The choice between hiring a full-time general counsel or outsourcing everything to a firm leaves many mid-market companies in high-risk sectors stuck between overhead they can’t afford and expertise they desperately need. Howard & Howard’s Alex Leonowicz explores how fractional general counsel offers a third path, providing the insider’s perspective without the insider’s cost while delivering predictable budgets, scalable capacity during transitions and the strategic foresight boards and investors demand.
When you’re part of the leadership team at a company in a high-compliance industry, whether it’s cannabis, fintech, healthcare, gaming or biotech, legal isn’t just an expense line; it’s a moving target. Regulations shift overnight, enforcement actions arrive unannounced, and investors demand airtight governance.
The challenge? Legal costs are climbing, risk exposure is growing, and the traditional solutions, hiring a full-time general counsel or outsourcing everything to a firm, no longer fit the financial or operational realities of growth-stage or mid-market companies. Enter fractional general counsel (FGC): a model that blends the strategic insight of a GC with the flexibility and accountability executives and boards need.
Think of FGC as general counsel on demand. Instead of carrying the salary and benefits of a full-time GC, companies pay for senior-level legal leadership on a part-time, retainer or project basis. Unlike traditional outside counsel who parachute in and out, FGCs embed within the business. They sit in leadership meetings, shape strategy and help build internal systems offering the insider’s perspective without the insider’s overhead. For company officers and directors, the payoff is clear: predictable budgets, measurable value and stronger governance in high-risk sectors.
Signs your leadership team needs a fractional GC
Legal bills that are unpredictable? An overloaded GC? Frequent regulatory change? Staff transitions? All of these are issues that could benefit from the fractional general counsel model. Consider these case studies:
Cutting legal costs
A Michigan-based cannabis operator faces ballooning legal costs. Their in-house GC was overwhelmed, outsourcing heavily and leaving leadership with little transparency. By shifting to a fractional model, the company:
- Reduces legal spend by 30%
- Adopts a predictable monthly retainer
- Uses legal “report cards” to identify HR and licensing as the main cost drivers, allowing better resource allocation
Instead of one overextended generalist, the company gains access to a team of specialists. For leadership, that means deeper expertise and lower cost.
Bridging maternity leave
FGC doesn’t have to be about replacement, it can also be about flexibility. When a healthcare company’s GC goes on maternity leave, the executive team faces an unenviable choice: leave the seat empty, hire temporary counsel or pay a firm’s hourly rates?
A fractional GC provides seamless continuity. Compliance deadlines are met, transactions stay on track, and the returning GC steps back into a fully functional department. For directors and officers, it’s proof that FGC can supplement, not just substitute, existing teams during transitions.
Handling a heavy lift
Sometimes the issue isn’t absence but capacity. A financial services company is hit with a sweeping regulatory overhaul, overloading their capable GC.
An FGC team steps in to manage the project, coordinate with outside counsel and provide surge capacity without adding permanent cost. The internal GC remains in control but is better-equipped. For executives, FGC serves as a scalable pressure valve when the stakes are high and the timelines tight.
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Read moreDetailsThe legal report card: Turning risk into data
Most boards can’t manage what they can’t measure. Legal spend is often a black box, difficult to forecast and harder to evaluate. Fractional GCs bring transparency through legal report cards, data-driven tools that track where legal time and money go, which departments drive the most demand and where risk patterns repeat. This transforms legal from a cost center into a business intelligence asset.
If licensing is burning resources, leadership can address the bottleneck. If HR disputes spike, preventive training can be deployed. FGCs also provide quarterly summaries that quantify risk exposure, costs and trends, giving boards and executives actionable insight into governance health.
Beyond the numbers
But, of course, cost savings are an easy sell. The true value of FGC lies in strategic impact. An FGC can draw on multi-disciplinary teams, something no single GC can match. This method can help anticipate regulatory changes, boost investor confidence through improved governance and align legal strategy with business growth.
Because FGCs integrate with leadership teams, they understand corporate culture, goals and risk tolerance, allowing them to accelerate growth responsibly, especially in sectors where compliance dictates speed.
The expanding role of corporate leadership
Today’s officers and directors aren’t just stewards of compliance; they’re co-pilots in strategy and governance. Investors and regulators alike expect measurable oversight, fiscal responsibility and proactive risk management.
Fractional general counsel fits perfectly within this mandate. It provides financial discipline, operational transparency and strategic foresight, all without permanent overhead.
For boards and executive teams navigating industries where the rules change as you go, FGC is a structural shift in how legal services support leadership. It gives companies the flexibility they need, the confidence investors demand and the governance stability regulators respect.
In short, fractional general counsel turns legal from a problem to be managed into a resource to be leveraged and in high-risk industries, that’s not just smart business; it’s good governance.


Alex Leonowicz is chair of the cannabis industry group at Howard & Howard in Detroit. Before joining Howard & Howard, he served as general counsel and chief operating officer for a Michigan-based cannabis company founded in 2019. 






