Your cohort's cap tables shouldn't live in twenty-four different spreadsheets.
Give every founder in the batch the same workspace. See what they're signing before they sign it. Grade the batch's ownership health on one dashboard.
Cohort pricing · Co-branded workspaces · Data export
You run a batch. Each founder is closing something — and you can't audit it in real time.
Twenty-four companies, three partners, three months. Every founder has a term sheet, a SAFE stack, or a co-founder split going sideways. You want to help. But you can't read twenty-four cap tables by Thursday and still run office hours.
Is this SAFE cap going to screw the founder at Series A?
Which of my cohort companies is about to dilute out of meaningful ownership?
Are we delivering consistent founder-level guidance, or is it down to who happens to respond?
OwnershipFlow gives every batch company the same engine, and gives you the view across the batch.
Standardize the workspace. Scale the oversight.
Every cohort company starts on the same rails.
Provision a workspace per company at batch kickoff. Equity Engine pre-configured. Portfolio, Snapshot, and Vesting live from day one. Your playbook is the default.
See StudioOne view across twenty-four cap tables.
Snapshot rolls every founder's ownership, every SAFE cap, every liquidation preference into one batch dashboard. Outliers surface. Red flags surface. You spend office hours on what matters.
See SnapshotEvery term sheet graded the same way.
When a founder uploads a term sheet, Deal Intelligence scores it and flags hostile clauses. You see the grade before the Zoom call. You coach to the clause, not the vibe.
See Deal IntelligenceYour batch graduates with cleaner cap tables than your last three.
By demo day:
Every founder has a defensible equity story.
The Equity Engine split and the vesting schedule are on file for every team. No demo-day-week scramble to reconstruct who owns what.
You catch the predatory term sheet in the cohort, not after.
Deal Intelligence scores before the Zoom call. The founders getting the roughest terms get your senior partner first, not last.
Your LPs see the batch ownership health without you rebuilding a deck.
Batch-level reporting exports from Snapshot. The metric set is consistent. The story writes itself.
Next batch inherits the workspace, not the lessons.
Templates carry over. Your program learning compounds inside the product, not inside heads that leave.