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What does a non-executive director actually do?

By Max Fontana-RevalUpdated June 20268 min read

The role in plain English: the legal reality, the five real jobs, the time, the money — and how to tell when your business is ready for its first independent voice.

Ask ten founders what a non-executive director does and you'll get ten polite guesses, usually involving the word "oversight". This guide is the plain-English version: what the role legally is, what a good NED actually does between meetings, what it costs, and how to tell whether your business is ready for one.

The one-sentence version

A non-executive director is a full member of your board who doesn't work in the business — appointed precisely so that someone at the table has nothing to defend except the company's interests.

The legal reality: same duties, no excuses

Under the Companies Act 2006, a NED carries exactly the same legal duties as the executive directors — most famously section 172, the duty to promote the success of the company. There is no junior class of director in UK law. The "non-executive" part describes the job (no operational role), not the responsibility.

This matters more than it sounds. It's why a NED's challenge carries weight an advisor's never quite does: they share the consequences. An advisor who's wrong sends an invoice; a director who's negligent answers for it.

What a good NED actually does

Across an ordinary year, the work clusters into five jobs:

  • Constructive challenge. Testing the strategy, the budget and the big calls — in the boardroom, before they're committed, while changing course is still cheap. Not contrarianism; pressure-testing.
  • Governance discipline. Making sure the basics quietly exist: a board cycle, papers that frame decisions, minutes with owners, conflicts declared, statutory duties met.
  • Mentoring the executive. Founders rarely have anywhere safe to rehearse hard decisions. A good NED is that room — experienced, confidential, and unimpressed by spin.
  • Doors and credibility. Introductions to capital, customers and senior hires — and the external signal that serious independent people have looked inside this business and stayed.
  • Event leadership. When a raise, exit, dispute or downturn arrives, the NED leans in: extra sessions, calm judgement, and a voice investors trust because it isn't management's.

What a NED is not

Three boundaries keep the role honest. A NED is not a part-time manager — the moment they start running a function, independence dies. They're not a consultant — bolting paid project work onto the directorship muddies both. And they're not decoration — a famous name who skims the pack in the taxi adds risk, not credibility.

Time and money

A typical SME NED seat runs one to two days a month: a monthly or six-weekly board meeting, real preparation, and availability between. UK SME fees commonly sit between £15,000 and £40,000 a year, varying with scale and risk — the full picture, including chairs and advisory structures, is in the fees guide.

When is a business ready?

The honest test isn't turnover; it's the decisions ahead. If the next eighteen months involve raising capital, a major hire, succession, or a strategy bet you'd struggle to defend to a sceptic, the business is ready. Most founders appoint their first NED somewhere between £1m and £5m of revenue — usually about a year later than they should have.

Choosing well: the first 90 days test

Interview for questions, not war stories. The best predictor of NED value is what they probe in the first meeting: cash, customer concentration, the gap between plan and pipeline, what the founder is avoiding. Then agree the first ninety days in writing — onboarding on numbers, customers and people; the board pack reshaped around decisions; the first proper challenge cycle. (That's the standard MAXFR commits to in its own NED engagements.)

The common failure modes

Appointments fail in predictable ways: the mate-of-the-founder who can't challenge; the trophy name who won't prepare; the frustrated executive who starts managing; the consultant in disguise billing days on the side. Every one is avoidable with a written role, declared conflicts and a six-month review both sides can use without drama.

Where to start

If you're weighing a NED against a chair or an advisory board, the decision guide compares the three — or let the Board Advisory Diagnostic score it from five questions about your stage, board and priorities.

Max Fontana-Reval
Written by

Max Fontana-Reval — Portfolio Chair & Certified NED; NE Chair, MW Equipment; Advisory Chair, Unsigned Research; Member IoD · NEDonBoard · BCS. About Max  ·  LinkedIn

Quick answers

Asked often.

Is a NED legally responsible if things go wrong?
Yes. UK law makes no distinction between executive and non-executive directors' duties — a NED carries the same Companies Act 2006 responsibilities, which is precisely why their challenge carries weight.
How much time does a NED commit?
Typically one to two days a month for an SME: board meetings, real preparation, and availability between. The commitment should be stated in the letter of appointment.
What's the difference between a NED and an advisor?
An advisor counsels with no legal duty or liability; a NED is a full statutory director. Advisors are easier to start with; NEDs are harder to ignore.
When should an SME appoint its first NED?
When the decisions ahead — capital, key hires, succession, big strategy bets — outgrow the challenge available around the table. For many founder-led businesses that's between £1m and £5m revenue.

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