Gatekeeper or Business Partner? Rethinking the Role of In-House Counsel

Somewhere along the way, in-house counsel got a label:

The Gatekeeper.

The one who says “no,” draws the red lines, and stops bad ideas before they spiral.

Necessary? Absolutely.

But today’s businesses need more.

If we only ever show up to block risks, we miss half the reason we’re here. Businesses today need more than watchdogs…they need co-pilots. Partners who understand the mission, anticipate the turbulence, and help chart a course that gets everyone to their destination safely and successfully.

Because imagine if all we ever did was say “no.”

Innovation would stall. Deals would die before they had a chance to grow. Good ideas would never get off the ground because the legal team becomes the department of impossibility, the one who pours cold water on every exciting endeavor.

And that’s not the kind of counsel businesses need today.

Thinking like a Business Partner

The real opportunity and challenge for modern in-house counsel is to think beyond legal risk in isolation. It’s about seeing the bigger picture: the commercial realities, the strategic ambitions, the human dynamics that drive a business forward.

It’s not about lowering standards or taking shortcuts. It’s about applying the law in ways that are practical, creative, and aligned with the business’s vision. It’s about being part of the solution, not just the regulator of problems.

The best in-house counsel are forward-thinkers

They spot challenges early, offer ways around them, and balance risk with opportunity. They adapt to fast-moving business landscapes, embrace technology to work smarter, and don’t just step in at the end — they’re right there alongside the business from the start.

By stepping into strategic conversations early and focusing on outcomes, not just risks, in-house counsel can move from being seen as a gatekeeper to becoming a trusted enabler of progress.

Walking the line

Of course, partnership doesn’t mean rubber-stamping every idea. Guardrails exist for a reason. Sometimes, the right answer really is “no.” Sometimes, protecting the business means standing firm even when it’s unpopular.

But the best in-house counsel know how to walk that line — balancing caution with courage, pragmatism with principle. They build trust by demonstrating that they understand not just the letter of the law, but the spirit of the business.

They’re not the last hurdle before launch.

They’re the sounding board that helps the business get off the ground stronger, smarter, and safer.

Shape the future of business through counsel

In an increasingly complex world, companies don’t just need lawyers who can spot risks.

They need lawyers who can see opportunities, navigate gray areas, and help leadership make confident, informed decisions.

Being a gatekeeper will always be part of the job. But being a true business partner? That’s where in-house counsel can have the greatest impact — shaping not just what companies can’t do, but what they can achieve.

Not either/or. Both.

Because at the end of the day, a great lawyer doesn’t just defend the company’s present — they help build its future.

Sincerely,

Stephen Le, Lead Litigator