Why we picked it This is the term sheet guide written for the Indian cap table, using rupee exits (a ₹40 Cr sale on a ₹100 Cr paper valuation) to show how liquidation preference and ESOP timing quietly move money off your side of the table. It nails the two India-specific traps most founders miss: whether the ESOP pool is carved pre-money or post-money, and full-ratchet versus broad-based weighted-average anti-dilution, then tells you plainly that a startup lawyer who has seen 100 term sheets is worth every rupee and not the place to cut costs.
How to Read a Startup Term Sheet Like a Founder
From Malpani Ventures by Malpani Ventures 15 min read
- Insist the ESOP pool is created post-completion (post-money) so the dilution sits on the cap table, not on your founder shares
- Refuse full-ratchet anti-dilution; broad-based weighted average is the Indian market-friendly default to hold to
- Model the downside exit and lock good-leaver / bad-leaver vesting terms, then pay for an experienced startup lawyer to review before signing