The Startup Glossary: 200 Words and Terms Every Founder Should Know

Building a startup is not just about having a great idea. It is about understanding the language of innovation, capital, growth, and execution.

Every ecosystem has its vocabulary. Law has its terms. Finance has its jargon. Technology has its acronyms. Startups are no different.

The problem is, many founders start building before they fully understand the words shaping the game they are entering.

Terms like MVP, burn rate, runway, cap table, product-market fit, SAFE, vesting, dilution, or CAC are not just buzzwords. They are operating concepts. They influence how you raise money, structure your company, make decisions, and scale.

And when founders do not understand these terms, they often build with blind spots.

They misread investor conversations.
They misunderstand deal structures.
They confuse growth with traction.
They chase valuation instead of value.

That is costly.

Because in startups, language is not separate from strategy. Language is strategy.

Knowing the right startup terms helps you think more clearly, ask better questions, avoid expensive mistakes, and operate with greater confidence.

It helps you understand what investors mean when they say your dilution is too high.

It helps you understand why runway matters more than vanity metrics.

It helps you know the difference between a pivot and a distraction.

It helps you move from sounding like someone with an idea to thinking like someone building a venture.

That is what this Startup Glossary is about.

This is a practical guide to 200 words and terms every founder should know, from fundraising and venture capital, to product development, growth, operations, startup finance, and scaling.

Whether you are an early-stage founder, building your MVP, raising pre-seed, or preparing to scale, these are terms you will keep encountering.

And the more fluent you become in them, the stronger your decision-making becomes.

Because founders do not just build products.

They build with clarity.

And clarity starts with understanding the language of the game.

 

Let’s Go!

200 Words and Terms Every Founder Should Know:

Fundraising & Venture Capital

  1. Angel Investor — An individual who invests personal capital into early-stage startups, often before institutional investors.
  2. Venture Capital (VC) — Professional investment funding provided to startups with high growth potential.
  3. Limited Partner (LP) — An investor in a venture fund who provides capital but does not manage the fund.
  4. General Partner (GP) — The venture fund manager who makes investment decisions.
  5. Pre-Seed — Very early funding used to validate an idea or build an initial product.
  6. Seed Round — Early capital raised to build product, team, and early traction.
  7. Series A — Growth funding typically used to scale a proven business model.
  8. Series B — Capital used to expand operations, team, and market reach.
  9. Series C — Later-stage funding often used for aggressive growth or expansion.
  10. Bridge Round — Interim financing raised between major funding rounds.
  11. SAFE — Simple Agreement for Future Equity; converts investment into equity later.
  12. Convertible Note — Debt that converts into equity at a future financing round.
  13. Valuation — The estimated worth of a company.
  14. Pre-Money Valuation — Company value before new investment.
  15. Post-Money Valuation — Company value after investment is added.
  16. Dilution — Reduction in ownership percentage after issuing new shares.
  17. Cap Table — A table showing who owns what percentage of the company.
  18. Term Sheet — A non-binding document outlining investment terms.
  19. Due Diligence — Investor investigation into a startup before investing.
  20. Liquidation Preference — Rules for who gets paid first in an exit.
  21. Anti-Dilution — Protection for investors if future shares are issued cheaper.
  22. Pro Rata Rights — Right to maintain ownership percentage in future rounds.
  23. Down Round — Funding raised at a lower valuation than a prior round.
  24. Up Round — Funding raised at a higher valuation than a prior round.
  25. Exit — Event where investors/founders realize returns.
  26. Acquisition — When one company buys another.
  27. IPO — Initial Public Offering; when a company goes public.
  28. Secondary Sale — Sale of existing shares, often by founders or early investors.
  29. Venture Debt — Debt financing available to venture-backed startups.
  30. Syndicate — Group of investors investing together in one deal.

