Where do I find a part-time Chief Revenue Officer in Florida in 2027?

Direct Answer
Florida’s startup and scale-up ecosystem in 2027 is concentrated in Miami (fintech, real estate tech, logistics), Tampa (cybersecurity, health tech), and Orlando (simulation, SaaS). However, the supply of experienced fractional CROs physically based in Florida is thin—most top-tier fractional leaders work remote or hybrid from anywhere in the U.S. Your search should prioritize competency and fit over geography. A part-time CRO in Florida costs the same as one in California or New York: $5k–$15k/month for a typical 4–8 day/month retainer, with higher rates for companies at $5M+ ARR or those requiring deep industry specialization. The key is finding someone who understands your vertical and can commit to regular in-person or virtual touchpoints—not necessarily someone who lives in your zip code.
Why fractional CROs are common in Florida’s ecosystem
Florida’s startup scene in 2027 is still maturing. Miami has become a legitimate hub for fintech and real estate tech, but the talent pool for senior revenue leadership remains shallow compared to traditional tech centers. Many founders in Florida are first-time CEOs who have raised seed or Series A rounds and need someone to build a repeatable sales process—but they can’t justify a $300k+ full-time CRO compensation package. Fractional CROs fill this gap. They bring a playbook, a network of buyer introductions, and the discipline to run a forecast without the overhead of a full-time hire.
The fractional model works especially well for Florida-based companies because many of these businesses sell to industries (insurance, logistics, property management) that have long, relationship-driven sales cycles. A part-time CRO can focus on the top of the funnel—pipeline generation, deal strategy, and hiring—while the founder continues to operate day-to-day. This is not a “set it and forget it” arrangement; you need to be ready to execute on the CRO’s recommendations.
Where to actually search (beyond LinkedIn)
LinkedIn is noisy. To find a vetted fractional CRO in Florida, use these channels in order of effectiveness:
- Pavilion (joinpavilion.com) – Join the Miami or Tampa chapter. Attend virtual and in-person events. Ask for introductions to their “Revenue” or “CRO” circles. Pavilion members are typically more senior and willing to do fractional work.
- RevOps Co-op (revopscoop.org) – A Slack community of revenue operations professionals. Post your search in the #fractional-hiring channel. You’ll get direct referrals from people who have worked with these CROs.
- Your investors – If you have VC backing, ask your lead investor for intros. Many VCs maintain a bench of fractional executives they’ve vetted.
- Local founder groups – Miami Tech Works, Tampa Bay Wave, Orlando Tech Association. These are less efficient but can yield a local candidate if geography is non-negotiable.
Beware of “fractional CROs” who are actually unemployed full-time CROs looking for a bridge job. Ask directly: “How many clients do you currently serve?” A true fractional CRO has 2–4 clients and can articulate how they manage their time across them.
What to expect in the first 90 days
A good fractional CRO will not “take over” your revenue function. Instead, they will:
- Week 1–2: Audit your current pipeline, CRM hygiene (Salesforce or HubSpot), sales process, and team. They will identify the biggest gaps—usually pipeline coverage, deal qualification criteria, or forecasting accuracy.
- Week 3–4: Present a 90-day plan with specific milestones: “We will increase pipeline by X qualified opportunities,” “We will implement a MEDDIC scoring system,” “We will hire one SDR.”
- Month 2–3: Execute. This means running weekly forecast calls, coaching your AEs, building a territory plan, and holding you accountable to revenue targets. They are not a doer—they are a coach and architect.
- Month 3: Review progress. If the CRO has delivered measurable improvements (pipeline growth, shorter sales cycles, better win rates), you extend. If not, you part ways.
Do not expect a fractional CRO to close deals for you. Their value is in building the system that lets your team close more. If you need someone to personally carry a bag, hire a full-time VP of Sales or a senior AE.
Cash vs. equity: the honest trade-off
Fractional CROs typically charge cash only. However, for early-stage Florida companies (pre-seed to $2M ARR), some will accept a cash + equity mix to reduce monthly burn. Typical terms:
- $3k–$8k/month cash + 0.5%–2% equity (vested over 2–3 years with a 1-year cliff)
- Equity is usually common stock or incentive stock options (ISOs), not preferred
- The CRO will expect a board observer seat or at least monthly board meeting attendance
Be cautious with equity. A fractional CRO who takes equity is making a long-term bet on your company. That can align incentives, but it also means they may push for aggressive growth tactics that increase risk. Make sure your cap table can accommodate this, and get legal advice before issuing equity to a part-time executive.
How to evaluate a fractional CRO’s fit for Florida-based companies
Florida’s key industries—fintech, logistics, real estate tech, health tech, and cybersecurity—each have distinct sales motions. A fractional CRO who succeeded in SaaS may struggle with a long-cycle enterprise deal in logistics. When interviewing, ask:
- “What’s the longest sales cycle you’ve managed, and how did you shorten it?”
- “Have you sold into the insurance or property management vertical? What buyer personas did you engage?”
- “How do you handle a founder who is still the primary closer?”
The best fractional CROs will push back on your assumptions. If you say “we need more leads,” a good CRO will ask “are you converting the leads you have?” If you say “our product is too complex,” they’ll ask “who is your ideal customer profile?” This intellectual honesty is worth more than a local address.
FAQ
What is the typical monthly cost for a fractional CRO in Florida? $5,000–$15,000/month for 4–8 days of engagement. The range depends on your stage (pre-revenue vs. $5M+ ARR), the CRO’s experience (former CRO at a $50M company vs. a $10M company), and whether you need industry specialization. Rates are the same as in other U.S. markets—Florida does not command a discount.
How many days per week does a part-time CRO work? Typically 1–2 days per week (4–8 days per month). Some CROs offer “intensive sprints” (e.g., 2 full weeks per quarter) for companies with specific launch or fundraising timelines.
Can a fractional CRO work remotely for a Florida company? Yes. Most fractional CROs work remotely with periodic in-person visits (quarterly or bi-monthly). If you require weekly in-person meetings, you will narrow your candidate pool significantly. Be honest about your expectations.
What’s the difference between a fractional CRO and a sales consultant? A sales consultant gives advice and leaves. A fractional CRO stays embedded in your business, attends weekly forecast calls, coaches your team, and is accountable for revenue outcomes. They are a temporary executive, not a vendor.
How do I know if I need a fractional CRO versus a full-time VP of Sales? If you are under $10M ARR and have no dedicated revenue leader, start with a fractional CRO. If you have $10M+ ARR, a team of 8+ reps, and need someone to manage day-to-day operations, hire full-time. The fractional CRO can also help you hire and train your future full-time VP of Sales.
What if the fractional CRO doesn’t deliver? Your contract should have a 30-day termination clause. Most fractional CROs will give you a 90-day commitment with a 30-day out. If they aren’t moving the needle on pipeline, process, or team capability, end the engagement. This is low-risk compared to a full-time hire.
Do I need to provide Salesforce or HubSpot access? Yes. The CRO needs full access to your CRM, Gong (if you use it), and any revenue intelligence tools. Without data, they can’t audit or improve.