How do I hire a fractional head of revenue for a medtech company in 2027?

Direct Answer
Medtech companies in 2027 face a specific challenge: the revenue leader must understand long sales cycles, regulatory milestones, and hospital procurement dynamics — not just SaaS metrics. A fractional head of revenue (often called a fractional CRO or VP of Revenue) brings that experience without the full-time commitment. You will likely pay between $8,000 and $20,000 per month, depending on how many days per week they work and whether the company is pre-revenue, post-revenue under $5M ARR, or scaling past that. Equity grants of 0.5%–2.5% are common for earlier-stage engagements. The key is to define whether you need a strategic advisor (2 days/week) or an operating leader (4 days/week) who will manage a team and own a number.
Why Medtech Is Different in 2027
Medtech revenue leadership is not a one-size-fits-all role. The sales motion involves regulatory approvals, reimbursement coding, GPO contracts, and hospital system procurement — each with its own timeline and decision-makers. A fractional head of revenue who built their career in SaaS will struggle here, because SaaS buyers make decisions in weeks, not months. In medtech, the typical buying cycle can span 6 to 18 months, with multiple clinical and administrative stakeholders. You need someone who has lived through FDA 510(k) submissions, understands HIPAA and data privacy requirements, and knows how to navigate value analysis committees in large hospital networks.
Hiring a fractional leader rather than a full-time VP of Sales gives you flexibility to test the role before committing to a permanent hire. Many medtech founders in 2027 are using fractional revenue leaders to validate their go-to-market model before raising a Series A or B. If your company is pre-revenue or under $5M ARR, a fractional CRO can help you build the playbook without the overhead of a full-time executive salary.
Where to Find Candidates
The best fractional revenue leaders for medtech are not on generalist freelance platforms. They are in specialized communities:
- Pavilion (joinpavilion.com) — has a medtech channel where experienced revenue leaders discuss regulatory sales cycles and share referrals.
- RevOps Co-op — a Slack community with a medtech sub-group; good for posting a "fractional CRO wanted" message.
- LinkedIn — search for "fractional CRO medtech" or "fractional VP of Sales medical device" and look for people with actual job titles at medtech companies, not consultants who claim to serve the industry.
When you find candidates, ask for proof of medtech revenue outcomes. A strong candidate will share anonymized examples: "I helped a Class II medical device company grow from $2M to $8M ARR in 18 months by restructuring their clinical trial sales process." If they cannot give specific, verifiable examples, move on.
How to Evaluate a Fractional CRO for Medtech
Your evaluation should focus on three domains:
- Medtech domain knowledge — Do they understand FDA clearance pathways, reimbursement strategy, and hospital procurement? Can they articulate how GPO contracts work and how to get on a hospital system's approved vendor list? If they cannot, they will waste your team's time learning on the job.
- Revenue operations rigor — Medtech companies often have messy data. Your fractional CRO should be comfortable with Salesforce or HubSpot, able to run a pipeline review that separates real opportunities from pipe dreams, and willing to build a forecasting model that accounts for regulatory milestones. They should recommend tools like Clari for forecasting or Gong for call analysis only if they have used them in a medtech context — not just SaaS.
- Cultural and team fit — Medtech teams are often smaller, more mission-driven, and less process-heavy than SaaS teams. Your fractional CRO needs to lead by influence rather than authority, especially if they are only present 2–3 days per week. Ask references: "How did this person build trust with a team that was skeptical of an outsider?"
What to Pay — Honest Ranges
Cash compensation for a fractional head of revenue in medtech in 2027 varies by stage, scope, and location. Here is the honest range:
- Pre-revenue to $1M ARR: $8,000–$12,000/month for 2 days/week. Equity of 1%–2.5% with a 4-year vest and 1-year cliff. Expect the CRO to be more strategic than operational.
- $1M–$5M ARR: $12,000–$16,000/month for 3 days/week. Equity of 0.5%–1.5%. The CRO will likely manage a small team and own the pipeline.
- $5M–$10M ARR: $16,000–$20,000/month for 4 days/week. Equity of 0.5%–1%. The CRO should be an operating leader who can scale the team and process.
These ranges assume the CRO works remotely (most do). If you require on-site visits to a medtech hub like Minneapolis (medtech capital), Boston (biotech), or Southern California (device manufacturing), expect to pay travel costs or a premium of 10%–20% for local candidates. Do not invent a discount for being outside those hubs — strong fractional CROs are scarce everywhere.
The Onboarding Process
A successful fractional engagement starts with a 30-day diagnostic. Your CRO should produce:
- A revenue audit — what data is clean, what is missing, and what pipeline metrics are reliable.
- A pipeline review — every deal over $50K, with stage, probability, and next step.
- A 90-day plan — specific actions to improve forecasting, rep activity, and deal velocity.
After the diagnostic, you should meet weekly for a 30-minute revenue review. The CRO should also hold bi-weekly 1:1s with each sales rep. If they are not doing this by day 45, the engagement is off track.
When to Convert to Full-Time
Fractional is not forever. You should consider converting to a full-time CRO or VP of Sales when:
- ARR exceeds $10M and the revenue function needs a dedicated leader.
- The playbook is proven and you need someone to execute it at scale.
- Team size exceeds 5–7 reps and the fractional leader cannot give enough attention.
If you convert, offer the fractional CRO the first right of refusal for the full-time role. Many fractional leaders prefer to stay fractional, so be prepared to run a separate full-time search.
FAQ
What is the difference between a fractional CRO and a fractional VP of Sales? A fractional CRO owns the entire revenue function: sales, marketing, customer success, and sometimes partnerships. A fractional VP of Sales owns only the sales team. For medtech companies under $10M ARR, a fractional CRO is usually the better choice because you need someone who can align marketing and sales around regulatory milestones.
How do I know if I need a fractional head of revenue at all? If you are the founder and spending more than 50% of your time on sales, or if your pipeline is inconsistent and you cannot forecast, you need revenue leadership. Fractional is a low-risk way to test if you need a full-time hire.
Can a fractional CRO work effectively if they are not on-site? Yes, if they are disciplined about communication and you use tools like Slack, Zoom, and a CRM. Many medtech fractional CROs work remotely and visit 1–2 times per quarter for key meetings. The key is that they are accessible during their contracted days.
What if the fractional CRO is not performing? Your contract should have a 90-day mutual out clause. If after 60 days you see no improvement in pipeline quality, forecast accuracy, or team morale, exercise the clause. Do not let a bad engagement drag on.
How do I handle equity for a fractional leader? Issue equity as a performance-based grant tied to milestones (e.g., $5M ARR, Series A close). Use a standard 4-year vest with a 1-year cliff. Fractional leaders often accept smaller equity grants than full-time hires because they have multiple clients.
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