You've done this before. You shouldn't have to rebuild the spreadsheet.
Every SAFE, clause, and scenario you cared about last round — one workspace this time, defensible by default.
Free to start · Your data never trains a model
Second company. Tighter round. You don't need hand-holding — you need the receipts.
You've raised before, shipped before, exited once maybe. The mistakes that cost you last time are known to you. What you want is a workspace that remembers them, runs the numbers fast, and makes the diligence call as clean as the deck.
Is the liquidation stack in this sheet subtly worse than my last one?
How much does the new option pool actually cost me — not the lead?
Which scenarios do I show my co-founders without restarting the modeling from zero?
OwnershipFlow keeps the whole set beside you. The same rigor. None of the rebuild.
You don't need training. You need to move.
Side-by-side this round against your last.
Upload both PDFs. Deal Intelligence grades each clause on the same scale. The diff is visible in one view — so you know where you are negotiating forward and where you are conceding ground.
See Deal IntelligenceCompare pool-shuffle, bridge, priced round — in minutes.
Scenario Simulator runs three or four variants of the cap table at once. Dilution, ownership, exit payout at $50M / $200M / $1B — side-by-side. Pick the one you'd sign, then counter with confidence.
See Scenario SimulatorEvery advisor grant, every side bet, one place.
Portfolio tracks investments, advisorships, and side ventures alongside your operating equity. When the new lead asks about conflicts, the answer is a link, not a 2am spreadsheet.
See PortfolioYou walk into diligence with a cap table you'd hand to a lawyer on the first day.
Within the first week of a live term sheet:
You see the degradation between rounds at a glance.
Last round's scores are right there. If this sheet is meaningfully worse — 2× vs 1× preferred, broader anti-dilution, narrower board — you know before the lead explains why it's "standard."
Your co-founder conversations take minutes, not evenings.
Share the scenario set. They see the trade-offs you're weighing. The alignment meeting becomes a decision, not a debate.
Your counter lands numbered, not hand-wavy.
Every ask attaches to a specific clause, a specific weight, a specific dollar swing at exit. Leads respect math.
Your next company starts on the same rails.
Portfolio carries everything forward. The spreadsheet you built last time stays retired.