Managing Legal Priorities Without a Full-Time General Counsel: The Importance of a Fractional General Counsel

Published By:

Hannah Deuk

Founder & Principal Lawyer

Key Takeaways:

  • The Default Owners: Founders and senior leaders typically inherit this responsibility by default, creating an ownership vacuum where legal risks are managed informally and inconsistently.
  • The Vocal Departments: Without a central legal owner, competing internal teams dictate priorities, causing low-risk tasks to consume resources while high-risk exposures are dangerously delayed.
  • The Regulatory Risk: Failing to assign structured legal ownership can cause regulated entities to breach core obligations under the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act 2006 (Cth) and the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth).
  • The Strategic Solution: You should appoint a fractional general counsel to take central ownership of the legal queue and implement a risk-based triage system that aligns with your business strategy.
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May 7, 2026

Introduction

In a growing business without a general counsel, legal requests often arrive from all directions. Founders and various teams are left to handle urgent demands and “quick legal questions,” leading to constantly shifting priorities. The core problem is not the volume of legal work, but the lack of clear ownership over its prioritisation, creating a significant hidden risk.

This article examines why legal support can fail not because of poor advice, but because the wrong work gets attention at the wrong time. It explains the consequences of this ownership vacuum for business leaders and provides a framework for managing legal risk more effectively.

Interactive Tool: Assess Your Legal Prioritisation & Governance Risk

Legal Prioritisation Health Check

Find out if your business is at risk from poor legal prioritisation—and discover how a fractional general counsel can help.

1 of 4 — Does your business have a single, centralised system for managing all legal requests?

2 of 4 — Who decides which legal tasks get priority in your business?

3 of 4 — Do you have a risk-based framework to assess and prioritise legal work?

4 of 4 — Is your business regulated by ASIC (AFSL) or AUSTRAC?

❌ Critical Legal Prioritisation Gap Identified

Your business is exposed to significant legal risk due to a lack of central ownership and structured prioritisation. Without a unified system and legal leadership, critical issues may be missed, and compliance obligations—especially for AFSL or AUSTRAC-regulated entities—can be breached.

Under Section 912A of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) and the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act 2006 (Cth), regulated entities must demonstrate robust risk management and compliance processes.
  • Section 912A of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth)
  • Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act 2006 (Cth)
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⚠️ Informal Legal Prioritisation Detected

Your legal work is managed informally, increasing the risk of missed deadlines, inconsistent decisions, and inefficient legal spend. A structured intake and risk-based framework is essential to demonstrate defensible governance and meet regulator expectations.

Consider implementing a centralised legal intake and triage process to align legal support with your business strategy.
  • Corporations Act 2001 (Cth)
  • Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act 2006 (Cth)
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✅ Structured Legal Prioritisation in Place

Your business demonstrates strong legal prioritisation and governance. By maintaining central ownership and a risk-based framework, you are well-positioned to manage legal risk and regulatory compliance.

Continue to review and refine your processes to ensure ongoing alignment with business strategy and regulatory changes.
  • Corporations Act 2001 (Cth)
  • Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act 2006 (Cth)
Review Your Legal Framework

⚖️ General Legal Prioritisation Advice

Your business is not directly regulated by ASIC or AUSTRAC, but structured legal prioritisation is still essential. Even without sector-specific obligations, a centralised system and risk-based approach will reduce hidden risks and improve efficiency.
  • Corporations Act 2001 (Cth)
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Why Legal Prioritisation Fails

Everything Feels Urgent & Nothing Is Structured

Without a central system for managing legal requests, every issue can feel like the top priority. Teams often assess urgency based on immediate pressures, including:

  • closing a deal; or
  • satisfying a demanding internal stakeholder.

This environment means the loudest or most recent request frequently gets attention over the work that is most critical for the business's long-term health. This lack of a structured intake or triage process creates a reactive cycle.

For instance, an urgent but low-value sales contract might be prioritised over updating a master services agreement, simply because the sales team is more vocal. Ultimately, this approach leaves significant legal risks unaddressed while resources are consumed by less important tasks.

Tension Between Commercial Needs & Compliance Requirements

natural conflict often exists between different functions within a growing business. This tension is typically seen as follows:

  • Sales teams: driven by speed and revenue; and
  • Compliance functions: focus on mitigating legal risk.

Without a general counsel or a similar legal leadership role to balance these competing interests, legal work is pulled in opposing directions. Consequently, this tension can lead to inconsistent and reactive decision-making.

A business might choose to accept a high level of risk to close a deal quickly, or conversely, lose a commercial opportunity due to prolonged compliance reviews. Without a dedicated owner to reconcile these priorities, decisions are made based on immediate pressures rather than a strategic assessment of the business's overall objectives and risk tolerance.

Lacking Visibility Over the Full Legal Queue

When legal work is scattered across various channels, no one has a complete picture of the company's legal needs. These fragmented channels often include:

  • emails;
  • direct messages; and
  • different external law firms.

