing more equity than anticipated if the company raises money at a lower valuation in the future. Anti-dilution provisions can limit this risk but can also result in greater dilution if overly aggressive.

  • Board Control: Losing majority control over the board could mean strategic decisions like hiring key executives or future funding rounds could be dictated by investors rather than the founder.

So, although a higher startup valuation may always seem the best option, you have to tread carefully. This often comes with stricter terms that can dilute founder control. Sometimes, lower valuations are the way to go if you want to maintain control over the company’s direction.

An example of this is Snap, Inc.’s IPO. Its founders structured the deal to retain an almost unprecedented 88% voting power through their board control despite giving up significant equity to investors. This means they could enjoy the best of both worlds, but it must’ve taken significant persuasion to pull it off.

Consulting experienced advisors before signing a term sheet is crucial, as many founders lack the expertise to fully understand how provisions like liquidation preferences, anti-dilution, or board control will affect their future operations. Experts can help founders avoid agreeing to terms that could lead to loss of equity or control down the road.

Navigating Venture Capital Investment

Understanding pre-money and post-money valuation is crucial for navigating venture capital investment for any startup or established business. 

These valuations determine the equity exchanged for funding and set the foundation for future negotiations. Beyond numbers, founders must understand investor expectations balancing valuation with control over their company. 

A strategic approach to valuation discussions helps founders secure favorable terms while positioning their businesses for long-term growth. Armed with this knowledge, founders can confidently navigate fundraising and ensure alignment with their broader goals.

Topics: venture capital Business valuation