Authored By: Eric Clarke
When raising capital, most founders focus on valuation and dollars raised. What often gets overlooked is the long-term impact on ownership and control. That’s where cap table management and dilution planning come in.
A well-structured cap table (capitalization table) doesn’t just show who owns what today—it models what ownership could look like tomorrow, after multiple rounds of financing, option grants, and investor protections. If you don’t think ahead, you risk losing more equity than you intended—or worse, control of your business.
Aligning your growth plan with your funding strategy is essential. Dilution planning builds on that—ensuring the way you raise and structure capital supports both your long-term growth and ownership goals.
As we head into 2026, investors are looking more closely at how founders manage dilution. Here’s a practical guide to navigating your cap table strategy.
Why Cap Table Strategy Matters More in 2026
The fundraising landscape continues to evolve:
- More funding instruments: SAFEs, convertible notes, revenue-based financing, and traditional priced equity rounds are all in play.
- Greater investor scrutiny: Investors want transparency and sophisticated modeling early.
- Founder expectations: Retaining meaningful ownership while fueling growth is tougher than ever.
Your cap table is the story of your company’s journey. Managing it well helps you protect ownership, attract investors, and stay prepared for the future.
Understanding Dilution: Ownership vs. Control
Dilution happens every time you issue new shares—whether to investors, employees, or advisors. It’s not inherently bad; raising capital is necessary for growth. But unmanaged dilution can erode your stake and limit decision-making power.
Think in terms of:
- Ownership: The percentage of equity you hold.
- Control: Your ability to make strategic decisions (often tied to voting rights and board seats).
A founder who experiences significant ownership reduction through multiple funding rounds may find their influence diminished—even if they remain the driving force behind the company.
Don’t Forget the Option Pool
Investors often require an option pool to attract and retain talent. If structured incorrectly, it can create unnecessary founder dilution.
Key considerations:
- Size: Typical pools range from 10–15%*, but right-sizing depends on your hiring roadmap.
- Timing: Pools added pre-money dilute founders more than if added post-money.
- Refreshers: Plan for future expansions of the pool and how they affect ownership.
A thoughtful option pool strategy signals professionalism to investors and helps avoid dilution surprises later.
*Percentages shown are industry averages and can vary based on company stage, sector, and hiring needs.
Best Practices for Cap Table Management
- Update regularly: Treat your cap table as a living document, not a static spreadsheet.
- Scenario plan quarterly: Stress test your ownership under different raise sizes and valuations.
- Communicate clearly: A clean, transparent cap table builds investor trust.
When to Revisit Your Strategy
Cap table strategy isn’t “set and forget.” Key checkpoints include:
- Before any new round of financing
- When expanding or refreshing your option pool
- If considering acquisitions, mergers, or exits
- When adding investor protections (e.g., liquidation preferences, anti-dilution clauses)
The earlier you model potential outcomes, the more leverage you’ll have in negotiations.
How an Outsourced CFO Helps
An outsourced CFO brings financial expertise and investor-level rigor to your decision-making. At Evergreen Advisors, we help founders and growth companies:
- Build dilution roadmaps that anticipate multiple rounds of funding.
- Negotiate terms with clarity around long-term implications.
- Maintain clean, investor-ready cap tables.
- Integrate cap table planning into broader growth and funding strategies.
Protect Your Story
Your cap table is more than a spreadsheet—it’s the narrative of your company’s growth and future. In 2026’s competitive funding environment, proactive dilution planning is essential.
Don’t wait until you’re in front of investors to discover you’ve over-diluted. Build your roadmap now, revisit it often, and use it as a tool to balance growth with ownership.