This fragmentation means there is no single source of truth for all pending, critical, and deferred tasks. As a result, without a unified view of the entire legal queue, important work can easily become invisible until it escalates into a crisis.

For example, a critical compliance deadline or a looming contract renewal might be overlooked because the request is buried in an inbox. This lack of oversight makes it impossible to strategically allocate legal resources, leading to missed deadlines and unforeseen emergencies.

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Business Cost of Lacking Legal Priority Ownership

Delaying High-Risk Items & Overworking Low-Risk Tasks

Without a clear owner for legal prioritisation, a common pattern emerges where effort is not aligned with impact. Teams often gravitate towards completing simple tasks first because they are easier to understand and finish, creating a sense of progress. This tendency leads to a significant misallocation of time and legal spend across the following areas:

  • Low-risk tasks: Valuable resources are consumed by low-value work that feels productive but leaves critical legal risks unaddressed; and
  • High-risk items: Complex legal issues, which may be ambiguous or require more thought, are frequently delayed.

Ultimately, the business may feel busy, but in reality, its most serious exposures are being ignored.

Critical Escalations Happen Too Late

In the absence of a structured prioritisation system, significant legal issues are often only escalated when they become visible, urgent problems. By the time a risk develops into a crisis, the business has far fewer options available to respond effectively. As a result, mitigating the damage at this stage is almost always more difficult and costly.

Furthermore, this reactive cycle is a direct result of having no effective triage process for incoming legal work. Without a system to flag and elevate important matters early, the business is forced into a constant state of firefighting, which creates several challenges:

  • Hidden critical issues: Important matters remain invisible until they can no longer be ignored; and
  • Pressured decision-making: Choices are forced at a time when the potential for a negative outcome is highest.

Founders & Leaders Become Default Legal Decision-Makers

When there is no designated owner for legal work, prioritisation decisions often fall to senior leaders or founders by default. While these individuals have the authority to make decisions, they may not have the specialised legal expertise to assess and prioritise competing legal risks accurately.

Consequently, this creates an ownership vacuum where the question of who owns legal risk is managed informally and inconsistently across the organisation. This informal approach makes it difficult to manage legal matters strategically, leading to the following issues:

  • Inconsistent treatment: Similar issues may be handled differently from one team to another; and
  • Unpredictable legal posture: The lack of a unified strategy can ultimately leave the business exposed.

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How a Lack of Prioritisation Becomes a Governance Problem

Inability to Show Structured Legal Decision-Making

Effective governance requires more than just making good decisions; it demands a defensible rationale for why certain legal work was prioritised while other tasks were deferred. Without a structured system, choices about what gets legal attention can appear ad hoc and reactive.

As a result, this makes it difficult to demonstrate intentional risk management to a board, auditors, or regulators, who expect to see a clear and logical process behind how legal resources are allocated. When decisions lack a clear framework, they are harder to justify under scrutiny, creating the impression that risk is managed by chance rather than by design.

Inconsistently Handling Similar Risks Across Business

When no central prioritisation framework exists, similar legal risks are often treated differently across various teams and over time. This inconsistency creates a fragmented and unpredictable legal posture for the business.

This lack of uniformity raises serious concerns about the effectiveness of internal controls and oversight. It suggests that risk tolerance is determined by individual teams or managers rather than by a unified business strategy. Consequently, these inconsistencies can expose the company to unforeseen liabilities and complicate efforts to maintain a consistent approach to compliance.

Meeting Regulator Expectations for AFSL & AUSTRAC Entities

For businesses regulated by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) or the Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre (AUSTRAC), the absence of a structured legal prioritisation system is a significant compliance issue. These regulators expect entities, such as Australian Financial Services Licence (AFSL) holders, to have robust and defensible processes for managing their AFSL compliance obligations.

Specifically, regulated entities must meet their obligations under key legislation, including:

Ultimately, a failure to systematically prioritise legal and compliance tasks can be viewed as a breach of these core obligations, potentially leading to enforcement action.

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What Effective Legal Prioritisation Looks Like for a Growing Business

Implementing Centralised Intake & Triage for Legal Requests

Effective legal prioritisation begins with establishing a single, centralised system for all legal requests. When legal work flows through one channel, it provides complete visibility over the volume, type, and urgency of every matter across the business. As a result, this structure prevents critical tasks from getting lost in emails or direct messages.

Furthermore, a formal intake and triage process is a core function of legal operations. It ensures that every request is logged, tracked, and assessed from the moment it enters the system. Ultimately, this allows for the effective management of the entire legal queue, moving the function from a reactive service to a structured part of the business.

Using a Risk-Based Framework for Legal Prioritisation

A key shift in mature legal prioritisation is moving to a risk-based framework. This involves assessing legal work using objective criteria instead of reacting to subjective feelings of urgency or the seniority of the person making the request. Consequently, it ensures that time and resources are allocated to the most significant issues.

This framework classifies tasks based on factors including:

  • Legal and Regulatory Exposure: The potential consequences of non-compliance or legal disputes.
  • Commercial Impact: The effect on revenue, key business relationships, or strategic projects.
  • Strategic Importance: How the work aligns with the company's long-term business objectives.

