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Every new angel investor wants to see their name on the cap table.
It feels official. It feels powerful. It feels like you’re really “in the game.” But in reality, that small line on a cap table can create a surprisingly large operational burden for the founder you’re trying to support.
In Ep#4 of Angels Decoded, Cheryl Kellond and Andy Walsh unpack the practical realities of cap tables, dilution, and why many angels misunderstand the role they should play once they invest.
The uncomfortable truth is simple: small checks shouldn’t slow companies down. When angels insist on being directly on the cap table without understanding the legal mechanics behind it, they often introduce friction that founders have to spend time and money managing.
This conversation explores why the best angels focus less on status and more on support.
Listen & Watch: Apple || Spotify || YouTube
Subscribe now
The Realities We Break Down
1) The Hidden Cost of Cap Tables
Every individual investor listed on a cap table creates administrative work. Legal filings, shareholder approvals, and document updates all add up. Over time, each name can cost a startup $1,500–$2,000 in legal overhead.
2) The ROFR Problem
Most angels don’t know what a Right of First Refusal (ROFR) actually is. But if you’re on the cap table, you’ll be asked to sign documents tied to it. One confused signature can delay a financing or acquisition.
3) Dilution Isn’t the Enemy
Early investors often obsess over dilution. But if a company is raising new capital and growing, dilution simply means the business is becoming more valuable. Fewer shares at a much higher value is still a win.
4) Influence vs. Impact
Being on the cap table doesn’t give angels meaningful power. The most valuable angels are the ones who help founders with introductions, advice, encouragement, and real-world experience.
The Big Idea
Angel investing works best when it functions as support, not control. Small checks shouldn’t create large operational headaches. Whether through SPVs or thoughtful investment structures, the goal should always be the same: Give founders capital without slowing them down.
Chapters
00:00 Introduction and Collaboration Plans
00:20 Understanding Cap Tables and SPVs
03:35 Dilution and Its Implications for Angel Investors
08:54 Cap Tables vs SPVs — What Actually Matters
18:06 Angels Decoded End Card
The Hosts
Andy Walsh: 2x exited founder and strategist. He helps investors and founders navigate the “power dynamics” of early-stage capital without the fluff.
Cheryl Kellond (aka “Shezza”): 3x founder and CEO of Play Money. She’s on a mission to move accredited professionals from the sidelines into the game with a data-backed, pragmatic approach.
Access All Areas.
Subscribe: Substack
Web: angelsdecoded.com
Resources
Startups Decoded Podcast
AngelList
By Andy WalshEvery new angel investor wants to see their name on the cap table.
It feels official. It feels powerful. It feels like you’re really “in the game.” But in reality, that small line on a cap table can create a surprisingly large operational burden for the founder you’re trying to support.
In Ep#4 of Angels Decoded, Cheryl Kellond and Andy Walsh unpack the practical realities of cap tables, dilution, and why many angels misunderstand the role they should play once they invest.
The uncomfortable truth is simple: small checks shouldn’t slow companies down. When angels insist on being directly on the cap table without understanding the legal mechanics behind it, they often introduce friction that founders have to spend time and money managing.
This conversation explores why the best angels focus less on status and more on support.
Listen & Watch: Apple || Spotify || YouTube
Subscribe now
The Realities We Break Down
1) The Hidden Cost of Cap Tables
Every individual investor listed on a cap table creates administrative work. Legal filings, shareholder approvals, and document updates all add up. Over time, each name can cost a startup $1,500–$2,000 in legal overhead.
2) The ROFR Problem
Most angels don’t know what a Right of First Refusal (ROFR) actually is. But if you’re on the cap table, you’ll be asked to sign documents tied to it. One confused signature can delay a financing or acquisition.
3) Dilution Isn’t the Enemy
Early investors often obsess over dilution. But if a company is raising new capital and growing, dilution simply means the business is becoming more valuable. Fewer shares at a much higher value is still a win.
4) Influence vs. Impact
Being on the cap table doesn’t give angels meaningful power. The most valuable angels are the ones who help founders with introductions, advice, encouragement, and real-world experience.
The Big Idea
Angel investing works best when it functions as support, not control. Small checks shouldn’t create large operational headaches. Whether through SPVs or thoughtful investment structures, the goal should always be the same: Give founders capital without slowing them down.
Chapters
00:00 Introduction and Collaboration Plans
00:20 Understanding Cap Tables and SPVs
03:35 Dilution and Its Implications for Angel Investors
08:54 Cap Tables vs SPVs — What Actually Matters
18:06 Angels Decoded End Card
The Hosts
Andy Walsh: 2x exited founder and strategist. He helps investors and founders navigate the “power dynamics” of early-stage capital without the fluff.
Cheryl Kellond (aka “Shezza”): 3x founder and CEO of Play Money. She’s on a mission to move accredited professionals from the sidelines into the game with a data-backed, pragmatic approach.
Access All Areas.
Subscribe: Substack
Web: angelsdecoded.com
Resources
Startups Decoded Podcast
AngelList