When should UK fintechs hire their first company secretary?

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As UK fintech firms mature from early-stage startups into regulated, financial services businesses, governance stops being optional and becomes a strategic necessity. What begins as a fast-moving technology venture quickly becomes part of a highly regulated financial ecosystem where accountability, transparency and oversight are essential. 

Hiring a Company Secretary is one of the most important early governance decisions for scaling fintech companies, as they assist the company in navigating regulatory requirements, strengthening corporate governance and supporting effective decision-making at board level. In the financial services sector, this role plays a critical part in developing governance structures that support sustainable growth while meeting regulatory expectations.  
 
See also: UK How to hire your first Company Secretary guide 

Below are some of the key reasons why hiring a Company Secretary becomes increasingly important as fintech companies scale. 

Entering a regulated environment

As fintech firms expand into regulated activities such as payments, lending, wealth management or digital asset services, regulatory complexity increases significantly. 
 
Many begin by operating with relatively simple business models but, as they scale, their services often intersect with multiple parts of the financial system. This brings them under the supervision of financial regulators such as the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and other regulatory bodies. 
 
Operating effectively in this environment requires structured governance and robust regulatory compliance processes, including: 

  • Coordinating regulatory submissions and supporting FCA authorisation processes 
  • Ensuring board oversight and governance structures meet regulatory expectations 
  • Implementing governance frameworks that support regulatory compliance 
  • Supporting senior management in responding to regulatory change

Without a dedicated governance support, fintech leadership teams can find themselves trying to manage product innovation, regulatory requirements and investor expectations simultaneously. This can place strain on authorisation timelines, regulatory relationships and strategic partnerships with financial institutions. 
 
For fintech startups entering regulated markets, governance quickly becomes a core operational capability rather than a purely administrative function.

Governance maturity as fintech companies scale

In the early stages of a fintech startup, governance practices are often informal. Founders typically prioritise product development, digital transformation and rapid customer acquisition. 

As the organisation grows, however, governance structures must evolve to support a more complex operating environment.  Board meetings become more structured; governance documentation becomes more important and internal controls must be formalised to meet regulatory expectations.  

Accurate board minutes, structured reporting and clear decision-making processes become essential, particularly in regulated financial services environments where governance records may be reviewed by financial regulators. 

Acompany secretary ensures that governance practices mature alongside the business. They maintain statutory records, oversee corporate filings and support the development of governance frameworks that enable the board of directors and senior management to operate effectively. 

By strengthening governance structures early, fintechs can build stronger relationships with regulators and investors while maintaining focus on growth. 

Financial crime, AML and KYC oversight

Many fintech companies operate in areas such as payments, lending or digital assets where financial crime risks must be carefully managed. This includes obligations around anti-money laundering (AML), know your customer (KYC) and sanctions screening. 
 
Regulators expect fintech firms to implement robust compliance frameworks that monitor financial crime risks and ensure regulatory obligations are met. 
 
While a company secretary does not directly manage AML operations, they ensure that financial crime risks are properly escalated to the board and senior management. They also help ensure governance structures support oversight of AML programmes, regulatory reporting and compliance initiatives across the organisation. 
 
As fintech companies expand internationally and operate across multiple jurisdictions, governance oversight becomes increasingly important to ensure financial crime controls remain effective and consistent.

Supporting the board and senior management

Boards must demonstrate clear governance processes, documented decision-making and accountability across the organisation. This is particularly important as companies prepare for institutional investment or regulatory supervision.  

A Company Secretary supports the board by preparing agendas, coordinating reporting, ensuring discussions and decisions are properly documented. 

They also help board members understand their responsibilities within the regulatory environment and ensure governance frameworks support effective oversight of business strategy, risk and regulatory compliance. 

Expansion across jurisdictions

The UK remains one of the world’s leading fintech hubs, and many firms expand internationally early in their growth journey. Expansion into Europe, North America, the Middle East or Asia introduces new regulatory frameworks, compliance requirements and governance obligations. 

Managing multiple legal entities across different jurisdictions without a coherent structure can quickly create operational and regulatory risk.  

A company secretary helps ensure governance frameworks remain consistent across jurisdictions. They support entity management, maintain corporate records and coordinate governance practices across international operations, helping fintech firms maintain strong governance standards as they scale globally.

Preparing for fundraising, 
acquisition or IPO

As fintechs approach major milestones such as funding rounds, acquisitions or potential IPOs, governance structures come under scrutiny.  

Investors and strategic partners expect to see mature governance frameworks, strong internal controls and clearly documented decision-making processes. These factors influence investor confidence and can become a competitive advantage when companies seek new investment.

When should fintech companies hire their first corporate governance leader?

As fintech startups evolve into regulated financial services businesses, governance structures must adapt to support regulatory compliance, risk management and board oversight. 

A skilled company secretary provides the stability and oversight that regulators expect and the organisational structure that investors and stakeholders value.  

By embedding good governance from the outset, fintechs position themselves to build trust, strengthen partnerships and pursue sustainable growth within an increasingly complex financial services landscape.

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