How to make your first risk hire in a private equity-backed business
Private equity-backed businesses are built to move quickly. Growth is accelerated, teams are lean and expectations are high.
As portfolio companies scale, a key question emerges: when should the business make its first dedicated risk hire and what should that role look like?
First risk hires can become genuine value multipliers. They can also become expensive mis-hires if the timing or mandate is unclear.
In a PE-backed business, the risk function exists for a practical reason: protecting EBITDA, supporting the investment thesis and enabling sustainable growth across the private equity portfolio. For management teams and portfolio company CEOs, the timing of this hire can directly influence how effectively risk supports value creation.
In most portfolio companies, the “first risk hire” refers to the first dedicated professional responsible for enterprise risk management or risk oversight. Until that point, responsibility typically sits with senior leaders such as the CFO, General Counsel (GC) or COO alongside their existing in-house roles. As the organisation grows, those responsibilities often become too complex to manage informally.
When is the right time for a PE-backed business to make its first risk hire?
In most mid-market portfolio businesses, risk responsibilities initially sit with the CFO, GC, COO or a combination of the three. In early-stage growth, that model can work well.
As portfolio companies move through the investment lifecycle, however, PE firms often expect governance structures to mature alongside operational growth. What works during the early stages of a high-growth investment can quickly become stretched as the business approaches refinancing, strategic expansion or exit preparation.
As businesses scale, complexity increases. Operational exposure grows; acquisitions introduce integration challenges and lenders begin to ask deeper governance questions.
There are usually clear inflection points where the existing model starts to strain:
- Rapid geographic expansion
- Buy-and-build strategies
- Increased lender scrutiny
- Growing regulatory exposure
- Exit planning entering board conversations
At this stage, risk often becomes reactive. Issues are handled as they arise. Controls are informal. Reporting is inconsistent. And then diligence begins to expose gaps.
The most effective businesses make the first-time hire before that pressure becomes visible. Scaling complexity requires structure.
What does the first risk hire do?
In most mid-market portfolio businesses, risk responsibilities initially sit with the CFO, General Counsel, COO or a combination of the three. In early-stage growth, that model can work well.
But it has a natural sell-by date.
As portfolio companies move through the investment lifecycle, PE firms typically expect governance structures to mature alongside operational growth. What works during the early stages of a high-growth investment can quickly become stretched as the business approaches refinancing, strategic expansion or exit.
As businesses scale, complexity increases. Operational exposure grows, acquisitions introduce integration challenges and lenders begin to ask deeper governance questions.
There are usually clear inflection points where the existing model starts to strain:
- Rapid geographic expansion
- Buy-and-build strategies
- Increased lender scrutiny
- Growing regulatory exposure
- Exit planning entering board conversations
- Integration strain in buy-and-build strategies
- Heightened focus on hold-period KPIs
- Exit readiness and diligence preparation
At this stage, risk often becomes reactive. Issues are handled as they arise, controls are informal and reporting becomes inconsistent.
The most effective businesses make the hire before that pressure becomes visible. They recognise that scaling complexity requires structure and that unmanaged risk can quickly translate into operational friction or value leakage.
Risk manager or head of risk: what level is right?
The appropriate level depends on business scale and regulatory exposure.
In many UK mid-market portfolio companies (generating between £50m and £300m in revenue), the first hire is often:
- A standalone risk manager or senior risk manager
- Reporting directly into the CFO
- Tasked with building structure over an 18–24-month period
In more heavily regulated sectors, particularly financial services, the business may require a formal head of risk or SMF-level oversight from the outset.
The key question is: Do you need strategic oversight or someone to build and embed?
In many cases, the immediate need is someone who can build the function. Hiring someone too senior early on can introduce structural friction and unnecessary cost. The most effective first hire is usually someone capable of operating strategically while remaining hands-on.
Value alignment: why first risk hires sometimes fail
PE-backed businesses operate very differently from large corporates. They tend to prioritise:
- Speed
- Pragmatism
- Direct communication
- Commercial judgement
Risk professionals coming from highly layered organisations sometimes struggle with that shift.