Equity, Ownership & Legal

  1. Equity — Ownership stake in a company.
  2. ESOP — Employee Stock Ownership Plan for team incentives.
  3. Stock Options — Rights to buy shares later at a fixed price.
  4. Vesting — Gradual earning of ownership over time.
  5. Cliff — Initial waiting period before vesting begins.
  6. Founder Shares — Shares issued to founders at company formation.
  7. Common Stock — Standard shares usually held by founders and employees.
  8. Preferred Stock — Shares with special rights often held by investors.
  9. Shareholder Agreement — Rules governing shareholder rights and responsibilities.
  10. Board of Directors — Group overseeing strategic decisions and governance.
  11. Governance — Systems for oversight, accountability, and decision-making.
  12. Fiduciary Duty — Legal duty to act in the company’s best interests.
  13. Incorporation — Legal process of forming a company.
  14. Delaware C-Corp — Common U.S. startup legal structure.
  15. Bylaws — Internal rules governing company operations.
  16. Articles of Incorporation — Formal legal document establishing a corporation.
  17. IP (Intellectual Property) — Protected creations like inventions, code, or brands.
  18. Patent — Protection for inventions.
  19. Trademark — Protection for brand names, symbols, or logos.
  20. Data Room — Organized repository for investor documents.

Product & Startup Building

  1. MVP — Simplest version of a product to test demand.
  2. Prototype — Early model used to test ideas.
  3. Beta — Pre-release version tested by users.
  4. Product-Market Fit — When a product strongly meets market demand.
  5. Roadmap — Strategic plan for product development.
  6. Product Discovery — Process of validating what to build.
  7. User Persona — Profile of an ideal user.
  8. User Journey — Map of a user’s interaction path.
  9. Problem-Solution Fit — Proof your solution addresses a real problem.
  10. Feature Creep — Adding too many unnecessary features.
  11. Wireframe — Basic product layout mockup.
  12. UX — How users experience a product.
  13. UI — The product’s visual interface.
  14. API — Interface allowing systems to connect.
  15. No-Code — Building software without traditional coding.
  16. Tech Stack — Technologies powering a product.
  17. Sprint — Short work cycle in product development.
  18. Agile — Iterative approach to building products.
  19. Iteration — Continuous improvement through repeated changes.
  20. Pivot — Strategic change in direction.

Growth & Metrics

  1. CAC — Cost to acquire one customer.
  2. LTV — Total value generated by one customer.
  3. Churn — Rate customers leave.
  4. Retention — Ability to keep customers.
  5. MRR — Monthly recurring revenue.
  6. ARR — Annual recurring revenue.
  7. Burn Rate — Monthly rate of spending.
  8. Runway — Time before cash runs out.
  9. Gross Margin — Revenue minus direct costs.
  10. Net Revenue — Revenue after deductions.
  11. Revenue Model — How a business makes money.
  12. Unit Economics — Profitability at the customer or transaction level.
  13. Conversion Rate — Percentage who take desired action.
  14. Funnel — Stages from awareness to purchase.
  15. Growth Loop — Self-reinforcing system driving growth.
  16. Virality — User-driven growth through sharing.
  17. Network Effects — Product gets stronger as more users join.
  18. DAU — Daily active users.
  19. MAU — Monthly active users.
  20. Activation Rate — Percentage reaching initial value.

Go-to-Market

  1. Go-to-Market Strategy — Plan to launch and acquire customers.
  2. Positioning — How you occupy a place in the market.
  3. Value Proposition — Core value offered to customers.
  4. Market Segmentation — Dividing customers into groups.
  5. ICP — Ideal Customer Profile.
  6. Demand Generation — Creating market demand.
  7. Lead Generation — Attracting potential customers.
  8. Sales Pipeline — Stages prospects move through.
  9. Sales Cycle — Time from lead to closed sale.
  10. Distribution — How your product reaches users.

Startup Finance

  1. Cash Flow — Movement of money in and out.
  2. P&L — Profit and loss statement.
  3. Balance Sheet — Snapshot of assets, liabilities, equity.
  4. Gross Profit — Revenue minus cost of goods sold.
  5. EBITDA — Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization.
  6. Break-Even — Point where revenue equals costs.
  7. Forecasting — Estimating future performance.
  8. Budgeting — Planning spending.
  9. Working Capital — Funds for daily operations.
  10. Treasury — Management of company cash.
  11. Revenue Recognition — Rules for recording revenue.
  12. Financial Model — Projection model for startup economics.
  13. Bookkeeping — Recording financial transactions.
  14. Accounts Payable — Money owed by company.
  15. Accounts Receivable — Money owed to company.
  16. GMV — Gross merchandise value transacted.
  17. Take Rate — Percentage captured from transactions.
  18. Burn Multiple — Capital burned relative to revenue growth.
  19. Contribution Margin — Revenue left after variable costs.
  20. Default Risk — Risk obligations cannot be met.

