Capital Formation
Term sheets, investor diligence, side letters, and the corporate cleanup that should happen before a round is under pressure.
Consilium Law LLC supports growth-stage companies through the legal work of raising capital. The practice covers pre-financing corporate cleanup, term sheet negotiation, investor diligence, securities law compliance, board approvals, capitalization-table hygiene, side letters, and the post-closing governance shifts that follow a priced round.
The work is structured for founders and executive teams who want their counsel on the same side of the table as the company throughout the round.
What does capital formation legal work actually cover?
Capital formation is broader than negotiating a term sheet. It runs from the first conversation with an investor through closing and into the first board cycle after the money lands. The work includes securities law compliance, diligence response, definitive agreements, side letters, board approvals, equity documentation, and the corporate cleanup that diligence almost always surfaces.
Common formats include priced equity rounds, SAFEs, convertible notes, venture debt, and strategic investments. Each has its own legal rhythm.
- Pre-financing corporate cleanup: cap-table reconciliation, IP assignment, option-pool sizing.
- Term sheet review and negotiation: valuation, liquidation preferences, anti-dilution, board composition, protective provisions.
- Securities law compliance: Regulation D filings, blue sky, and accredited-investor verification.
- Definitive document negotiation: SPA, IRA, ROFR/Co-Sale, voting agreement, charter amendments.
- Investor diligence response, disclosure schedules, and side letters.
What should a company prepare before a fundraise?
The strongest position to negotiate from is a clean record. That means a current cap table that ties to the corporate books, signed IP assignments for every contributor, founder vesting that matches what investors expect, organizational documents that reflect actual practice, and a board-consent trail that is up to date.
A short pre-fundraise audit usually identifies the gaps before investor counsel does.
How does this fit into an outside general counsel relationship?
Capital formation work commonly sits inside an outside general counsel engagement, with discrete scoping for the round itself. That way, the same counsel that handled corporate cleanup, equity grants, and commercial contracts during the year is the counsel that runs the round when it lands.
The continuity tends to reduce diligence surprises and shortens the closing timeline.
What about post-closing governance?
A priced round usually changes the company’s governance. Board seats shift, protective provisions activate, information rights start running, and committee structures sometimes follow. Consilium Law sets up the post-closing calendar and the documentation flow so the new governance pattern is actually operationalized, not just papered.
Frequently asked questions
When should a company bring in counsel during a fundraise?
The earlier the better. Term sheet stage is the cheapest place to negotiate, and pre-term-sheet corporate cleanup avoids re-papering work that diligence would otherwise surface late.
Does Consilium Law work on the investor side or only the company side?
Consilium Law represents the company. The founding attorney has prior experience on the investor side, which informs how the company-side work is run, but the engagement runs for the company, not the fund.
How are fundraise legal fees handled under a flat monthly engagement?
Routine cap-table and corporate work usually sits inside the monthly engagement. A priced round, a SAFE pre-seed, or a venture debt facility is scoped separately so the monthly relationship stays clear and the round-specific work is priced on its own.
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