Venture Capital Explained: From Seed Round to IPO

TL;DR: What Venture Capital Is

Venture capital (VC) is private-market funding for early-stage companies that are too young or risky for traditional bank loans but have the potential to grow very fast. A VC fund pools money from institutional investors, deploys it into startups, and tries to return multiples of that capital through exits — typically an IPO or acquisition. The whole process, from first investment to final distribution, usually spans about a decade.

Who Puts Money Into a VC Fund?

Every VC fund has two types of investors. Limited partners (LPs) provide the capital. They are typically large institutions — pension funds, university endowments, sovereign wealth funds, insurance companies, and high-net-worth family offices. LPs commit a fixed amount to the fund but play no role in day-to-day decisions.

The general partner (GP) is the VC firm itself. The GP selects investments, sits on boards, recruits executives, and manages the portfolio. In exchange, the GP earns fees and a share of the profits.

Think of LPs as the silent backers of a film studio, and the GP as the studio that picks which projects to greenlight and runs production.

How the GP Gets Paid: Management Fees and Carried Interest

The standard VC compensation structure is often summarized as “2 and 20”:

  • 2% annual management fee on committed capital. A $300 million fund generates $6 million per year to cover salaries, office costs, and operations during the investment period.
  • 20% carried interest (or “carry”) on profits above the fund’s return hurdle — typically an 8% annualized return to LPs. Once LPs receive their capital back plus the hurdle, the GP takes 20 cents of every dollar of profit. The LP keeps the other 80 cents.

The 20% carry is where the big money lives in venture. A fund that turns $300 million into $1 billion generates $700 million in gains. After the hurdle and return of capital, the GP may pocket well over $100 million in carry — aligning the GP’s incentive with the LP’s desire for outsized returns.

The Funding Ladder: From Idea to IPO

Companies don’t raise all their capital at once. Funding happens in stages, with each round designed to fund the company to the next major milestone. Each round dilutes existing shareholders — including the founders — as new investors receive equity in exchange for their capital.

Stage Typical Raise Typical Post-Money Valuation Key Milestone
Pre-seed / Angel $100K–$2M $2M–$10M Prototype or early users
Seed $2M–$10M $8M–$40M Product-market fit, first revenue
Series A $10M–$30M $30M–$150M Scalable growth model proven
Series B $30M–$100M $100M–$500M Market expansion, team scaling
Series C+ $50M–$300M+ $300M–$2B+ International expansion, pre-IPO
IPO / Exit Varies Determined by public markets Liquidity event for all shareholders
Source: National Venture Capital Association (NVCA). Ranges are illustrative; actual deal sizes vary by sector, market conditions, and geography. As of 2025.

Dilution: A Worked Example

Every time a startup raises a new round, the percentage of the company owned by existing shareholders shrinks — this is called dilution. It’s not a punishment; it’s the trade-off for getting the cash needed to grow. Here’s how it plays out across four stages for a two-founder startup that also reserves equity for future employees:

  • Founding: Founders hold 80% combined. The remaining 20% is an employee option pool for future hires.
  • Seed round ($5M at $25M post-money): New seed VC investor receives 20%. Existing holders are diluted proportionally. Founders now hold 64%, pool 16%, seed VC 20%.
  • Series A ($20M at $100M post-money): Series A investor receives 20%. Founders now 51%, pool 13%, seed VC 16%, Series A VC 20%.
  • Series B ($50M at $250M post-money): Series B investor receives 20%. Founders now 41%, pool 10%, seed VC 13%, Series A VC 16%, Series B VC 20%.

At each stage, the founders own less of the pie — but the pie is much bigger. Owning 41% of a $250M company ($102M) is far more valuable than owning 80% of a $3M company ($2.4M).

Founder Equity Dilution Across Four Funding Rounds Stacked horizontal bar chart showing how founder ownership (blue) shrinks from 80% at founding to 41% after Series B as new investors join the cap table. Founding Seed Series A Series B Founders 80% Pool 20% 64% 16% VC 20% 51% 13% 16% A: 20% 41% 10% 13% 16% B: 20% Founders Option Pool Seed VC Series A VC Series B VC
Illustrative example. Actual dilution depends on round size and pre-money valuation. Source: NVCA, illustrative model.

