A Term Sheet is Not a Deal

A Term Sheet is Not a Deal

First the good news. If you get a signed term sheet with a reputable angel or venture investor, there is a very good chance you will get a deal done. Unless, of course, you don’t.

Probably the most common element of every term sheet is the provision that states unequivocally that by signing the term sheet neither party is obligating itself to enter into an investment transaction, whether on the terms reflected in the term sheet or otherwise. Still, if the parties do reach agreement on a term sheet, there usually is a deal made, and usually on terms mostly consistent with the term sheet. That said, herewith a look at the most common reasons a “done term sheet” does not lead to a “done deal.”

  1. The investor can’t build a syndicate sufficient to close the deal out. As they teach you in entrepreneurship boot camp, getting a deal done is first about finding a lead investor. Someone credible who can put a stake in the ground and then help the entrepreneur close a syndicate around that stake. If your lead investor is a top tier fund, or even a second tier fund committed to invest 75% or more of the minimum closing amount, chances are somewhere between no-brainer (top tier fund) and highly likely (second tier fund) that you will get the deal done. On the other hand, if your lead investor is an anonymous angel committed to take only 35% of the minimum-closing amount, don’t hold your breath. The take home point here: your chances of turning a term sheet into a deal are pretty closely tied to the market credibility and relative capital commitment of the investor that signed the term sheet.
  2. Deal due diligence uncovers a major issue that either can’t be suitably resolved, or reflects badly on the entrepreneur’s competence. All-too-common issues that come up in due diligence include IP ownership issues (e.g. important IP was developed without appropriate work-for-hire or assignment documentation) and capitalization table issues (e.g. equity distribution is not well-documented; potential claims for significant equity outside of the cap table turn up; previous investors were unaccredited, or paid too high a price). The take home point here is get your due diligence ducks lined up (and shot, if they need shooting) before you sign the term sheet. Investors – good ones, at least – don’t like surprises, particularly when they suggest a careless, clueless or deceptive entrepreneur.
  3. In the rush to get the term sheet done, one of the parties punted on an important issue, figuring that she could take care of it in the fine print of the closing documents. For example, I once saw an investor leave the question of subjecting some of the founder’s stock to vesting for the closing documents. The very fact that the investor thought avoiding the issue at the term sheet stage was a good idea shows what a bad idea it was. A simple lesson: if an issue is material to either party, deal with it in the term sheet. It may kill the deal, but it will save a lot of time, distraction, energy and expense.
  4. The entrepreneur and the investor discover, under the pressure of getting the deal done, that they do not work very well together; or one or both of them loses confidence in the integrity of the other. Closing an early stage deal can put a lot of pressure on an entrepreneur (less so an experienced investor, who does a lot more deals). Pressure can bring out the best in a good entrepreneur. And the worst in a bad entrepreneur. Just as bad investors turn off good entrepreneurs, so bad entrepreneurs turn off good investors. Not that you can’t be an aggressive, take no prisoners entrepreneur and succeed, if that’s your style. But whatever your style, wear it well.
  5. Internal events at the investor’s shop derail the process. Say, for example, the partner leading your deal moves to another firm, or gets hit by a bus. Stuff happens, and when it does, deals often die. Being good is not enough in the high impact entrepreneurship world. You’ve got to be lucky too. Or at least not unlucky.
  6. A major external event shocks the market generally or the particular segment of the market the deal is in. Remember 9/11? I do. And so do several entrepreneurs I know who were trying to close deals at the time. More failed than succeeded. I’ve also seen deals blow up based on a shock to a particular market segment, as for example diagnostic deals in the aftermath of a major patent ruling that basically gutted the IP protection upon which the bulk of diagnostics companies were built. The take home lesson here: after you get the term sheet signed, close your deal with all deliberate speed. And stay lucky.

When an entrepreneur tells me they have a lead investor on board, my first reaction is to ask some questions. Who is it? Have they signed a term sheet? How much are they committing? How confident are you that all of your due diligence ducks are lined up? If the answers to these questions are satisfying, I’ll mentally note that the deal in question will most likely happen. Unless it doesn’t.


Paul Jones is Of Counsel and Chair of the Venture Best group at Michael Best & Friedrich. His practice focuses on emerging technology entrepreneurs and businesses and their investors. Mr. Jones began his legal career in Silicon Valley in 1985. He moved to North Carolina in 1990 to co-found the second venture capital backed spin out from the Medical Center at Duke University, and over the following dozen years was a serial venture backed entrepreneur, angel investor and finally co-managing partner of a $26 million early stage venture capital fund. He returned to Wisconsin in 2003, where he continues to consult with and occasionally invest in Wisconsin technology driven start-ups.  This post was originally published on Venture Best Blog.

The opinions expressed herein or statements made in the above column are solely those of the author, and do not necessarily reflect the views of WTN Media LLC. WTN accepts no legal liability or responsibility for any claims made or opinions expressed herein.