Key takeaways
- The CEO focuses on running the business day to day, while the Chair provides oversight and leadership at board level
- Clear separation of roles becomes increasingly important once external investors are involved
- Strong governance helps founders make better decisions and protects the long-term health of the business
- An effective Chair supports and challenges the CEO, keeping the board focused on what really matters
- Non-executive directors add value by bringing skills and experience that complement the founding team
- Boards should evolve as the business grows, adapting to new challenges and opportunities
In the early days of building a startup, governance can feel like something to worry about later – something only larger companies should be doing and a potential hindrance to the ability to pivot as needed and make decisions quickly.
Founders are naturally entrepreneurial and fast moving: they will typically be focused on product development, winning customers, hiring the first team members, and keeping the business moving forward. Board structures and role definitions can seem secondary at this stage. But as soon as external investment enters the picture, the way a company is governed begins to matter. Clarity between the Chair and the CEO in terms of their roles becomes especially important as blurred responsibilities at the top can slow progress and create unnecessary tension.
Understanding the differences between Chair and CEO – and developing a great working relationship between the two is an essential part of building a resilient, investable business.
The key differences between Chair and CEO in a tech startup
The CEO runs the business day to day. They are responsible for executing strategy, leading the team, delivering results, and making sure the company performs against its plan.
The Chair has a different role. The Chair leads the board, not the organisation itself. They provide oversight and challenge, helping ensure the company is being run effectively and responsibly. In most UK startups, the Chair is non-executive. This means they are not involved in operational management. Instead, they act as a sounding board for the CEO and help the board function well.
Chair vs CEO: Comparison table
| Area | CEO | Chair |
|---|
| Focus | Leads daily operations and execution | Leads governance, oversight, and board effectiveness |
| Core role | Runs the company and drives performance | Ensures strong governance and guides strategic direction |
| Strategy | Develops and executes strategy | Challenges, validates and approves strategy |
| Decision making | Makes operational and commercial decisions | Oversees major strategic and governance decisions |
| Involvement | Fully operational and hands-on | Non-executive; not involved in daily management |
| Accountability | Accountable for business results | Accountable for board performance and governance |
| Investor Role | Reports results and performance | Manages board relationships and supports investor communication |
| Leadership | Leads executive team and culture | Leads board discussions and decision making |
Some businesses appoint an executive Chair during fundraising or transition periods, but this comes with different expectations and is less common. In most cases, the roles of Chair and CEO are designed to complement each other rather than overlap.
How decision-making is divided between the Chair and CEO
Decision making in startups works best when there is a clear structure – especially once external investors are involved. They bring with them a new set of expectations, one of which is that a business plan will be delivered on.
The executive team develops plans, makes recommendations, and brings key decisions to the board. The board’s role is to scrutinise those plans, test assumptions, ask tough questions and approve major strategic decisions.
The CEO remains responsible for delivery. The board does not run the business, but it does provide oversight, particularly once external shareholders are involved. As companies mature, more structure becomes necessary. Early-stage board meetings often feel informal and operational. Over time, governance needs to become more disciplined as complexity increases.
For a deeper look at how taking investment changes how decisions are made, read our article on the truth about control.
Why strong business governance matters for startups
Some founders see governance as an administrative task that can be time consuming, but strong governance protects the company, the leadership team, and its stakeholders. It provides accountability, reduces risk, and creates a framework for making sound decisions under pressure.
Evidence from across private capital and venture markets shows that strong governance is a defining feature of these investment environments. BVCA research finds that most private capital backed firms have robust governance procedures, and McKinsey reports that applying proven PE board governance principles can improve medium and long-term value creation.
Clear corporate governance roles help prevent avoidable mistakes, ensure problems are identified early, and provide founders with experienced support as they scale. Governance is not about slowing a business down. It’s about helping it to grow sustainably.
Why startups need a reliable Chair (and what makes one)
A reliable Chair can be one of the most valuable assets a growing startup has – they will complement the CEO and generally offer a knowledge set that no one else in the business has.
A good Chair runs meetings efficiently, prioritises the most important discussions and ensures that all voices around the table are heard. They create space for constructive challenge rather than allowing conversations to be dominated by one individual.
The Chair’s job isn’t to provide all the answers. The best Chairs challenge the CEO to justify recommendations, consider evidence, and think through alternatives. They also help manage external stakeholders. As a company grows, investor communication and board expectations increase. A strong Chair can take some of that burden away from the CEO so the executive team can remain focused on running the business.
The role of non-executive directors
The responsibilities of the board of directors extend beyond oversight. A strong board also brings additional expertise and perspective.
Non-executive directors (NEDs) can add specific functional or sector knowledge. A business may benefit from a finance-focused NED ahead of fundraising, or a sector specialist who understands customer dynamics, regulation, or pricing.
The board does not need every capability permanently. It should evolve as the business evolves. The best boards combine strong governance with targeted support, helping founders anticipate challenges rather than react to them.
To find out more about what an NED can bring, read our article on the benefits of appointing a non-executive director.
How to build an effective board
Founders should approach board-building with the same strategic thinking they apply to hiring.
It starts with clarity. Taking investment means sharing ownership, agreeing a plan, and accepting that major decisions may require board or shareholder consent.
That does not mean investors will micromanage. Management remains responsible for execution. But alignment matters, and governance is how that alignment is maintained.
Founders can build an effective board by focusing on a few key principles:
- Choose people who complement your gaps rather than mirror your strengths.
- Appoint a Chair who can challenge constructively without taking control.
- Bring in NEDs who add specific expertise at the right stage.
- Treat governance as an enabler of growth, not an administrative burden.
A good board helps founders scale, stay focused and avoid costly mistakes. If you’ve recently secured investment, our guide to the first 100 days post‑investment explains how governance and founder–investor relationships evolve immediately after a round.
Final thoughts: good governance builds great companies
The relationship between Chair and CEO is one of the most important dynamics in any startup.
When responsibilities are clear, corporate governance is strong and expectations are aligned, businesses benefit from decisive leadership and thoughtful oversight. When roles blur, trust can erode and decision-making slows.
Understanding the differences between Chair and CEO, and building the right board structure early, helps startups grow with confidence and resilience.