
Calm Company Fund is an early-stage investor in software and software-enabled companies
At Calm Company Fund we invest early in software and software-enabled companies We invest via a new financing structure called a Shared Earnings Agreement (SEAL) which is very different from traditional VCs or accelerators We are a team of founders, bootstrappers, and makers focused on funding entrepreneurs who want to build sustainable, profitable businesses We developed the Shared Earnings Agreement transparently in public to be the funding terms we would have wanted to see when we were building our businesses
A Shared Earnings Agreement (we shorthand it as SEAL) is typically used as a substitute for equity-like structures like a SAFE, convertible note, or equity It is not debt, doesn’t have a fixed repayment schedule, doesn’t require a personal guarantee The goal of a SEAL is to align the interests of investors and founders in a wide variety of outcomes, while giving founders full control of their business and keeping as much optionality as possible open for the business A SEAL is a long-term commitment that in most cases lasts for the lifetime of the business, so pick your partners wisely
The core idea of a SEAL is that investors make an upfront capital investment and then are entitled to receive a percentage of what we call Founder Earnings What are Founder Earnings? Most business owners see revenues come in, other expenses go out, and whatever is leftover is a sum of money that founders can chop up into one of three things:
One of our core strategies is to bring together an incredible group of experienced founders who are both mentors to companies we back, and literally invested in their success We wanted to ensure there was long-term alignment with the success of companies who raise capital on a SEAL Also, let’s be honest, every investor backing companies at the very early stage wants to have some chance of a huge uncapped return if they back a billion-dollar business The SEAL includes an Equity Basis (the numerator) and a Valuation Cap (denominator) which defines a percentage of the company that investors are entitled to if the founders decide to either a) sell the company or b) raise a priced round of equity like a Series A from a traditional VC That Equity Basis is reduced over time as Shared Earnings payments are made, but there is a residual Equity Basis that remains after the Shared Earnings Cap is fully repaid, so investors are still incentivized to help founders keep building the company At that point, investors have already gotten a decent return on their capital and won’t be clamoring for a “liquidity event” so they can get their money back This allows investors to be supportive and in most ways indifferent between either a strategy of a) grow fast, reinvest every dollar in growth, and sell the company b) grow sustainably, build a massively profitable business and never sell it or c) anything in between on the spectrum The convertible piece operates much like a SAFE and if founders decide later that they want to raise a round of venture capital, our investment converts to equity without any issues We like to think of a SEAL as a convertible financing structure that actually makes sense even if you don’t raise more capital and convert it Weird right? If this seems a little complex, well we agree, although everything in finance seems complex until it doesn’t One reason for wanting to handle every possible outcome is that we are committed to a SEAL not having any control over the business: no equity, no shares, no board seat, no preferred voting rights This means we have to create investor/founder alignment with almost any possible scenario for the business Every word added to the SEAL was part of a public process we kicked off trying to collaboratively create funding for bootstrappers
Introduce yourself and your business to us here
After a great suggestion that we "give this thing a name" - we're going with the @EarnestCapital Shared Earnings Agreement (SEA) Thoughts? https://t co/Qj6w4kx5gP 1 ETFs, mortgage securities, robo-advisors, equity crowdfunding, etc























