Strategy

Key Clauses in Shareholders Agreements

A detailed breakdown of the most important clauses in startup shareholders agreements — and what founders must negotiate carefully.

Nirji Ventures Editorial
Nirji Ventures Editorial
10 min readApril 2025

The clauses in a shareholders agreement determine the power dynamics between founders and investors for the life of the company. Understanding each clause's implications is essential for founders entering fundraising negotiations.

Key Clauses

Pre-Emption Rights: Give existing shareholders the right to purchase shares before they are offered to third parties. Protects against unwanted new shareholders but can slow down secondary sales. Tag-Along Rights: Allow minority shareholders to join a sale by majority shareholders on the same terms. Protects minority investors from being left behind. Drag-Along Rights: Allow majority shareholders to force minority shareholders to join a sale. Enables clean exits but can force founders out at unfavourable terms. Reserved Matters: List of decisions requiring investor consent. Common examples include new share issuances, material contracts, and changes to the business. Information Rights: Investor rights to receive regular financial and operational updates. Anti-Dilution: Protections that adjust investor share prices if future rounds occur at lower valuations. Good Leaver / Bad Leaver: Define what happens to a departing founder's shares based on the circumstances of departure.

Decision Framework

For each clause, founders should ask: What is the investor trying to protect against? Is this protection reasonable? What is the impact on my operational flexibility? Can I negotiate a more balanced version of this clause?

Nirji Strategic Perspective

Nirji Ventures has negotiated hundreds of shareholders agreements across multiple jurisdictions. We know which clauses are standard market terms and which represent aggressive investor positions. Our advisory ensures founders don't concede critical rights without adequate compensation elsewhere in the deal.

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Navigating this landscape requires expert guidance. Nirji Ventures offers fundraising advisory and startup consulting to help founders and executives make informed decisions.

Explore related insights:

Learn about term sheet fundamentals for complementary strategic context
Understand startup funding stages to strengthen your approach
Read our guide on protecting founder equity for deeper analysis
Read our guide on vesting clauses for deeper analysis

See how we've delivered results:

Contact our team to discuss how these insights apply to your specific situation.

Nirji Ventures Editorial

Written by

Nirji Ventures Editorial

Strategic Advisory

Nirji Ventures is a Singapore-based investment banking and strategic advisory firm with 35+ years of experience across 30+ countries. We specialise in M&A advisory, capital raising, startup consulting, and business transformation.

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This article is part of Nirji Ventures' commitment to helping founders, executives, and investors make better decisions. Our advisory practice turns frameworks like these into execution — whether you need startup consulting to refine your strategy, fundraising advisory to raise your next round, or go-to-market strategy consulting to drive traction.

Companies at different stages benefit from different capabilities. Growth-stage businesses often engage our investment banking practice for M&A and capital raising, while enterprises leverage our business transformation and financial advisory services. For international opportunities, explore our global expansion advisory.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What are pre-emption rights?

Pre-emption rights give existing shareholders the right to purchase shares before they are offered to third parties, protecting against unwanted new investors.

What is a drag-along clause?

A drag-along clause allows majority shareholders to force minority shareholders to join a company sale on the same terms.

What are good leaver and bad leaver provisions?

These define what happens to a departing founder's shares — good leavers typically retain vested shares, while bad leavers may forfeit some or all shares.

Which clauses should founders negotiate most carefully?

Reserved matters, drag-along rights, anti-dilution provisions, and good leaver/bad leaver definitions have the most significant impact on founder interests.

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