What do Regulators Expect from your Business & Why a Fractional General Counsel is the Answer

Published By:

Hannah Deuk

Founder & Principal Lawyer

Key Takeaways:

  • Unintentional Legal Liability: As your business scales, operational teams prioritising speed often bypass formal reviews, creating fragmented legal exposure that accumulates without leadership visibility.
  • The Structural Tipping Point: You need a fractional general counsel when non-legal teams are forced to make independent judgment calls on contracts or compliance because your existing legal support cannot match your pace of execution.
  • Centralised Preventative Oversight: A fractional general counsel restores control by establishing clear decision boundaries and embedding proactive legal expertise into daily operations to prevent disputes before they occur.
  • Heightened Regulatory Exposure: This embedded legal leadership is critical to avoid severe penalties, as compliance failures by internal teams can trigger enforcement action under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) and the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act 2006 (Cth).
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May 12, 2026

Introduction

For growing and regulated businesses, meeting compliance obligations is a critical leadership responsibility, even before hiring a full-time in-house counsel. Regulators expect founders to set a proactive “tone from the top” and embed legal and regulatory considerations into the company’s daily operations, a standard many businesses struggle to meet with ad-hoc legal support.

This article explains the core expectations of regulators and why a reactive approach to legal advice creates significant risk. It outlines how a fractional general counsel, also called a fractional GC, provides the clear ownership and strategic legal function necessary to satisfy these demands, particularly for businesses regulated by the Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre (AUSTRAC) or requiring an Australian Financial Services Licence (AFSL).

Interactive Tool: Check Your Compliance Risk & Regulator Readiness

Regulatory Readiness Checker for Growing Businesses

Are you meeting regulator expectations, or is your compliance approach putting your business at risk? Find out in minutes.

Does your business operate in a regulated sector (e.g., financial services, remittance, digital currency, or provide designated services under AUSTRAC)?

Who currently owns responsibility for legal and compliance risk in your business?

Is legal input sought proactively (before decisions), or only reactively (after issues arise)?

✅ You Demonstrate Regulatory Readiness

Your business shows clear ownership of compliance risk and proactive legal oversight. Regulators expect a single point of accountability and operational compliance, especially in regulated sectors.

Keep maintaining robust governance and ensure your legal function remains embedded in all strategic decisions.

Relevant law: Section 911A of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth); Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act 2006 (Cth).
Get Ongoing Legal Risk Management

⚠️ Compliance Ownership is Diffused – At Risk

Regulators expect a single, clear owner for legal and compliance risk. When responsibility is spread across departments or handled ad hoc, this signals weak governance and increases the risk of non-compliance.

Consider appointing a dedicated legal leader or engaging a Fractional General Counsel to centralise compliance oversight.

Relevant law: Section 911A of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth); Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act 2006 (Cth).
Speak to a Fractional General Counsel

❌ Reactive Legal Support – High Regulatory Risk

Relying on reactive legal advice exposes your business to significant compliance risk. Regulators require evidence of proactive, operational compliance and clear legal accountability.

Transitioning to an embedded legal function (such as a Fractional GC) is critical to meet these standards and avoid penalties.

Relevant law: Section 911A of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth); Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act 2006 (Cth).
Book a Compliance Risk Assessment

⚖️ Unsure About Your Regulatory Status?

If you are unsure whether your business is regulated or who owns compliance risk, you may be exposed to hidden legal obligations.

Get clarity on your obligations and avoid accidental breaches by consulting a legal expert.

Relevant law: Section 911A of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth); Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act 2006 (Cth).
Get Legal Advice on Your Compliance Obligations

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The Real Risk Of Operating Without An In-House Legal Function

Moving Beyond Reactive & Fragmented Legal Support

Many growing businesses engage external legal support on a reactive basis, seeking legal advice only when a specific problem arises. As a result, this approach often leads to fragmented guidance, with different law firms handling isolated matters like contract reviews or employment disputes.

Furthermore, this method of accessing legal services fails to provide the strategic oversight that regulators expect. A business that only reacts to legal issues cannot demonstrate proactive risk management or a culture where compliance is embedded into its operations. Therefore, regulators want to see an ongoing, structured approach to legal and regulatory obligations, not just a series of disconnected legal consultations.

Dangers Of Diffused Compliance Ownership

Without a dedicated in-house legal function, the question of who owns legal risk when there is no general counsel becomes a critical problem, as responsibility for compliance often becomes scattered across different departments. With no central owner ensuring consistency, specific areas are often managed in isolation, including:

  • Data privacy: managed by the marketing team;
  • Employment matters: handled by human resources; and
  • Financial regulations: overseen by finance.

This diffusion of responsibility creates significant risks, including accountability gaps and the inconsistent application of policies. When regulators assess a business, they look for clear ownership of legal and compliance risk. Ultimately, a lack of a designated owner signals that compliance is not being managed strategically, which can lead to:

  • A perception of weak governance; and
  • A poor “tone from the top“.

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Our senior lawyers will contact you to discuss your situation & outline next steps.

