Glossary • Marketing & Business Leadership
A fractional CMO is a senior marketing executive who works with a company on a part-time, embedded basis. The word fractional describes the engagement model - they provide a fraction of their time, at a fraction of the cost of a full-time hire, while delivering the same level of strategic marketing leadership.
Fractional - means part-time, retainer-based engagement. Typically 10-40 hours per month. Not a contractor in the traditional sense - a fractional executive is embedded in leadership, participates in strategy, and owns outcomes.
CMO - Chief Marketing Officer. The most senior marketing role in a company. Owns strategy, team, budget, and marketing's contribution to revenue. Not a specialist, not an advisor - an executive.
A fractional CMO is a part-time Chief Marketing Officer - a senior marketing executive who works on a monthly retainer, owns your marketing function, and is accountable to revenue outcomes, without the cost of a full-time hire.
A typical fractional CMO engagement includes:
The economics are decisive for most growth-stage companies. A full-time CMO hire at $280,000 to $450,000 per year in total compensation plus 3 to 6 months of ramp time represents a significant capital commitment before the company sees commercial return. A fractional CMO at $8,000 to $25,000 per month produces active strategic output in week two, requires no equity, no benefits overhead, and can be engaged or disengaged on a month-to-month basis.
The performance evidence is equally compelling. Fractional CMOs typically have operator track records across multiple companies at comparable stages -- they arrive with a tested playbook rather than spending months diagnosing the current state. The failure rate for fractional CMO engagements in the first six months is substantially lower than the failure rate for full-time CMO hires, because the fractional model de-risks the engagement for both parties.
Companies also choose fractional because the full-time CMO model is mismatched to their needs. At $5M to $20M in revenue, most companies need CMO-level judgment for 2 to 3 days per week -- not 5 days per week. Paying for 5 days of presence when 2 days of judgment is what creates value is an inefficient capital allocation that most companies recognize once they understand the fractional model.
A standard fractional CMO engagement includes: a weekly 60-minute strategy and execution review call with the CEO and relevant stakeholders; monthly pipeline and attribution review covering channel performance, CAC by source, and marketing contribution to pipeline; quarterly board deck preparation with full marketing performance analysis; and async communication for day-to-day decisions, vendor management, and team oversight.
Time commitments range from 8 to 20 hours per week depending on the scope of the engagement. At the lower end (8 to 10 hours), the CMO functions as a strategic advisor who directs an existing marketing team. At the higher end (15 to 20 hours), the CMO functions as the hands-on head of marketing, managing vendors, overseeing execution, and producing marketing deliverables directly.
All engagements should be month-to-month with no minimum commitment. This structure aligns incentives: the fractional CMO must demonstrate commercial value to retain the engagement. Contracts that require six-month or twelve-month minimums before demonstrating results remove the performance accountability that defines the fractional model.
Week one: the diagnostic. The fractional CMO reviews CRM data, existing attribution (or lack thereof), current channel performance, team structure, and pipeline history. The output is a clear-eyed assessment of where the commercial function is generating value and where it is losing pipeline.
Weeks two and three: ICP validation and strategic brief. The CMO validates the ICP definition against actual closed-won data, identifies the channels most aligned with where that ICP concentrates, and produces a strategic brief that prioritizes the three to five highest-leverage commercial actions for the first 90 days.
Days 30 to 90: execution on the highest-leverage priorities. The fractional CMO leads implementation of the prioritized actions -- typically attribution model build, demand generation system design, ICP refinement, and marketing-sales alignment on qualification criteria. Most companies see measurable pipeline impact within the first 60 to 90 days of a well-executed fractional CMO engagement.
Yes. The terms are interchangeable. 'Fractional' has become the more common industry term because it emphasizes the engagement model (a fraction of a full-time executive's time and cost) rather than simply the hours.
A marketing consultant delivers recommendations and analysis. A fractional CMO owns execution, manages the team, controls the budget, and is accountable to revenue outcomes. The engagement depth is fundamentally different.
Fractional CMOs are most common in B2B SaaS, healthcare technology, professional services, manufacturing, fintech, and other industries where companies need executive marketing leadership but can't justify a full-time CMO hire.
Results measured in pipeline generated, CAC reduced, and revenue compounded -- not reports delivered or hours billed.
"Understanding what a fractional CMO actually is took us longer than it should have. It is not a part-time marketing manager. It is not a marketing consultant. It is a senior operator who has been a CMO -- who has owned a team, held a pipeline number, and reported to a board -- working with your company on a fractional basis. That definition changes the value proposition completely.",
"The fractional model is not a compromise on quality -- it is a compression of cost. You get the same strategic caliber as a full-time CMO at the point in your stage when you need strategy more than you need full-time presence. We got $1.6M in qualified pipeline from 12 focused hours a week of senior CMO engagement.",
"Once we understood the definition correctly, the decision was easy. The alternative was hiring a full-time CMO at $300K plus equity or leaving the marketing seat empty. The fractional model gave us CMO-level strategy and accountability at 25% of the cost with 0% of the equity dilution. The ROI was obvious.",
Every MarkCMO engagement is structured to protect you. You stay because the results are compounding -- not because you are locked in. Cancel any time. No fees, no questions.
The decision between a fractional CMO and a full-time CMO hire is primarily a function of commercial stage and capital efficiency, not preference or philosophy. The question is whether the company's commercial problems require full-time CMO presence to solve, or whether CMO-level judgment for 10-20 hours per week is sufficient. In most B2B companies under $20M in revenue, the answer is that fractional hours are sufficient -- not because the commercial problems are small, but because the highest-leverage CMO work is strategic and diagnostic rather than operational. Diagnosing the ICP, building the attribution model, designing the demand generation architecture, and aligning sales and marketing requires CMO-level judgment, but it does not require 40 hours per week of that judgment to execute.
The fractional CMO model becomes inferior to the full-time model at specific inflection points. The first is when marketing budget exceeds $1.5M annually -- at this level, the oversight complexity and real-time decision-making requirements of managing a large marketing investment justify full-time CMO presence. The second is when the marketing team grows beyond 7-8 people -- beyond this team size, the fractional model struggles to provide the daily management and development attention a full team requires. The third is when the board or investors require a full-time C-suite presence in marketing leadership -- typically at Series B and beyond, where institutional investors have specific expectations about the executive team composition.
The transition from fractional to full-time CMO is itself a strategic exercise that benefits from fractional CMO involvement. The fractional CMO who has built the commercial infrastructure -- the attribution model, the ICP definition, the demand generation playbook, the sales-marketing alignment framework -- is ideally positioned to define the full-time CMO hire requirements, participate in the search and evaluation, and manage the transition to ensure continuity of the commercial strategy. The best fractional CMO engagements are designed from the beginning with a clear view of whether the endpoint is a full-time CMO hire, an internal promotion, or continuation of the fractional model at a different scope.
Mark Gabrielli is a Fractional CMO and COO serving B2B companies in healthcare, SaaS, fintech, and beyond. Results in 30 days.
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