Key Terms in a VC Term Sheet

When a VC agrees to invest, the deal is initially documented in a term sheet — a non-binding summary of the key terms. Founders often encounter these concepts for the first time:

  • Pre-money vs. post-money valuation: If a VC values a company at $20M before investing $5M, the pre-money valuation is $20M and the post-money is $25M. The VC owns $5M / $25M = 20%.
  • Liquidation preference: In a downside scenario (acquisition below expectations), preferred stock investors collect their money back first — before common stockholders (founders, employees) receive anything. A 1x preference returns the original investment; a 2x preference returns double before common gets paid.
  • Pro-rata rights: The right for existing investors to participate in future rounds, maintaining their ownership percentage by writing additional checks.
  • Anti-dilution: Protects investors if the company raises a future round at a lower valuation (a “down round”). It adjusts the conversion price of their preferred shares to soften the economic blow.
  • Vesting: Founders and employees typically earn their equity over time — often four years with a one-year cliff. This ensures key people stay with the company. If a founder leaves after six months, they usually forfeit most of their unvested shares.

The Power Law: Why One Winner Pays for Everything

VC is a power law business. The majority of returns in a portfolio come from one or two extraordinary outcomes. Most startups fail to return capital, a handful break even, and a small number generate multiples large enough to carry the entire fund — and then some.

According to the NVCA, 75% of the largest US VC-backed companies would not exist or achieve their current scale without an active venture capital industry. The names include Google, Apple (in its early days), Amazon, Meta, and in the current AI wave, Anthropic and OpenAI — both backed through multiple VC rounds before reaching stratospheric private valuations.

Typical VC Portfolio Return Distribution (10 Investments) Bar chart showing that in a typical VC portfolio of 10 companies, roughly 4 fail completely, 3 return modest amounts, 2 return 2–10x, and 1 exceptional company returns 20x or more — often generating most of the fund’s total return. 0 1 2 3 4 Cos. out of 10 4 0x (Failed) 3 0.5–2x 2 2–10x 1 20x+ (Fund-maker) Outcome Category (per 10 investments)
Illustrative model based on commonly cited VC industry return distributions. The single 20x+ company often generates more than 50% of the fund’s total return. Source: NVCA, general industry research.

The Economic Impact of VC-Backed Companies

The aggregate economic footprint of venture-backed businesses is substantial. According to the National Venture Capital Association:

  • VC-backed public companies spent $244 billion on R&D in 2020, up from essentially zero in the 1970s.
  • Employment at VC-backed companies grew 960% from 1990 to 2020 — compared with 40% for the total private sector.
  • 62.5% of VC-backed jobs are distributed broadly across the entire United States, not concentrated in coastal hubs.

Down Rounds and What They Mean

Not every round is an up round. When a company raises capital at a valuation lower than its previous round, it’s called a down round. Down rounds trigger anti-dilution protections for earlier investors, severely dilute founders and employees, and signal to the market that the company’s growth story has stalled. They are demoralizing but survivable — many great companies have endured a down round on the way to eventual success.

From VC to Public: The Exit

VC funds need liquidity events to return capital to LPs. The most common paths are:

  • IPO (Initial Public Offering): The company lists on a public exchange. Early investors can sell shares through the market once the lockup period expires (typically 180 days after the IPO).
  • Acquisition: A larger company buys the startup, paying cash or stock. This is the most common VC exit — acquisitions outnumber IPOs by a wide margin.
  • Secondary sale: An investor sells its stake to another private investor before an IPO. This has become common as companies stay private longer.

After a successful exit, the GP distributes proceeds to LPs after deducting carried interest. The fund is then wound down, and the GP typically raises a new fund to start the cycle again.

What to Learn Next

  • Cap table management — understanding SAFE notes, convertible notes, and how option pools work as a company grows.
  • Private equity vs. VC — PE invests in established companies using debt; VC invests in early-stage companies using equity. Different risk profiles, different return drivers.
  • How an IPO works — once a VC-backed company is ready for the public markets, the process involves S-1 filings, investment bank bookbuilding, and price discovery.

Sources

Disclosure: This article was produced with AI assistance and reviewed before publication. It is for informational purposes only and is not investment advice.

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