Operations & Scaling

  1. SOP — Standard Operating Procedure.
  2. Automation — Using systems to reduce manual work.
  3. Scalability — Ability to grow efficiently.
  4. Operating Model — How a business functions.
  5. OKRs — Objectives and Key Results.
  6. KPIs — Key Performance Indicators.
  7. Hiring Plan — Strategy for recruiting.
  8. Onboarding — Integrating new hires or customers.
  9. Talent Acquisition — Recruiting strategy.
  10. Organizational Design — Structuring teams and responsibilities.
  11. Delegation — Assigning responsibility.
  12. Outsourcing — Using external providers.
  13. Compliance — Meeting regulations.
  14. Risk Management — Identifying and mitigating risks.
  15. Internal Controls — Safeguards for operations and finance.
  16. Expansion Strategy — Plan for entering new markets.
  17. Localization — Adapting for local markets.
  18. Cross-Border Operations — Operating across countries.
  19. Partnerships — Collaborative business relationships.
  20. Strategic Alliances — Structured long-term partnerships.

Startup Strategy

  1. TAM — Total Addressable Market.
  2. SAM — Serviceable Addressable Market.
  3. SOM — Serviceable Obtainable Market.
  4. Competitive Advantage — Sustainable edge over rivals.
  5. Moat — Defensible barrier against competition.
  6. First-Mover Advantage — Benefit from entering early.
  7. Differentiation — What makes you distinct.
  8. Business Model — How value is created and captured.
  9. Flywheel — Self-reinforcing growth engine.
  10. Blue Ocean Strategy — Creating uncontested market space.

Sales & Revenue

  1. B2B — Business selling to businesses.
  2. B2C — Business selling to consumers.
  3. SaaS — Software delivered by subscription.
  4. Subscription Model — Recurring payment model.
  5. Freemium — Free entry with paid upgrades.
  6. Enterprise Sales — Selling into large organizations.
  7. Upsell — Selling higher-value offers.
  8. Cross-Sell — Selling complementary offers.
  9. Customer Success — Helping customers achieve outcomes.
  10. Renewal Rate — Percentage of customers renewing.

Technology & Innovation

  1. AI — Machines performing intelligent tasks.
  2. Machine Learning — Systems learning from data.
  3. Blockchain — Distributed ledger technology.
  4. Stablecoin — Digital asset pegged to stable value.
  5. Cloud Computing — Computing resources delivered online.
  6. SaaS Infrastructure — Backend systems powering software.
  7. Cybersecurity — Protection from digital threats.
  8. Data Architecture — Structure of data systems.
  9. Interoperability — Systems working together.
  10. Embedded Finance — Financial services built into non-financial products.

Founder & Team Terms

  1. Co-Founder — Person who starts the company with others.
  2. Founder-Market Fit — Founder uniquely suited to solve problem.
  3. Founder Mode — Deep founder-led operational involvement.
  4. Advisory Board — Informal strategic advisors.
  5. Fractional Executive — Part-time senior operator.
  6. Chief of Staff — Strategic operator supporting leadership.
  7. Operator — Execution-focused business builder.
  8. Builder — Person who creates and launches.
  9. Hustle — Intense effort to move things forward.
  10. Founder Burnout — Exhaustion from startup pressure.

Venture & Exit Outcomes

  1. Unicorn — Startup valued at $1B+
  2. Decacorn — Startup valued at $10B+
  3. Hectocorn — Startup valued at $100B+
  4. Exit Multiple — Return relative to invested capital.
  5. Strategic Acquisition — Acquisition driven by strategic value.
  6. M&A — Mergers and acquisitions.
  7. Recapitalization — Restructuring capital mix.
  8. Buyout — Purchase of controlling ownership.
  9. Liquidity Event — Event allowing shareholders to cash out.
  10. ROI — Return on investment.

Modern Startup Terms

  1. Lean Startup — Build-test-learn methodology.
  2. Growth Hacking — Experimental tactics for rapid growth.
  3. Bootstrapping — Building without external funding.
  4. Moonshot — Highly ambitious breakthrough idea.
  5. Deep Tech — Science-driven advanced technology ventures.
  6. Platform Play — Building a platform others build on.
  7. Super App — App combining multiple services.
  8. Creator Economy — Ecosystem where creators monetize audiences.
  9. Venture Studio — Entity that builds startups internally.
  10. Zero-to-One — Creating something fundamentally new.

 

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