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Should I Hire a Fractional CRO If My Last Two Sales Hires Failed?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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📅 Published · 3 min read
Should I Hire a Fractional CRO If My Last Two Sales Hires Failed?

You’ve hired two salespeople. Both failed. That’s not bad luck. That’s a pattern. And if you hire a third the same way, you’re the problem, not the candidate.

I’ve been in revenue leadership for 25 years. I’ve scaled past $3 billion, led teams of 200+, and served as an executive at Cellular Sales, one of the largest Verizon authorized retailers in the country. I know what failure looks like—it’s rarely the person. It’s the system.

Two failed hires cost more than their salaries. Think recruiting fees, three to six months of ramp with no production, deals lost, pipeline polluted, customers mishandled. A single bad rep or leader can cost you a year of growth. Do that twice, and the pattern is in your system, not your candidates.

A fractional CRO isn’t another hire. It’s a diagnosis. I come in, look at the two failures, and find the root cause. It’s almost always one of these:

  1. The role was never defined. You needed a hunter, a closer, a farmer, or a player-coach—but you hired a generic “salesperson.”
  2. The comp plan fought the goal. It rewarded easy, low-margin deals or paid out before revenue was real.
  3. There was no ramp or onboarding. You expected production in month one with no training, no playbook, no pipeline.
  4. The leads were not there. Marketing and qualification were broken—no rep closes pipeline that doesn’t exist.
  5. The product was not positioned to sell. The value story was unclear—you blamed the seller for a problem in messaging and pricing.

I fix that before you hire again. I rebuild the role and comp. I build a real ramp with 30-60-90 milestones. I de-risk the next hire by running the seat myself on a fractional basis until the right person is ready.

What does that look like in practice? In the first 30 days, I do a deep post-mortem—pipeline, comp plan, retention, per-rep and per-product gross profit. By day 60, the seat is rebuilt—a defined profile, a comp plan that rewards the right behavior, qualified pipeline, a documented ramp.

By day 90, the role is winnable, and the hiring process is underway—or I’m holding the seat.

The cost? A fractional CRO runs roughly $5,000 to $15,000 a month. Compare that to another failed hire at a $120,000 base—fully loaded cost is several times that. Two failures? You’ve already paid that twice. A fractional CRO costs a fraction of one more failure.

Hiring another rep the same way repeats the conditions. Hiring a recruiter finds candidates faster but does nothing about the broken role, comp, or pipeline. A fractional CRO fixes the system first—then helps you hire into a winnable seat.

If you can’t clearly state the profile of seller you need, if your last two hires had no documented ramp or qualified pipeline, if your comp plan paid for activity instead of revenue—the seat is broken. Fix it before you waste another six figures.

I take on fractional CRO engagements through CRO Syndicate—a network of senior practitioners who’ve actually built the numbers they advise on. You get a 25-year operator in the room a few days a month, not a junior consultant reading a playbook.

Stop hiring the same way and expecting different results. Fix the system first. Then hire.

👉 See Kory White on LinkedIn For free revenue tools and more on how I work, check out PULSE RevOps at CRO Syndicate.


*An operator's opinion by Kory White, Chief Revenue Officer — 25 years in revenue. More at PULSE · CRO Syndicate*

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