Aligning Legal Priorities with Business Strategy

Effective legal prioritisation ensures that legal work directly supports what the business is trying to achieve. The legal function should operate as a business enabler that facilitates growth, rather than just acting as a compliance gatekeeper that blocks it. In addition, this strategic alignment is a core part of the value a fractional general counsel provides.

When legal priorities are aligned with business goals, resources are directed towards high-impact activities, ensuring the legal function actively contributes to achieving key business milestones.

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How a Fractional General Counsel Owns Legal Prioritisation

Taking Central Ownership of the Legal Queue

A fractional general counsel, also called a "fractional GC", provides a central point of ownership for all legal work, creating visibility over the entire queue of requests. With senior legal expertise, they have the authority to assess and decide on key workflow elements, as follows:

  • Task attention: which tasks receive attention;
  • Execution order: in what order they are addressed; and
  • Review level: with what level of review.

Ultimately, this function is critical for moving a business from a reactive to a proactive legal posture. By controlling the flow of work, they can efficiently prioritise crucial issues and allocate legal resources to the matters that pose the most significant risk or offer the greatest strategic value.

Translating Business Strategy into Legal Execution

An experienced fractional general counsel bridges the gap between the leadership team's strategic objectives and the day-to-day legal workflow. They translate high-level business goals into concrete legal priorities, ensuring that legal support is directed towards activities that drive the company's success.

This alignment means that if a key business objective is market expansion, the fractional GC will prioritise legal tasks related to that goal. As a result, this strategic legal leadership ensures the legal function acts as a business enabler, actively helping to achieve important milestones through targeted tasks, such as:

  • Supplier agreements: drafting or reviewing new supplier agreements; and
  • Regulatory compliance: managing compliance requirements in a new jurisdiction.

Balancing Commercial Pressures & Compliance Demands

In a growing business, there is often tension between the need for commercial speed and the demands of regulatory compliance. A fractional GC acts as an experienced arbiter, balancing these competing pressures to ensure decisions are made strategically rather than by default.

They have the commercial judgment and legal expertise to weigh the risks and benefits of a particular course of action. For instance, a fractional general counsel can provide support in several ways, including:

  • Sales team support: helping a sales team move quickly while ensuring that contracts still contain necessary protections; or
  • AFSL compliance: managing compliance for AFSL holders without creating unnecessary operational bottlenecks.

Creating a Repeatable & Structured Prioritisation System

A fractional GC moves legal prioritisation from an informal, ad hoc process to a structured and repeatable system. They achieve this by establishing the core components of legal operations, such as standardised workflows and clear decision-making frameworks.

In addition, these systems persist over time and ensure a consistent and defensible allocation of legal resources. Key elements a fractional GC often introduces include:

  • Formal intake and triage workflows: to manage and track all incoming legal requests.
  • Risk classification frameworks: to assess matters based on objective criteria.
  • Standardised contract templates and review processes: to increase efficiency and consistency.
  • Centralised document repositories: to ensure knowledge is retained and accessible.

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Signs Your Business Has a Legal Prioritisation Problem

Constantly Shifting "Urgent" Legal Work

If your business's definition of "urgent" changes from one day to the next, it is a clear sign that no stable or objective prioritisation system is in place. This constant churn means that legal work is dictated by the most recent request or the loudest voice, rather than by strategic importance.

When priorities are always shifting, resources are wasted as focus is repeatedly moved from one unfinished task to another. Ultimately, this results in:

  • creating inefficiency; and
  • leaving high-risk matters unresolved.

Teams Are Bypassing Each Other to Get Legal Attention

A lack of central control over the legal queue often leads to internal friction and competition for legal resources. You may notice different teams attempting to get their work to the top of the pile by:

  • approaching various senior leaders; or
  • even engaging separate external law firms.

This behaviour creates an environment where legal support is inconsistent. Furthermore, work is prioritised based on internal politics rather than a unified assessment of business risk.

Important Legal Issues Consistently Surface Late

When critical legal matters are only discovered when they have become urgent crises, it points to a fundamental problem with visibility and triage. These matters often include:

  • contract renewals; or
  • compliance deadlines.

A business that is constantly firefighting is not unlucky; rather, it is operating without an effective intake process to identify and elevate important issues early. As a result, this reactive approach means decisions are made under pressure when the time to act is limited and the potential for negative outcomes is highest.

Conclusion

Legal risk is ultimately shaped by what gets attention and what is ignored, and without clear ownership, legal work often becomes reactive, inefficient, and risky. A fractional general counsel provides the necessary ownership, ensuring that what truly matters for the business gets the right attention at the right time.

For businesses regulated by AUSTRAC or holding an AFSL, this structured approach is not just good practice—it is a core compliance requirement. To ensure your legal prioritisation framework is both strategic and defensible, contact Click Legal’s experienced fractional general counsel lawyers.

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Published By:

Hannah Deuk

Founder & Principal Lawyer

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