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investors veto

What Are Investors Actually Allowed to Veto in My Company? 

What Are Investors Actually Allowed to Veto in My Company? 

You closed the round. The money is in. 

But buried in your term sheet is a list of decisions you may no longer be able to make alone. Protective provisions give investors veto rights over specific company actions. Many founders sign them without fully understanding what they gave up. 

What Protective Provisions Actually Are 

They Are Not Just Governance Boilerplate 

Protective provisions are clauses that require preferred stockholder approval before the company can take certain actions. They appear in most priced rounds. The scope, however, varies significantly depending on what you negotiated. 

The Standard List Covers More Than Most Founders Expect 

Most protective provisions require investor approval for: 

  • issuing new shares or creating new stock classes 
  • taking on debt above a specified threshold 
  • selling, merging, or dissolving the company 
  • amending the company’s certificate of incorporation 
  • changing the size of the board of directors 

The Scope Is Negotiable 

Many founders accept the investor’s proposed protective provisions list with limited negotiation. But several items on that list are frequently negotiated down or removed entirely: 

  • the debt threshold (raise it, or it limits operating flexibility) 
  • approval requirements for ordinary-course business decisions 
  • provisions that give a single investor class unilateral veto power 

The standard list is a starting point, not a fixed baseline. 

Veto Rights Are Not the Same as Board Control 

A common confusion: investors with protective provisions do not run your company. They have veto rights over specific actions. Day-to-day operations, hiring decisions, and product direction typically remain yours unless the provision language explicitly says otherwise. Read the list carefully. 

3 Mistakes Founders Make Here 

Mistake #1: Assuming “Standard” Means Harmless 

Investors often present protective provisions as standard boilerplate. Most of the items on the list are indeed common. But standard does not mean narrow. Founders who sign without reading the scope often discover: 

  • provisions that require investor approval for routine debt (a $50K credit line) 
  • language that gives investors veto over equity grants to employees 
  • clauses that require preferred approval for any board size change 

Mistake #2: Not Modeling Which Decisions Will Be Affected 

Founders who do not map protective provisions to their actual business plans often discover conflicts later. Before signing, identify: 

  • the largest debt your business is likely to take in the next 18 months 
  • any equity-based compensation you plan to issue 
  • any partnerships or strategic deals that could be characterized as a change of control 

If any of those actions require preferred approval under the proposed provisions, negotiate the language before you close. 

Mistake #3: Not Getting Counsel to Flag the Outliers 

Standard protective provisions and outlier provisions can look identical on paper. Founders who review the list without startup-specialized counsel often miss: 

  • unusual veto triggers that go beyond industry norms 
  • provisions that bind future rounds to the same approval requirements 
  • language that gives a minority investor class disproportionate blocking power 

Before You Sign, Work Through This 

Before you agree to protective provisions in any term sheet, work through this: 

☐ Have I read every item on the protective provisions list and mapped it to decisions I expect to make in the next 24 months? 

☐ Is the debt approval threshold high enough that it will not interfere with normal operating decisions? 

☐ Does the provision require a majority of preferred, or can a single investor class block a decision unilaterally? 

☐ Have I asked which items on the list are standard and which are being added by this specific investor? 

☐ Has startup-specialized counsel reviewed the full list and flagged any outliers before I respond? 

☐ Do I know which provisions carry over into future financing rounds? 

If you cannot answer yes to all of these, you are not ready to agree to these terms yet. 

Bottom Line 

Protective provisions are a standard part of most priced rounds. What is not standard is the scope. Founders who map investor veto rights to their actual business plans before signing are in a much stronger position than those who discover conflicts after the round closes. 

Ready to Walk Into Your Next Round Knowing What You Are Agreeing To? 

Join our First Time Founders Masterclass on May 19 to learn more and ask questions. 

Reserve your seat: https://howtoraisevcround.com/how-to-raise-priced-round-2 

Sources Used 

  • Cooley, Protective Provisions in Venture Capital Financing, https://www.cooleygo.com/glossary/protective-provisions/ 
  • Carta, What Are Protective Provisions?, https://carta.com/learn/startups/financing/protective-provisions/ 
  • NVCA, Model Legal Documents — Investor Rights Agreement, https://nvca.org/model-legal-documents/ 
  • Founder Institute, Understanding Protective Provisions in Venture Capital, https://fi.co/insight/understanding-protective-provisions-in-venture-capital 
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