Where do I find a fractional VP of Sales in Cary in 2027?

Direct Answer
Cary, North Carolina, has a growing tech and life sciences scene, but the pool of experienced fractional sales leaders who live and work locally is thin. Most strong fractional CROs and VPs of Sales operate remotely, serving clients across time zones. If you insist on someone who will drive to your office weekly, you may need to widen your search to the Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill triangle or accept a fully remote arrangement. The cost range above reflects the reality that a true VP-level fractional leader charges a premium for their time — you are buying focused, senior judgment without a full-time salary or benefits burden.
Why Cary specifically matters (and doesn't)
Cary is part of the Research Triangle, anchored by major employers like SAS, Cisco, and numerous biotech and pharma firms. The local economy is strong in software, life sciences, and professional services. However, the pool of experienced sales leaders who choose fractional work is still small compared to San Francisco, New York, or even Charlotte. Most fractional VPs of Sales in the Triangle have built their careers at mid-market B2B companies (e.g., Pendo, Bandwidth, Red Hat) and now consult part-time. If your company is in a niche vertical (e.g., clinical trial software, clean energy), expect to search nationally and accept remote work.
Honest reality: You will likely find 2–3 qualified local candidates, interview them, and then decide between one of them and a stronger remote candidate from another region. The remote candidate often wins on experience and cost. Do not let geography override competency — a great fractional VP in Austin who flies in quarterly is better than a mediocre one in Cary who shows up every Tuesday.
Fractional vs. full-time: the real trade-offs
The ```compare block above gives the numbers. Here is the prose version:
- Cost: Full-time VP of Sales in Cary (2027) runs $250k–$400k total annual cost (base, bonus, equity, benefits). Fractional is $48k–$180k/year for 5–15 days/month. That gap is real, but you get fewer hours.
- Speed: A fractional leader can start within 2 weeks and produce in month one. A full-time hire takes 3–6 months to ramp, and if they fail, you lose 6–12 months and severance.
- Commitment: Fractional lets you scale up or down monthly — useful if you are testing a new market, launching a product, or bridging a gap. Full-time is a bet that you need that role permanently.
- Culture: A full-time VP can build deeper relationships with your team. A fractional leader brings external perspective but may not absorb your company's quirks as quickly.
When fractional makes sense: You have $1M–$10M ARR, a founder who is still the main closer, and you need a strategic operator to build process, coach reps, and open doors — not a full-time manager.
When full-time makes sense: You have $10M+ ARR, a sales team of 5+, and you need someone embedded daily to run forecasting, hiring, and compensation.
How to evaluate a fractional VP of Sales
You are buying judgment, not hours. Here is what to check:
- Stage fit: Have they worked at your ARR range? A VP from a $50M company may struggle at $2M.
- Industry adjacency: Do they understand your buyer? A med-tech VP can pivot to SaaS, but not overnight.
- References: Ask for 3 founders from companies at a similar stage. Ask: "What did they actually change? What was their biggest miss?"
- Tools: They should be fluent in Salesforce, HubSpot, Gong, Clari, Outreach, or Salesloft — but do not over-index on tool expertise. Process matters more.
- Availability: How many clients do they have right now? If they are juggling 5+ clients, you will get fragmented attention. Two to three clients is ideal.
Where to post your search
- Pavilion (joinpavilion.com): The largest community of revenue leaders. Post in the #hiring channel with "Fractional VP of Sales – Cary/Remote." Expect 10–20 applications.
- RevOps Co-op: A focused community of operations and revenue leaders. The #fractional-hiring channel is active.
- LinkedIn: Use the Services Marketplace or post a job with "Fractional VP of Sales" and location "Cary, NC." You can also search for "Fractional CRO" and filter by location.
- Local meetups and events: Check Triangle Tech Meetup, RTP Startup Meetup, and Cary Chamber of Commerce events. In-person networking still works for finding local talent.
The remote reality
In 2027, most fractional VPs of Sales work fully remote or hybrid with quarterly travel. If you are in Cary, you can hire someone in Charlotte, Atlanta, or even San Francisco who will visit 1–2 times per quarter. The cost will be the same or slightly higher (travel is usually on you). Do not limit yourself to a 10-mile radius unless you have a specific reason (e.g., you need someone to attend weekly in-person board meetings).
FAQ
What is the typical engagement length for a fractional VP of Sales? Most engagements run 3–12 months, often renewable monthly. Some founders use a fractional VP for a specific project (e.g., building a sales playbook, launching a new product) and then convert to full-time or end the engagement.
Can I hire a fractional VP of Sales for just 10 hours per week? Yes, but expect to pay $4,000–$6,000/month minimum for that level of commitment. At 10 hours/week, they can attend your weekly forecast call, review pipeline, and coach one or two reps — but they will not be building your entire sales process from scratch.
How do I handle equity for a fractional leader? Some fractional VPs accept small equity grants (0.5%–2%, vesting over 2–4 years) in exchange for a lower cash retainer. This is common at seed-stage companies. For later-stage, cash-only is standard. Always vest equity — do not grant it upfront.
What if I hire a fractional VP and they don't deliver? That is why you start with a trial engagement (2–4 weeks). If it is not working, you cancel with 30 days' notice (typical contract term). Fractional hiring carries far less risk than full-time — you are not stuck with a bad hire for 6 months.
Is there a local directory of fractional sales leaders in Cary? Not a reliable one. Most directories are national. Your best bets are Pavilion’s member directory (filter by Raleigh-Durham) and CRO Syndicate’s network. Do not trust a random Google search result — vet every candidate.
How do I know if I need a VP of Sales vs. a CRO? A VP of Sales focuses on the sales team, pipeline, and revenue targets. A CRO owns the entire revenue engine: sales, marketing, customer success, and sometimes partnerships. If you need someone to align marketing and sales, hire a fractional CRO. If you just need someone to run the sales team, hire a fractional VP of Sales.