---
name: managing-growth-equity-board-governance
language: en
description: Structures board engagement for growth equity investments with meeting cadence, committee design, and information rights. Use when establishing board governance, preparing board materials, or managing investor board relationships.
tags:
  - management
  - growth-equity
  - investment
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - Growth Equity
    - Expansion Capital
    - Late-Stage Investing
  document_types:
    - Management Report
  skill_modes:
    - Management
    - Coordination
---
# Managing Growth Equity Board Governance

Structures board engagement for growth equity investments, covering meeting cadence, committee design, information rights, and the ongoing relationship between management teams and investor-appointed directors.

## When To Use

- Setting up board governance for a new growth equity investment (post-closing)
- Redesigning board structure after a new funding round changes the investor mix
- Preparing recurring board materials or board packages
- Resolving friction between management and investor board members on reporting, consent rights, or committee scope
- Onboarding a new investor-appointed director

## Inputs To Gather

- **Investment documents**: Shareholders' agreement, investor rights agreement, and any side letters specifying board composition, observer rights, or consent requirements
- **Current board composition**: Names, roles (independent, investor-appointed, founder/management), term lengths, and committee assignments
- **Company stage and cadence**: Revenue run-rate, employee count, existing meeting frequency, fiscal year calendar
- **Information rights schedule**: What reports are currently delivered, to whom, and on what timeline
- **Outstanding governance issues**: Any disputes, unfilled seats, or upcoming term expirations

## Workflow

1. **Map board composition requirements**
   - Extract mandatory seat allocations from the shareholders' agreement (e.g., "Investor A designates 1 director, Founders designate 2, 1 independent mutually agreed")
   - Confirm observer seat rights and whether observers receive full or redacted materials
   - Identify any protective provisions requiring board-level approval vs. investor-majority approval [VERIFY against shareholders' agreement]

2. **Design meeting cadence**
   - Set quarterly board meetings as the baseline; increase to monthly or six-weekly for companies below $20M ARR or navigating inflection points (new market entry, M&A exploration)
   - Schedule an annual strategy session (typically off-site, 4–6 hours) separate from regular governance meetings
   - Define a standing calendar with dates distributed at least 90 days in advance

3. **Structure committees**
   - **Compensation Committee**: Required once the company exceeds ~75 employees or begins equity refresh grants; at least one independent director should sit on this committee
   - **Audit/Finance Committee**: Recommended once revenue exceeds $30M or the company is on a 12–24 month IPO timeline; charter should specify oversight of annual audit, related-party transactions, and D&O insurance
   - **Nominating/Governance Committee**: Optional at growth stage; useful when the board has 5+ seats or independent director searches are underway
   - Document each committee's charter, membership, and reporting-back cadence to the full board

4. **Define information rights and board package**
   - Standard board package contents:
     - Financial statements (income statement, balance sheet, cash flow) with budget-vs-actual variance
     - KPI dashboard (ARR/revenue, net retention, CAC payback, burn rate, runway)
     - Sales pipeline and bookings summary
     - Product roadmap update (milestone-based, not Gantt-level)
     - Key hires, departures, and org chart changes
     - Legal/regulatory update (material litigation, IP filings, compliance matters)
   - Distribute the board package **5 business days** before the meeting [VERIFY — some agreements specify 3, 5, or 7 days]
   - Monthly investor updates (lighter-weight) should be sent within 30 days of month-end, covering financial summary and top-3 priorities

5. **Establish consent and approval thresholds**
   - List actions requiring board approval vs. investor consent vs. management discretion (e.g., annual budget approval = board; debt above $X = investor consent; hiring below VP = management)
   - Create a decision-rights matrix mapping action categories to approval levels
   - Flag any drag-along, tag-along, or ROFR triggers that affect governance decisions [VERIFY against shareholders' agreement]

6. **Operationalize governance cadence**
   - Assign a board liaison (typically Chief of Staff, CFO, or General Counsel) responsible for scheduling, materials, and minute-taking
   - Use a board portal or secure shared drive — avoid email-only distribution for confidentiality and version control
   - Circulate draft minutes within 10 business days; finalize with board approval at the next meeting
   - Track action items from each meeting with owners and due dates

## Output

- **Board governance summary**: One document consolidating composition, meeting schedule, committee charters, information-rights calendar, and consent-rights matrix
- **Board package template**: A reusable slide or memo template with the standard sections pre-built
- **Decision-rights matrix**: A table mapping action categories (capital expenditures, hiring, debt, equity issuance, related-party transactions) to approval authority

## Quality Checks

- Every board seat allocation traces back to a specific clause in the shareholders' agreement or investor rights agreement
- Committee charters specify membership requirements, meeting frequency, and scope of authority
- Information-rights timeline matches contractual obligations — mark any discrepancies with [VERIFY]
- Consent thresholds are stated with dollar amounts or percentage triggers, not vague references
- The board package template covers both financial and operational metrics appropriate to the company's stage
- No governance structure assumes U.S. corporate law defaults without confirming the company's jurisdiction of incorporation [VERIFY]
