A designee is a person or entity who has been designated—formally appointed or named—to act in a specific role, exercise a specific power, or receive a specific benefit under a legal document. The word “designee” appears frequently in operating agreements, employment contracts, corporate governance documents, and government regulations, always in the same functional role: it’s the person someone else has pointed to.
Designee Definition in Law
In legal usage, a designee is the recipient of a designation—someone who has been selected by a designating party (the “designator”) to fill a particular function. The designee’s authority or entitlement derives from the designating party’s act of designation, not from their own independent right.
Example: A company’s board resolution authorizes the CEO to designate a “designee” to sign routine vendor contracts on the CEO’s behalf. The person the CEO names is the designee—their signing authority exists because the CEO designated them, not because of their own position.
Designee in LLC Operating Agreements
In LLC operating agreements, “designee” language typically appears in two contexts:
Board or Manager Designees
When investors take board seats as part of a financing, the investment agreement often gives them the right to designate a person to serve as their board representative. The investor’s board designee sits on the board and acts in the investor’s interest—but is personally a separate legal person from the investor fund itself.
“So long as Investor holds at least 10% of the outstanding Membership Interests, Investor shall have the right to designate one (1) Manager, and the Members shall promptly cause such designee to be appointed to the Board of Managers.”
This gives investors board representation without requiring a specific named individual—they can swap their designee when personnel changes.
Transfer Designees
Some operating agreements allow members to transfer interests to their “designees” (affiliates, trusts, family members) without triggering right-of-first-refusal requirements. The definition of permitted designee in these provisions is critical—a broad definition significantly expands transfer rights.
Designee in Employment Contracts
Employment agreements for executives and senior employees use “designee” in authority provisions:
- “Employee shall report to the CEO or the CEO’s designee.” — Allows the company to have a different person manage the employee without technically breaching the reporting structure promised in the contract.
- “Expenses shall be approved by the CFO or the CFO’s designee.” — Allows the CFO to delegate approval authority without amending every employment agreement.
- “Notice shall be given to the Company at its principal office, Attention: General Counsel or designee.” — Ensures notices reach the right person even as personnel changes.
Designee in Government and Regulatory Contexts
Federal and state regulations frequently use “designee” to allow delegation of governmental functions. For example:
- OSHA regulations often authorize compliance actions by the “Secretary [of Labor] or designee”
- Illinois statutes authorize action by the “Director [of a state agency] or the Director’s designee”
- Export control regulations require EAR compliance by “the responsible official or designee”
Why Designee Language Matters in Startup Documents
Designee clauses create flexibility but also ambiguity if poorly drafted:
- Unlimited flexibility can undermine protections: If a board seat is for “Investor’s designee” with no restrictions on who qualifies, Investor could designate a competitor’s employee or an unqualified person.
- Designation should be in writing: To avoid disputes about whether someone was validly designated, require written designation delivered to the company.
- Define whether designation is revocable: Can the designating party swap their designee at will? The answer affects governance stability.
- Consider conflicts of interest: A designee who also sits on a competitor’s board presents conflict-of-interest issues that should be addressed in the operating agreement.
FAQ: Designee in Business Agreements
Is a designee the same as an agent?
Not exactly. An agent acts on behalf of a principal with authority to bind the principal. A designee is named to fill a role or receive a right—they may or may not be acting as the designating party’s agent depending on context.
Can an entity (company) be a designee?
Yes. A designee can be an individual or an entity unless the agreement specifically requires a natural person (e.g., for board membership, which often requires an individual).
Fitter Law helps Illinois startups draft operating agreements, board governance documents, and employment contracts with clear designation and authority provisions. Learn about our corporate governance services or view our flat-fee packages.