
A standout GC can flip between two roles - general practitioner and surgeon.
The key is knowing which hat to wear, and when.
↳ General Practitioner Mode
Most legal questions that land on your plate aren’t emergencies. They’re checkups and routine care, such as drafting standard contracts, keeping up with compliance, and scanning for low-level risks.
As the GP, your job is to move fast and keep the business running smoothly without tying anyone in legal knots. The stakes aren’t high enough for endless debates, so you need to act quickly and try to head-off any potential issues early.
The secret is to build genuine trust with your internal teams. If you show up as a proactive advisor - offering timely, pragmatic guidance - you’ll set a collaborative tone that helps everyone operate with more confidence.
↳ Surgeon Mode
Every so often, a startup faces a make-or-break moment - like a tough lawsuit, government scrutiny, a high-stakes M&A, or something else that has the potential to alter the business's trajectory.
In these company-defining moments, you need to shift from GP to surgeon. Gather all the facts, sharpen your specialist skills, and make well-informed and decisive calls. When the stakes are existential, you need to slow down a bit, set a clear plan, and act with precision.
One of the common mistakes I see newer GCs make is staying stuck in surgeon mode. They treat every small question like it’s a code-red crisis - over-investing time, energy, and resources on routine stuff with low risk. In the process, they wind up slowing down the entire organization and diluting the impact of the moments that really do warrant a carefully deliberated response.
If everything’s an emergency, then nothing’s truly urgent. As a GC, you need to develop a strong barometer to know which is which.
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