Raising capital is often positioned as a milestone, proof that a business is “ready for the next stage.” For founders, however, financing is rarely just about money. It’s about control, alignment, and long-term decision-making.
This case study explores how a structured legal approach helped a founder raise growth capital while protecting governance, maintaining operational control, and avoiding misalignment with investors.
The company had reached a clear inflection point. Product-market fit was established, growth opportunities were emerging, and additional capital would accelerate expansion.
Key pressures included:
- Competing investor expectations
- Limited time to negotiate while running the company
- Long-term governance implications beyond the immediate raise

At the same time, the founder was cautious. Early conversations with investors surfaced familiar concerns: board seats, veto rights, liquidation preferences, and control provisions that could reshape how the company was run long after the round closed.
The challenge was not attracting capital. It was raising capital on terms that supported the business — not constrained it.
Investors move faster when alignment is clear. Founders keep control when structure supports that alignment.
Capital raises introduce new stakeholders into a company’s decision-making framework. Even well-intentioned investors seek protections — and those protections, if not understood or structured carefully, can shift control in subtle but lasting ways.
Founders often underestimate:
None of these issues are inherently problematic.
But without clarity, they can create friction, both immediately and years later.
Our role was not to block investment or slow momentum, but to help the founder understand, evaluate, and negotiate terms with confidence.
Rather than treating the financing as a single document exercise, we approached it as a strategic decision-making process.
Once objectives were clear, negotiations became more disciplined. Conversations shifted from vague concerns to concrete decisions: where flexibility existed, where it didn’t, and why.
This clarity reduced back-and-forth, improved alignment with investors, and allowed the founder to stay focused on running the business. The financing moved forward without introducing unnecessary governance constraints or future friction.
This shift, from reactive to prepared, changed the tone of the transaction.
Practical Advice for Founders Raising Capital
Founders considering a raise often benefit from stepping back before engaging deeply with term sheets:
Understand which rights affect control versus economics
Consider how governance provisions scale over time
Align internal decision-making before external negotiations
Treat early structure as a foundation, not a formality
Small choices early can shape years of decision-making later.
Common Issues That Create Fundraising Friction
Even successful raises can introduce avoidable tension when:
Terms are accepted without understanding long-term impact
Governance is negotiated reactively, under time pressure
Founders focus on valuation while overlooking control provisions
Individually, these issues may seem manageable. Together, they can erode autonomy and slow execution post-closing.
I have worked with David Moon across multiple ventures over many years and have consistently found him to be a highly capable and dependable legal advisor. From early-stage financings to more complex corporate matters, David brings a thoughtful combination of legal expertise and practical business insight. He has been a valuable presence in the boardroom, contributing not only as counsel but also as a strategic partner when needed.
David approaches his work with professionalism, sound judgment, and a clear focus on outcomes. I would confidently recommend him to entrepreneurs, executives, and professionals seeking experienced and reliable legal counsel.
The company successfully raised growth capital while maintaining a governance structure aligned with the founder’s vision.
The result was:
Most importantly, the business moved forward without introducing constraints that would need to be undone later.
We help founders approach financing with structure, clarity, and foresight. Our role is to support informed decisions, protect long-term control where it matters, and ensure that capital supports, rather than reshapes, the business.

