- The “Title Without Clear Responsibility” Problem
- Management Decision Layer (Why)
- Legal Liability is Judged by “Substance,” Not “Title”
- Three Legal Risks Created by the Title-Responsibility Gap
- ① Ambiguity in Accountability
- ② Escalation into Labor and HR Disputes
- ③ Risk of Being Unable to Explain Policies and Contracts
- Specialist Implementation Layer (How)
- Design Perspectives to Prevent Misalignment
- Common Misconceptions
- Misconception ①: Ambiguity in Responsibility Protects Individuals
- Misconception ②: Job Titles Are an Internal Matter Only
- Final Questions to Confirm with This Decision
- Summary (No Single Answer)
The “Title Without Clear Responsibility” Problem
As an organization grows and titles proliferate, a common situation emerges: “They have the title of manager, but it’s unclear what they’re actually responsible for; in reality, senior leadership makes the final calls.” This state is more than just an operational awkwardness—it’s a dangerous sign that legal risks are quietly accumulating.
Management Decision Layer (Why)
Legal Liability is Judged by “Substance,” Not “Title”
Many business leaders tend to think, “We haven’t assigned that level of responsibility based on their position.” However, in the legal world, titles are not the benchmark for determining liability. What matters is the “substance”: what they actually decided, the extent of their discretion, and which judgments influenced outcomes. In other words, a misalignment between title and reality creates the most difficult situation to explain to third parties.
Three Legal Risks Created by the Title-Responsibility Gap
① Ambiguity in Accountability
When trouble occurs, if you cannot explain who the ultimate decision-maker was or how far authority was delegated, the organization’s management responsibility will be heavily scrutinized. This is a classic case where a vaguely defined role, intended to protect an individual, ultimately becomes a risk for the entire organization.
② Escalation into Labor and HR Disputes
When job titles and responsibility scopes don’t match, claims like “I wasn’t actually a manager,” “I didn’t have the corresponding authority or discretion,” or “I was only burdened with responsibility” easily arise. This gap can develop into labor disputes, such as unpaid overtime or unfair performance evaluations.
③ Risk of Being Unable to Explain Policies and Contracts
Even if a title implies sign-off authority, if senior management was making the decisions in practice, a situation arises where you cannot explain to a third party who decided what and to what extent. This doesn’t necessarily mean contracts become immediately void, but it creates a risk where the organization is placed at a disadvantage in fulfilling its accountability to stakeholders or in arguing its case during a dispute.
Specialist Implementation Layer (How)
Design Perspectives to Prevent Misalignment
To prevent a gap between titles and responsibilities, you need at least the following perspectives.
- Always align job titles with responsibility scopes.
- Document the reality of authority and discretion.
- Avoid ambiguity around the “final decision-maker.”
The key is “not to be vague in an attempt to protect.” Ambiguity does not provide defense; it increases risk.
Common Misconceptions
Misconception ①: Ambiguity in Responsibility Protects Individuals
Making responsibility ambiguous protects neither the individual nor the organization. Since substance is what matters, ambiguity only makes it impossible to fulfill accountability.
Misconception ②: Job Titles Are an Internal Matter Only
The relationship between titles and responsibilities affects internal evaluations, external contracts, and legal liability judgments. It is not an issue that can be resolved with internal adjustments alone.
Final Questions to Confirm with This Decision
For this position, what level of responsibility is it expected to bear? Does it match the actual scope of decision-making? Is it in a state that can be explained to a third party? If you cannot answer these questions, your organization may have inherent legal risks.
Summary (No Single Answer)
Legal liability is judged by substance, not title. A misalignment between position and responsibility can become a risk for the entire organization. Ambiguity is a vulnerability, not a defense. Granting a title means defining the structure of legal responsibility. Operating with this awareness in management decisions and organizational design is essential for the sustainable growth of an SME.


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