What Regulators Expect & Why Most Businesses Fall Short

Clear Ownership Of Legal & Compliance Risk

Regulators expect to see a single, clear point of accountability for legal and compliance risks within a business. In organisations without an in-house counsel, this responsibility automatically falls upon the founders and senior management.

Consequently, they are held personally accountable for understanding and fulfilling the company’s legal obligations. However, a fractional general counsel is specifically designed to fill this gap by providing dedicated ownership of the legal function.

Operational Not Theoretical Compliance

Having written policies is not enough to satisfy regulatory expectations. Authorities want to see that compliance is actively integrated into the company’s daily operations and systems, a concept known as ‘compliance by design’. Therefore, this means legal and regulatory requirements are built into processes from the very beginning, not added as an afterthought.

Key areas where compliance must be operationalised include:

  • Data Protection & Privacy: Implementing compliant privacy policies and robust data security measures is essential if your business handles personal information.
  • Consumer Protection: Your standard contracts must be free of unfair terms, and you must adhere to consumer guarantees as required under Australian law.
  • Employment Compliance: Businesses are expected to pay correct wages, follow Work Health and Safety Regulations 2025 (NSW), and maintain appropriate workers’ compensation insurance.

Making Decisions With Regulatory Awareness

Regulators anticipate that key business decisions are made with a full understanding of their legal and compliance implications. This requires a proactive “tone from the top,” where leadership demonstrates a clear commitment to ethical and compliant conduct.

Instead of seeking legal review after a decision has been made, the expectation is that legal input is sought upfront to guide strategy and mitigate risk from the outset.

Importance Of Demonstrable Compliance

A business must be able to prove its compliance to regulators upon request. This involves maintaining clear and organised records, documenting the rationale behind important decisions, and establishing audit trails.

Having essential legal documentation in place is a critical part of this process. Core documents that demonstrate a commitment to governance include:

  • The implementation of co-founder agreements;
  • The establishment of shareholder agreements; and
  • Properly drafted employment or contractor agreements that address intellectual property and confidentiality.

Speak to Our Senior Lawyers Today

Request your free consult & our senior lawyers will contact you to discuss your situation.

Why Traditional Legal Support Fails To Meet Regulatory Expectations

Growing businesses often turn to traditional law firms or modern subscription services for legal support, but these models can fall short of meeting regulatory expectations. Regulators look for an owned, integrated legal function that actively manages risk. This requirement is fundamentally different from the reactive or resource-based support these options typically provide, as demonstrated by the following approaches:

  • Traditional law firms: Generally engaged on a matter-by-matter basis, this approach provides legal advice for specific issues as they arise. However, it does not offer the continuous, strategic oversight required to build a culture of compliance. As a result, the guidance is often fragmented and fails to demonstrate the proactive risk management and clear ownership that regulators expect to see.
  • Legal subscription services: Offering a different model, these services often provide access to templates, document portals, and educational resources. While useful, this approach places the burden of implementation squarely on the business. It enables compliance by providing tools but does not deliver the outcome, leaving internal teams to perform the work. Furthermore, regulators are focused on operational compliance rather than just the availability of policies.
  • Fractional general counsel: Designed to fill these gaps, this model provides an embedded, execution-led legal function that implements compliance frameworks directly within the business. Unlike other legal services, a fractional GC takes responsibility for the compliance outcome. Ultimately, this key distinction is what satisfies regulatory demands for clear accountability and proactive oversight.

Request Free Consultation Today

Our senior lawyers will contact you to discuss your situation & outline next steps.

Shifting From Ad-Hoc Legal Advice To An Embedded Fractional General Counsel

Regulators expect growing businesses to evolve from seeking ad-hoc legal advice to establishing an owned, embedded legal function. Ultimately, this represents a fundamental shift in mindset, moving away from a reactive approach where lawyers are consulted only during a crisis. Instead, the expectation is for a proactive legal framework that is embedded within the company’s core operations.

This transition involves treating legal support as a strategic part of the business infrastructure, similar to finance or human resources. As a result, an embedded legal function provides key operational benefits, including:

  • Ongoing oversight: Ensuring that legal and regulatory considerations are factored into decisions before they are made, not after a problem arises.
  • Proactive governance: Adopting a proactive stance on governance and risk, which is a key indicator of mature leadership and a strong compliance culture.

The rise of the fractional general counsel model is a direct response to these needs. It provides growing businesses with the senior legal leadership necessary to build and manage an internal legal function. Therefore, this approach delivers the continuous, strategic oversight that satisfies regulatory demands for clear ownership and proactive risk management, without the immediate cost of hiring a full-time in-house counsel.

Conclusion

Regulators expect growing businesses to have a proactive, owned legal function, and relying on fragmented, reactive legal advice creates significant compliance risk. A fractional general counsel provides the embedded, strategic oversight necessary to meet these expectations and build a defensible governance framework.

For growing businesses, this level of strategic legal support is critical to managing risk and enabling growth. Contact Click Legal’s experienced fractional general counsel lawyers today to discuss how our strategic legal support can provide the clear ownership and operational compliance your business needs.

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Published By:

Hannah Deuk

Founder & Principal Lawyer

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