In a portfolio company environment, decisions move quickly. There are fewer committees and shorter reporting lines. Risk professionals must be able to work alongside the CFO, understand EBITDA impact and frame risk in commercial terms.
The most successful first hires are influential without being obstructive. They enable growth rather than slow it down.
Interim vs permanent: a strategic lever
Another factor often overlooked is whether the first risk hire should be interim rather than permanent.
In several situations, bringing in an experienced interim risk lead can be the right move, particularly:
- Immediately post-acquisition
- During integration of multiple acquisitions
- When preparing for refinancing
- While defining the long-term governance structure
An interim professional can stabilise the function, establish initial frameworks and help define what good looks like without committing to a permanent structure too early.
In other cases, particularly where regulatory exposure is higher or the investment horizon is longer, a permanent hire from the outset may make more sense.
The decision should align with the investment thesis and stage of growth, not simply urgency.
Common mistakes made when hiring their first risk professional
Across PE-backed businesses several consistent pitfalls appear during the hiring process:
- Hiring someone overly technical who lacks business influence
- Treating the role as purely compliance-focused
- Waiting until exit planning begins
- Underestimating how lean the role will be
First risk hires rarely inherit large teams. They need to operate independently, build credibility quickly and influence senior stakeholders without relying on hierarchy. That profile requires a careful search process.
How risk governance impacts exit value
Governance maturity increasingly affects buyer perception during transactions. During diligence, buyers and lenders often review:
- Risk frameworks
- Control documentation
- Incident history
- Reporting cadence
- Board oversight
Where these areas are underdeveloped, deals rarely collapse entirely. However, they can introduce friction, delay or pricing pressure.
A well-embedded risk function reduces those variables.
Getting the first risk hire right
The first risk hire in a portfolio company shapes the function that follows.
They set the tone for governance, define what proportionate risk management looks like and influence how risk is discussed at board level.
Experience across enterprise risk, regulatory risk and operational risk shows that profiles translate differently across environments.
Corporate experience can be valuable. But it does not always translate into a PE-backed setting. Equally, someone purely operational without strategic awareness may struggle to gain credibility with investors and senior leadership.
The strongest candidates are commercially minded risk professionals who understand governance and possess the right skill set for building within lean, fast-moving organisations.
Identifying that balance early and defining the role clearly can make the difference between a risk hire that simply adds oversight and one that genuinely supports the investment strategy.
Frequently asked questions
This section provides clear, concise answers to the most common queries about hiring risk professionals in PE-backed businesses
A dedicated risk professional becomes essential once operational complexity threatens EBITDA stability, or when upcoming events, such as acquisitions, refinancing, or exit preparation, require formalised controls and reliable reporting to avoid diligence friction.
They build proportionate risk infrastructure that protects margin, enhances transparency, and reduces operational surprises. Their work helps the company scale cleanly, keeps lenders and investors confident, and positions the business for a smoother exit process.
The decision depends on regulatory exposure and the stage of the investment thesis. Many mid‑market companies benefit from a hands‑on builder who can create frameworks quickly, enabling value creation, rather than a heavily strategic hire more suited to mature corporate environments.
Interims can rapidly stabilise risk governance during integration phases, pre‑exit preparation, or immediately post‑acquisition. They also help prevent diligence‑day surprises by putting minimum‑viable frameworks in place ahead of buyer scrutiny.
Buyers increasingly scrutinise governance maturity to assess reliability of forecasts, operational discipline, and regulatory exposure. Well-developed risk structures reduce perceived execution risk and protect valuation multiples by showing that EBITDA is sustainable and well‑controlled.
An enterprise risk management (ERM) framework is a structured approach used by organisations to identify, assess and manage risks across the business. In portfolio companies, it typically includes processes for risk identification, reporting, escalation and oversight.
For PE-backed businesses, a proportionate ERM framework helps leadership teams and investors understand key operational, financial and regulatory risks while supporting decision-making as the business grows.
