When legal risk intersects with business strategy, boards and CEOs look toward their general counsel. The general counsel is the senior-most legal officer in the organization and one of the few executives whose work touches every function, every material decision, and every significant risk the organization carries.
What is a General Counsel?
A general counsel is the senior-most legal officer in the organization, responsible for overseeing all legal matters, managing compliance, and advising the CEO, board, and executive team on risk and governance. Unlike outside counsel retained for specific matters, the GC is a permanent member of the executive leadership team with accountability for the organization’s legal health across every function and jurisdiction. The role carries responsibility for enterprise-level legal strategy, which means the GC influences decisions well before legal review would traditionally begin.
What does a General Counsel do?
General counsel responsibilities span legal strategy, regulatory compliance, governance, and direct advisory to the CEO and board. The scope is broader than most legal titles suggest. At a functional level, the GC owns five interconnected areas:
- Risk management and compliance: The GC identifies legal and regulatory exposure, builds compliance programs, and advises leadership on how to manage risk without impeding business operations. In regulated industries, this includes direct engagement with regulators and oversight of internal audit or compliance functions.
- Corporate governance: The GC supports board operations, ensures fiduciary obligations are met, and maintains the documentation and processes that underpin sound governance. In public companies, this includes SEC reporting obligations, proxy materials, and coordination with the audit and compensation committees.
- Contracting and transactions: The GC oversees the negotiation, drafting, and execution of material contracts. In M&A activity, the GC is typically embedded in due diligence from the earliest stages, managing legal complexity alongside the deal team.
- Litigation and crisis management: When disputes arise or a crisis threatens the organization’s reputation or operations, the GC manages the legal response. This includes outside counsel selection, litigation strategy, and, in serious matters, direct board communication.
- Advisory to senior leadership and the board: The GC functions as a trusted advisor to the CEO and other C-suite executives. Board directors rely on the GC to interpret legal risk in a strategic context.
In practice, these five areas rarely operate in isolation. The GC who manages them well understands that a dispute in one area rarely stays there.
General Counsel responsibilities vary by organization
A general counsel’s scope, structure, and authority shift considerably depending on ownership type, industry, and organizational stage. These differences are consequential in hiring and are often underestimated by organizations filling the role for the first time.
In a publicly traded company, the GC carries the weight of securities law compliance, shareholder relations, and a regulatory footprint that demands significant bandwidth. The role often includes a team of in-house attorneys, dedicated compliance professionals, and a formal legal operations function.
In a PE-backed platform company, the GC is frequently the legal function rather than the head of one. Speed matters more than process depth. The GC operates across deals, portfolio integration, and governance simultaneously, often with limited support staff.
In a family-owned business or nonprofit, the GC may carry responsibilities that extend beyond legal, including government affairs, risk management, or even HR oversight. The advisory relationship with ownership or a founding board is often central to the role’s effectiveness.
A GC who excels in a tightly structured public company environment may struggle in the ambiguity of an early-stage platform. Organizations that fail to define the role against their actual operating context tend to misalign on expectations before the search is complete.
General Counsel vs Chief Legal Officer
The primary difference between a general counsel and a Chief Legal Officer is organizational scale. In most companies, the GC serves as the sole senior legal voice reporting directly to the CEO. The CLO title typically signals a larger enterprise structure where a GC reports up to a CLO who leads a broader legal and compliance function.
For organizations hiring into this role, the title choice often signals something about seniority expectations and organizational complexity. If the position requires board-level engagement, enterprise risk ownership, and leadership of a large legal team, CLO framing may be appropriate. For organizations where the legal leader is a direct advisor to the CEO without a layered team beneath them, general counsel remains the more accurate title.
How is the General Counsel role structured?
A general counsel typically reports directly to the CEO and holds an independent advisory relationship with the board. According to the 2026 ACC Chief Legal Officers Survey, which drew on insights from 1,049 CLOs across 43 countries, a record 84% of CLOs now report directly to their CEO, up from 79% the prior year. In public companies, this dual reporting structure is a defining feature of the role. The GC must provide independent legal counsel to the board while maintaining the operational trust of the CEO.
At the enterprise level, the legal function may include Associate General Counsels aligned to business units, a dedicated compliance team, and legal operations professionals managing outside counsel spend and matter tracking. Team composition varies by size and industry. In smaller organizations, the GC may have one or two direct reports or none at all.
The fractional GC model has grown as a meaningful option for companies that need senior legal leadership but cannot justify a full-time hire. Fractional arrangements work best when the organization’s legal needs are episodic rather than continuous, or when the company is in a transitional period between leadership regimes. The arrangement carries real limitations. Fractional GCs cannot fully embed in the organization’s culture, and the relationship-building that makes an in-house legal leader effective takes time a part-time structure doesn’t allow. Organizations that rely on the model long-term often find it becomes a ceiling on legal maturity rather than a bridge to something stronger.
Finding the right General Counsel
General counsel searches require a fundamentally different sourcing approach than most C-suite functions. The strongest candidates hold senior in-house roles and are not actively circulating, which means effective search depends on direct outreach into a defined talent pool rather than database sourcing or public postings. Evaluating finalists requires distinguishing between technical legal competence and the executive presence, board communication skills, and business judgment that actually determine GC effectiveness over time. In our experience, retained GC searches typically run 12 to 20 weeks, with public company engagements often extending beyond that given board approval requirements and the additional stakeholder alignment those processes require.
N2Growth conducts retained general counsel searches across ownership types and organizational structures, combining legal leadership placement expertise with behavioral assessment methodology. Our process begins with precise role definition and evaluates both legal expertise and the executive presence that determines long-term GC effectiveness. Learn more about how we approach legal, risk, and compliance executive search and what that process looks like for general counsel placements.
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