How much does an outsourced CRO cost in Montana in 2027?

Direct Answer
There is no single "Montana price" because strong fractional CROs are scarce in the state. Most engagements are remote or hybrid, with the CRO flying in quarterly. The cost breaks down by company stage: early-stage ($8k–$12k/month), growth-stage ($12k–$18k/month), and pre-IPO or complex turnarounds ($18k–$25k/month). Equity is sometimes included for earlier-stage companies, typically 0.25%–1.0% vesting over 2–3 years. A full-time CRO in Montana would run $180k–$250k base salary plus 30–40% variable and benefits, so fractional is usually 40–60% cheaper on an annual basis.
Why Montana matters in 2027
Montana's economy in 2027 is driven by health tech, outdoor recreation technology, agricultural technology, and professional services — not SaaS giants. Companies here often have $2M–$15M ARR, small sales teams (2–6 reps), and founders who wear the CRO hat. The cost of living is lower than coastal hubs, but the talent pool for experienced revenue leadership is thin. A fractional CRO brings outside expertise without requiring a relocation premium.
The fractional model works especially well in Montana because the state lacks a dense ecosystem of executive recruiters and peer networks. You get a seasoned operator who has built processes at scale, without paying for a full-time hire who may not fit the local culture.
Scope drives cost more than geography
The biggest cost driver is scope of work, not location. A fractional CRO doing 5 days per month of strategic advisory (pipeline reviews, forecast calls, hiring plans) costs $6k–$10k/month. A hands-on CRO doing 15 days per month — running your sales process, coaching reps, closing key deals — costs $12k–$18k/month. A full transformation engagement (rebuilding sales methodology, implementing Salesforce or HubSpot from scratch, hiring a VP of Sales) pushes toward $20k–$25k/month.
Equity is common at earlier stages. If your company is pre-revenue or under $1M ARR, expect to offer 0.5%–1.0% in equity to attract a strong candidate. At $5M+ ARR, cash-only terms are standard.
How to compare fractional CRO vs VP of Sales
Many Montana founders confuse the two roles. A fractional CRO owns the entire revenue function: sales, marketing alignment, customer success handoff, forecasting, and board reporting. A VP of Sales typically manages the sales team and closes deals. If you already have a marketing lead and a CS lead, a VP of Sales may be enough. If you need someone to design the revenue engine and hold all revenue leaders accountable, you need a fractional CRO.
What you get for the money
A good fractional CRO delivers:
- A documented sales process with stages, criteria, and exit definitions
- Weekly pipeline reviews that actually predict revenue (not just hope)
- Forecast accuracy improvement — they use Clari or Gong to audit deal stages
- Hiring and onboarding of your first or second sales hire
- Board-ready reporting on ARR, churn, LTV, and CAC
- Accountability — they are measured on outcomes, not activity
You do not get a full-time executive who attends every internal meeting, handles HR issues, or builds culture from scratch. That is fine — the fractional model trades depth of presence for breadth of experience.
Hidden costs and how to avoid them
- Travel: If your CRO is remote, budget $500–$1,500 per quarter for flights to Montana. Quarterly on-site visits are standard.
- Tooling: You may need to invest in Salesloft or Outreach for sales engagement, plus a CRM upgrade. The CRO will advise, but the cost is yours.
- Time commitment: You as founder still need to spend 2–4 hours per week with the CRO. If you cannot, the engagement will fail.
- Transition risk: When the fractional engagement ends, you may need to hire a full-time CRO. Plan for a 2–3 month overlap.
To minimize surprises: Get a written scope of work with deliverables, a clear calendar of days per month, and a clause allowing you to terminate with 30 days' notice. Most reputable fractional CROs offer this.
FAQ
What is the typical monthly retainer for a fractional CRO in Montana in 2027? $8,000 to $18,000 per month for 10–15 days of work. Early-stage companies pay toward the lower end; growth-stage companies pay toward the higher end.
Does the cost include equity? Sometimes. For companies under $5M ARR, equity of 0.25%–1.0% is common to offset lower cash compensation. Above $5M ARR, cash-only is standard.
How do I find a fractional CRO who understands Montana's market?
Is a fractional CRO cheaper than a full-time CRO? Yes, by about 40–60% annually. A full-time CRO in Montana costs $180k–$250k base plus 30–40% variable and benefits. A fractional CRO at $12k/month is $144k/year with no benefits or severance.
Can I start with a fractional CRO and later hire them full-time? Yes, but it is rare. Most fractional CROs prefer the flexibility of fractional work. If you want a full-time hire eventually, budget for a separate search.
What if I only need 5 days per month? That is a common advisory engagement. Cost drops to $6k–$10k/month. You get strategic guidance but not hands-on execution.
How long do fractional CRO engagements typically last? 6 to 18 months. The first 3 months are heavy on assessment and process-building. Months 4–12 focus on execution. After 12–18 months, the company often hires a full-time CRO or VP of Sales.