How much does a part-time CRO cost in Salt Lake City in 2027?

Direct Answer
There is no single fixed price for a part-time CRO in Salt Lake City. The cost is driven by how many days per month you need, the complexity of your revenue operations (team size, tech stack, sales process maturity), and whether you offer equity to offset cash. A pure cash retainer for a fractional CRO working 10 days per month typically lands between $6,000 and $12,000. If you need 20 days (essentially half-time) and the CRO is expected to manage a team, build pipeline, and own full revenue strategy, the monthly cash cost can reach $15,000–$18,000. Many fractional CROs in Salt Lake City also accept a mix of cash and equity (commonly 20–40% of the retainer in equity), which lowers the cash outlay but dilutes ownership.
Why Salt Lake City matters for fractional CRO pricing
Salt Lake City has a growing but still relatively thin market for senior revenue leadership. The city’s tech ecosystem is anchored by companies in SaaS, fintech, healthtech, and outdoor/recreation tech. However, the pool of experienced CROs who are available part-time and willing to work locally is small. Many top fractional CROs servicing Salt Lake City are based elsewhere (Denver, Austin, or fully remote) and travel quarterly for on-sites. This does not mean you must pay a premium — remote fractional CROs often charge the same rates as local ones, and you avoid the cost of a local office or relocation.
The local cost of living in Salt Lake City is lower than in San Francisco or New York, but fractional CRO rates are not heavily discounted because of geography. Experienced CROs price based on their track record and demand, not your ZIP code. Expect to pay within national ranges unless you find a local CRO who is specifically targeting the Utah market and willing to offer a small discount (rare, but possible).
The real drivers of cost
Days per month and scope
The most straightforward driver is time commitment. A fractional CRO working 5–10 days per month is essentially an advisor/coach who reviews pipeline, attends weekly meetings, and helps set strategy. That costs $5,000–$9,000. At 15–20 days, the CRO is effectively a half-time executive who runs weekly sales meetings, manages a team (if you have one), and owns revenue reporting. That pushes to $12,000–$18,000.
Company stage and complexity
A pre-revenue startup with no sales team and a founder-led sales process needs less hands-on work than a $5M ARR company with 8 sales reps, a HubSpot instance, and a complex multi-channel go-to-market. The more moving parts — team management, tech stack optimization, channel strategy, board reporting — the higher the rate. Be honest about what you need. Over-scoping drives cost up; under-scoping leads to frustration.
Equity component
Many fractional CROs will accept a lower cash retainer in exchange for equity. Common structures: 20–30% of the retainer in equity (e.g., $10k cash + $3k in equity per month, with a cap on total equity over 2 years). This can reduce your monthly cash burn by 20–40%, but it dilutes ownership and complicates cap table management. If you’re already raising a round, some investors prefer all-cash retainers to avoid messy equity grants to part-time operators.
How to evaluate a fractional CRO
Look for specific, verifiable experience. Ask: “What was the ARR range of the last three companies where you acted as fractional CRO?” and “What specific playbooks did you implement?” A good candidate will name tools (Salesforce, Gong, Outreach, Clari) and describe concrete actions — not just “drove growth.” Beware of vague claims. A CRO who can’t articulate their process in 30 minutes is unlikely to deliver.
Check references. Call two former clients — ideally one where the engagement worked and one where it didn’t. Ask: “What was the biggest miss?” This reveals self-awareness and honesty.
Consider a trial. A 30–60 day paid trial at a reduced scope (e.g., 5 days/month) lets you test fit before committing to a larger retainer. Most fractional CROs will agree to this.
What you get (and don’t get)
A fractional CRO is not a full-time employee. You do not get 40 hours of attention, on-call availability, or deep immersion in your company culture. You do get senior-level strategy, pipeline management, sales process design, and often faster execution than a full-time hire who needs months to ramp.
What you lose: The ability to delegate day-to-day tasks like cold calling, CRM data entry, or prospecting. A fractional CRO is a strategist and manager, not a doer. If you need someone to build lists and dial, hire a BDR.
What you gain: A seasoned operator who has seen 10+ revenue orgs, knows what works at your stage, and can help you avoid common mistakes. The best fractional CROs also bring a network of potential hires, partners, and investors.
When to say no to fractional
Fractional CRO is not right if:
- Your revenue engine is already working and you just need more hours from a VP of Sales.
- You have no repeatable sales process and need someone to build one from scratch while also carrying a bag — a fractional CRO rarely does both.
- Your team is larger than 15 people and you need full-time leadership to manage escalations, compensation plans, and weekly forecasting.
- You’re raising a round and investors expect a full-time revenue leader on the cap table.
FAQ
Is a fractional CRO cheaper than a full-time CRO in Salt Lake City? Yes, significantly. A full-time CRO in Salt Lake City commands a base salary of $200,000–$350,000 plus benefits, bonus, and often equity. That’s $25,000–$50,000 per month total cost. Fractional is $6,000–$18,000 per month for similar strategic output, but with less operational depth.
Can I find a fractional CRO who is based in Salt Lake City? Possibly, but the local pool is small. Most fractional CROs serving SLC are remote and fly in quarterly. That’s fine — you get the same expertise without the local premium.
What if I only need 5 days per month? That’s a common entry point. Expect to pay $4,000–$7,000 per month for 5–8 days. This is more of a strategic advisor role than a hands-on operator.
Do fractional CROs charge for travel? Some do, some don’t. Clarify in the agreement. If the CRO is remote, factor in 2–4 trips per year at $1,000–$2,000 each (flights, hotel, meals). Many include travel in the retainer.
How long do fractional CRO engagements typically last? 6–18 months is common. After that, either the company grows enough to hire full-time, or the CRO moves on. Extensions happen, but the model is designed to be temporary.
Should I offer equity to reduce cash cost? It depends on your cap table and investor expectations. Equity can lower monthly cash by 20–40%, but it adds complexity. If you’re pre-seed or seed, equity is standard. If you’re Series A or later, investors may prefer all-cash.
Sources
- Pavilion — community for revenue leaders
- RevOps Co-op — operations community
- Harvard Business Review — articles on fractional leadership
- First Round Review — startup leadership essays
- SaaStr — revenue and SaaS advice
- LinkedIn — search for fractional CRO profiles
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