The short answerA COO owns operations and execution across the business; a President's role is broader and more variable, often encompassing operations but sometimes extending to commercial leadership, a division, or a near-CEO remit. Where a COO is defined by function (operations), a President is defined by seniority and scope — which is why the two sometimes merge.

COO and President are two senior roles that often overlap, and in some businesses are held by the same person. Here is how they differ and when each makes sense.

Two different kinds of role

The distinction is partly that these are different kinds of title. COO is a functional role — it denotes ownership of operations and execution. President is a role defined by seniority and scope rather than a specific function, which is why its meaning varies so widely. Comparing them means comparing a defined function with a flexible senior title.

Where they overlap

In many businesses the President effectively is the operational leader — running the company day to day — which is much the same as a COO's remit. In these cases the titles are near-interchangeable, and some businesses use one where others would use the other. This overlap is the source of most of the confusion between them.

Where they diverge

They diverge when the President's role extends beyond operations — encompassing commercial leadership, a whole division or market, or a broader near-CEO remit, sometimes with succession in mind. A COO's remit, by contrast, stays anchored in operations and execution however senior the person. Where a President owns more than operations, the roles are genuinely different.

Which to use

The choice depends on the specific mandate. If the need is a dedicated owner of operations and execution, COO is the clearer title; if the need is a broad senior leader running the business or a major part of it, President may fit better. As always, defining the actual remit matters more than the label — the key to hiring well.

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Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between a COO and a President?

A COO owns operations and execution (a functional role); a President is a broader, more variable senior role defined by scope, often including operations but sometimes extending to commercial leadership, a division, or a near-CEO remit. They frequently overlap.

Can one person be both COO and President?

Yes — in many businesses the same person holds both, or the President is effectively the operational leader (the COO's remit). The titles are often near-interchangeable when the President's role centres on running operations.

Related: What Does a COO Do? · What Does a President Do? · How to Hire a President

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