Founders are taught to think about fundraising as one thing: sell equity, take the money, grow. But the kind of capital you raise should depend on what you are using it for, and the wrong instrument can cost far more than its headline price.
When equity is right
Equity is for risk. If the next phase is genuinely uncertain, building a new product line, entering a market you have not proven, hiring ahead of revenue, then sharing the downside with an investor is fair, and dilution is the price of that partnership.
When debt is the cheaper answer
If you have predictable, recurring revenue and you are funding something with a known return, debt is often far cheaper than giving up ownership. Financing receivables, extending runway through a known ramp, or smoothing seasonality rarely needs equity. You are not sharing risk; you are timing cash flow.
- Uncertain outcome, long horizon. Lean toward equity.
- Predictable revenue, defined use. Lean toward debt.
- Somewhere in between. A deliberate mix often works best.
Dilution is the most expensive money you will ever raise. Use it where it belongs, and not a dollar further.
Let the numbers pick the instrument
The healthier and more predictable your performance, the more options you have. Lenders and equity investors are both reading the same connected numbers, and strong, legible performance is what earns you the right to choose. The goal is not to raise the most; it is to raise the right shape of capital for the moment you are in.