Equity Dilution
Definition
The reduction in an existing shareholder's percentage ownership in a company resulting from the issuance of new shares or the conversion of convertible instruments. Equity dilution is an inherent feature of venture-backed growth companies and must be carefully modelled at each financing round to ensure founders and early investors retain sufficient alignment. Anti-dilution provisions, pro-rata rights, and option pool sizing are key mechanisms for managing dilutive impact.
Related Terms
Related FAQ
What are investor expectations for equity distribution and cap table management?
Investors expect: founders retain 40-60%, employee option pool 10-20%, existing investors dilute pro-rata. Poorly managed cap tables kill deals.
Read full answer →Put this knowledge to work
Use Opagio's free tools to measure and grow the intangible assets that drive your business value.