Stillago

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seed-to-acquisition continuity for vesting acceleration triggers—what seed-stage boards quietly expect

Vesting acceleration triggers is a fundraising and trust question, not just a legal one. seed-to-acquisition continuity gives founders a minimum-viable prote…

4 min read

Published 2026-02-06. Founders build toward momentum; seed-to-acquisition continuity for vesting acceleration triggers—what seed-stage boards quietly expect is the layer most decks skip because it feels pre-mature. It is not. Investors, co-founders, and senior hires all price in whether vesting acceleration triggers is actually planned or just vaguely intended.

What an investor-grade answer looks like

If a lead investor asks, “If you were hit by a bus tomorrow, what happens Monday?”—the strongest answer is not a legal document. It is a named second-in-command, a payroll bridge, and a written seed-to-acquisition continuity that names who communicates with the board and on what cadence.

A seed-to-acquisition continuity you can finish before the next raise

  • Name the emergency operator—one person inside, one fractional outside—who can keep vesting acceleration triggers running for 60 days.
  • Document the payroll, banking, and cap-table access map. Trusted operators cannot help if they cannot authenticate.
  • Write the 90-day continuity note: what stays, what pauses, what should not silently auto-renew.
  • Confirm key-person insurance is priced to cover the payroll bridge, not just a vanity headline.

Co-founder and executor hygiene

Most founders never tell their executor that they own equity in multiple entities. That conversation alone—plus written instructions for the operator bench—solves 80% of the operational risk without touching legal documents.

Stillago is structured specifically for this: sections for people, devices, money, vendors, and narrative context—so succession is an operating manual, not a binder nobody updates.

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Common questions

Is this legal or tax advice?
No. These articles frame operational continuity and succession readiness. Attorneys still draft wills, buy-sells, and trusts; CPAs still own tax elections.
Where should I start if I have never done this?
Start with people, money, and access. Who signs payroll, where the cash lives, and how logins recover. The narrative layer can follow once that spine exists.
Do I need a fractional CFO or COO to do this?
No, but it helps. Owners who self-document usually cover 60–70% of what matters. A fractional CFO or COO closes the rest and keeps it current between quarterly reviews.