How much does a part-time CRO cost in Montana in 2027?

Direct Answer
You are looking at a monthly retainer of roughly $4,000 to $12,000 for a fractional CRO in Montana in 2027. This range reflects a market where remote work is standard, so your cost is driven more by the CRO's experience and the intensity of engagement than by local geography. A founder in Bozeman or Missoula will likely pay similar rates to a founder in Austin or Denver, because strong fractional CROs serve clients nationwide and price based on value, not zip code. For a pre-revenue startup needing 10 hours of strategic guidance per month, expect the lower end; for a growth-stage company requiring 20+ hours of active pipeline management, deal coaching, and board reporting, expect the upper end.
Why Montana matters (and why it mostly doesn't)
Montana's economy leans heavily on healthcare, technology, manufacturing, and outdoor recreation. Bozeman and Missoula have growing tech clusters, but the pool of experienced CROs living in-state is thin. In 2027, most fractional CROs serving Montana companies work remotely from hubs like Denver, Seattle, or Austin, and fly in quarterly for key meetings. This means you are competing in a national talent market, not a local one. The good news: you can hire a top-tier CRO without paying a "Montana premium" because remote work is the norm. The bad news: you cannot expect a local discount just because your cost of living is lower.
What you actually get for $4k–$12k per month
A fractional CRO is not a part-time sales rep. You are buying revenue leadership — strategy, process, coaching, and accountability. At the low end ($4k–$6k), expect 10 hours per week of strategic guidance: pipeline reviews, deal strategy, hiring plans, and board-level metrics. At the mid-range ($7k–$9k), you get 15 hours per week including active deal coaching, CRM hygiene oversight, and weekly 1:1s with your sales team. At the high end ($10k–$12k), you get 20 hours per week with full ownership of revenue operations, territory planning, and direct involvement in enterprise deals. No fractional CRO should be building your entire sales motion for less than $4k/month — that is a red flag for inexperience or overcommitment.
Cash vs. equity: the honest trade-off
Most fractional CROs prefer cash. Equity is speculative, and they already carry risk by working part-time across multiple clients. However, for early-stage startups (pre-revenue or under $1M ARR), some CROs will accept a 10–20% discount on cash in exchange for a small equity grant (typically 0.25%–0.5% vesting over two years). Do not offer equity as a substitute for fair cash unless you have a compelling story and a clear path to Series A. A CRO who takes equity is betting on your exit — make sure they have real conviction, not just a willingness to gamble.
The "hidden" costs of going too cheap
If you find a fractional CRO offering to work for $2,500/month in Montana, ask hard questions. They may be: (1) a junior operator with no CRO experience, (2) overcommitted to 8+ clients, or (3) planning to treat you as a low-priority account. The cost of a bad hire — or a bad fractional engagement — is lost time, confused reps, and stalled revenue. A cheap CRO who cannot close a deal or build a process costs you more in missed revenue than the $4k you saved. Always ask for references from companies at a similar stage and ARR.
How to evaluate a fractional CRO for your Montana company
Step 1: Define your 90-day outcome. Do you need a repeatable sales process? A closed pipeline of enterprise deals? A hiring plan for your first VP of Sales? Write it down before you interview.
Step 2: Ask for a "diagnostic" in the interview. A strong fractional CRO should be able to review your current pipeline, CRM data, and team structure in a 30-minute call and point out 3–5 specific issues. If they give generic advice ("you need to prospect more"), keep looking.
Step 3: Check references for availability. Ask each reference: "How many hours did they actually deliver per week? Did they miss meetings? Were they responsive during your time zone?" Remote CROs who serve multiple clients can overcommit. Verify they have capacity for your needs.
Step 4: Negotiate a 30-day out clause. Most fractional CROs will agree to a 30-day termination notice. This protects you if the fit is wrong. Do not sign a 6-month lock-in unless you have worked with them before.
Why you might need a fractional CRO instead of a full-time VP of Sales
If your company is under $3M ARR, a full-time VP of Sales (or CRO) is often premature. The cost ($20k–$35k/month fully loaded) eats into runway, and the role may not have enough scope to keep a full-time executive engaged. A fractional CRO gives you senior revenue leadership at a fraction of the cost, with the flexibility to scale up or down as you grow. Once you cross $5M ARR and have a team of 5+ reps, the math shifts — a full-time leader becomes more cost-effective because they can focus 100% on execution.
FAQ
Can I find a fractional CRO based in Montana? Yes, but the pool is small. Most fractional CROs serving Montana companies work remotely from other states. If you need a local CRO for in-person visits, expect to pay a premium for travel or a higher hourly rate.
What if I only need 5 hours per week? Some fractional CROs offer "advisory" engagements at $2,500–$4,000/month for 5 hours per week. This is best for companies that already have a VP of Sales and just need strategic guidance. For most startups, 10 hours per week is the minimum to drive real change.
Do fractional CROs charge for onboarding? Some charge a one-time onboarding fee of $1,000–$3,000 to cover CRM audit, pipeline analysis, and strategy documentation. Others include this in the first month's retainer. Ask upfront.
How do I pay a fractional CRO in Montana? Standard is monthly retainer via invoice (Net 30). Some accept payment through platforms like Gusto or Deel. Avoid hourly billing — it discourages the CRO from thinking strategically about your business.
What tools should a fractional CRO use? Expect proficiency in Salesforce or HubSpot (CRM), Gong (call recording/coaching), Clari (revenue forecasting), and Outreach or Salesloft (sales engagement). They do not need to be administrators, but they must be able to pull reports and coach from the data.
Can I share a fractional CRO with another company? Yes, that is the model. A fractional CRO typically works with 3–5 clients simultaneously. Ensure they have a clear time-blocking system and are not overcommitted. Ask: "How many clients do you currently serve? What is your weekly hours split?"