How do I hire a part-time CRO for a proptech company in 2027?

Direct Answer
You hire a part-time (fractional) CRO by first clarifying whether you need a strategic advisor who builds process or a hands-on closer who carries a bag. Proptech companies in 2027 face unique headwinds—longer enterprise sales cycles tied to real estate asset lifecycles, fragmented buyer personas (property managers, developers, tenants), and a market where trust in tech is lower after the 2023–2025 correction. A strong fractional CRO brings a playbook specific to these dynamics, not generic SaaS tactics. Expect to pay $3,000–$12,000/month for 10–20 hours/week, with equity (0.5–2%) common for earlier-stage companies.
Why Proptech Is Different in 2027
Proptech is not just another vertical SaaS market. The buyers are real estate operators, property managers, and developers who are skeptical of technology promises after a decade of over-hyped platforms. A fractional CRO who has sold into multifamily property management or commercial real estate understands that the sales cycle is tied to lease cycles, capital expenditure budgets, and regulatory timelines. They know that a demo is rarely enough—you often need a pilot on an actual building before a deal closes.
In 2027, proptech companies are also facing consolidation pressure. Large incumbents like Yardi, RealPage, and MRI Software have expanded their platforms, and startups need a revenue leader who can navigate competitive displacement without resorting to price wars. A fractional CRO who has done that before is worth far more than someone who only knows generic SaaS playbooks.
What to Look for in a Fractional CRO
Proptech or adjacent experience is non-negotiable. Look for someone who has sold into real estate tech, construction tech, or property management software. They should be able to name the key buyer personas—chief investment officer, head of asset management, director of property operations—and explain how each one’s priorities differ.
They should also be systems builders. A fractional CRO’s primary value is not in closing deals themselves (though they may do that in early stages) but in building the revenue engine: CRM hygiene (Salesforce or HubSpot), pipeline management (Clari), sales cadences (Outreach or Salesloft), and a hiring and onboarding plan for future full-time reps. If they can’t articulate how they’d set up a weekly forecasting rhythm within two weeks, move on.
Honesty about scope is critical. A part-time CRO cannot do everything. They should tell you upfront what they won’t do—cold calling 50 prospects a day, building a website, writing marketing copy. If they promise to be your entire revenue team, that’s a red flag.
How to Structure the Engagement
Most successful fractional CRO engagements start with a 90-day sprint. The first 30 days are about listening and diagnosing: reviewing your current pipeline, talking to your top 10 prospects (won and lost), and auditing your CRM. Days 31–60 are about building: creating a sales playbook, setting up a lead scoring model, and implementing a forecasting process. Days 61–90 are about execution: coaching your existing sales team (if any), closing a few key deals, and handing off a repeatable process.
The contract should include clear deliverables—not just hours. Examples: a documented sales process, a weekly forecast report, a list of 10 qualified opportunities, and a hiring plan for the next full-time hire. Payment is typically monthly, with a 30-day out clause for both parties.
The Fractional CRO vs. Full-Time VP of Sales Decision
The table above shows the key trade-offs. The biggest hidden cost of a full-time VP of Sales is onboarding time—it takes 3–6 months for a new full-time hire to understand your product, your market, and your customers. A fractional CRO, who likely has done this multiple times, can be productive in 2–4 weeks. They also bring network effects: they can introduce you to proptech-specific channel partners, integrators, and potential customers from their existing relationships.
Where to Find Fractional CROs with Proptech Experience
The best fractional CROs for proptech are not on generic job boards. They are in specialized communities:
- Pavilion (joinpavilion.com) — the largest community of revenue leaders; search for members with real estate or proptech experience
- RevOps Co-op — strong for operations-minded CROs who can build systems
- LinkedIn — search for "fractional CRO proptech" or "interim VP Sales real estate tech"; look for people who have held full-time CRO or VP roles at proptech companies
- Proptech-specific events (e.g., CREtech, MIPIM, NAR Tech) — fractional CROs often speak at these; attend or check speaker lists
Do not rely on generalist fractional CRO marketplaces that match you with anyone. Proptech is niche enough that you need someone who understands the difference between selling to a multifamily REIT and a single-asset owner. The wrong CRO will waste months learning the basics.
How to Evaluate Candidates
During interviews, ask these specific questions:
- "Walk me through a proptech sales cycle from first call to closed-won. What were the key milestones?" — Listen for concrete steps, not generic "discovery, demo, proposal."
- "How do you handle a buyer who says 'we already use Yardi and it's fine'?" — They should have a specific displacement playbook.
- "What metrics do you track in the first 30 days of a fractional engagement?" — Good answers: pipeline coverage ratio, win rate by deal size, time to close, CRM data completeness.
- "Have you ever fired a client? Why?" — Honest fractional CROs know when the founder isn’t ready for revenue leadership; a willingness to walk away is a good sign.
FAQ
How do I know if I need a fractional CRO vs. a sales consultant? A sales consultant gives you a report and leaves. A fractional CRO stays, builds the system, and helps execute. If you need someone to run the weekly pipeline review and coach your reps, you need a fractional CRO. If you just need a one-time sales playbook, hire a consultant.
Can a fractional CRO work effectively if my company is fully remote? Yes. Most fractional CROs are used to remote work. The key is a weekly synchronous meeting (2–3 hours) and a shared async tool like Slack or Gong. They should be in your CRM daily.
What if I can only afford 5 hours per week? That’s not enough for a fractional CRO to be effective. At 5 hours, you’re paying for advice, not execution. Save up or consider a part-time sales coach instead.
How long should I keep a fractional CRO? Typical engagements last 6–18 months. After that, you either hire a full-time VP of Sales or the fractional CRO transitions to an advisory role. Some companies keep a fractional CRO indefinitely if they stay below $5M ARR.
Will a fractional CRO actually close deals? It depends on the scope you set. Some fractional CROs are player-coaches who close the first 5–10 deals. Others are pure builders who never touch a deal. Be explicit in the contract.
How do I handle equity for a fractional CRO? For pre-revenue to $1M ARR, 1–2% equity with a 4-year vest and 1-year cliff is standard. For $1M–$5M ARR, 0.5–1% is typical. Equity should be tied to milestones (e.g., reaching $2M ARR within 18 months).
Sources
- Pavilion — community for revenue leaders
- RevOps Co-op — operations and revenue operations community
- Harvard Business Review — articles on fractional leadership
- First Round Review — startup sales and leadership advice
- SaaStr — SaaS sales and go-to-market insights
- LinkedIn — search for fractional CROs with proptech experience