How do I hire a part-time Chief Revenue Officer in Salt Lake City in 2027?

Direct Answer
A part-time Chief Revenue Officer (fractional CRO) is a senior revenue executive who works on a retainer basis—typically 2–8 days per month—to build your go-to-market strategy, sales process, and revenue operations. In Salt Lake City, the market is dominated by SaaS, fintech, and health-tech companies, but the local pool of experienced fractional CROs is small; many top candidates are based elsewhere but willing to travel quarterly. Your cost will depend on your company’s stage (pre-revenue vs. $1M–$10M ARR), the days per month required, and whether you include equity. Expect to pay $3,500–$10,000/month for a seasoned operator, with equity grants of 0.5%–2% for higher-commitment roles.
Why Salt Lake City in 2027?
Salt Lake City’s tech ecosystem has matured significantly over the past decade. The city is a hub for SaaS (Domo, Qualtrics, Pluralsight), fintech, and health-tech, with a growing pool of experienced revenue leaders who have scaled companies from zero to exit. However, the supply of fractional CROs who are both local and available is limited. Many of the best operators in Utah work as full-time executives or have already been snapped up by portfolio companies of local venture firms.
In 2027, remote work remains normalized, so you can hire a fractional CRO based in Denver, Austin, or even New York who will fly to Salt Lake City quarterly. That said, there is a real advantage to hiring someone who understands the local talent market—recruiting sales reps in Utah comes with specific compensation norms and a smaller candidate pool than the Bay Area. A fractional CRO who has hired in Salt Lake City before will save you weeks of trial and error.
When a Fractional CRO Makes Sense
Fractional revenue leadership is not a one-size-fits-all solution. It works best when you have one or more of these conditions:
- You are pre-revenue or under $2M ARR and cannot afford a $200K+ full-time CRO salary.
- You have a sales team of 2–8 reps but no repeatable process, no CRM discipline, and no pipeline visibility.
- You are between full-time CROs and need a bridge executive to keep deals moving while you search.
- You need a specific skill set (e.g., enterprise sales, channel partnerships, or PLG-to-sales transition) for a 6–12 month project.
- You want an outside perspective to audit your revenue operations without internal politics.
If your company has $10M+ ARR, a sales team of 10+ reps, and a complex multi-channel go-to-market, a full-time CRO is almost always the better choice. Fractional leadership at that scale becomes a coordination bottleneck—the part-time executive simply cannot attend enough customer meetings, pipeline reviews, and leadership syncs to drive the business.
How to Evaluate Candidates
When you interview fractional CROs, focus on stage-specific experience, not just revenue numbers. A candidate who scaled a company from $10M to $50M may be useless to you at $1M ARR—they are used to having a VP of Sales, a RevOps team, and a marketing engine that you don’t have.
Ask these questions:
- “What was the ARR range of your last three engagements?” — You want someone who has worked at your exact stage.
- “Walk me through how you built a sales process from scratch at a company with no CRM.” — Look for concrete steps, not theory.
- “What tools did you use, and why?” — They should name Salesforce, HubSpot, Gong, Clari, Outreach, or Salesloft, and explain their choices. Avoid candidates who say “it depends” without giving a framework.
- “How do you handle a founder who still wants to close every deal?” — The answer should include a transition plan, not just “I’ll coach them.”
- “What is your availability for weekly 1:1s and monthly board meetings?” — A fractional CRO who cannot commit to a recurring schedule will fail.
The Onboarding Process
A fractional CRO’s first 30 days should be structured and intensive. Do not let them “figure it out” on their own. Give them:
- Full access to your CRM (Salesforce or HubSpot), Gong, and any revenue tools.
- A list of your top 10 open deals and the last 10 lost deals.
- One hour with each sales rep, the founder, and the head of product.
- A copy of your pricing, contract terms, and sales collateral.
Set a weekly 1:1 for the first month, then biweekly after that. Define success metrics in week one—for example, “By day 30, we will have a documented sales process, a cleaned CRM, and a pipeline review cadence.” If the fractional CRO cannot deliver these basics, end the engagement early.
Cost Breakdown and Negotiation
The cost of a fractional CRO in Salt Lake City varies widely based on:
- Days per month: 2 days/month runs $3,500–$5,000; 8 days/month runs $8,000–$10,000.
- Company stage: Pre-revenue or under $500K ARR may get lower rates ($2,500–$4,000) from less experienced operators.
- Equity: Some fractional CROs will accept a lower cash rate in exchange for 0.5%–2% equity. This is common but risky—you are giving up ownership for part-time help. Only offer equity if the CRO is critical to your fundraising or exit strategy.
- Travel: If the CRO is not local, budget $500–$1,000 per quarterly trip to Salt Lake City.
Never pay a flat monthly fee for unlimited access. Fractional CROs who promise “unlimited support” usually over-deliver in the first month and under-deliver after that. Stick to a fixed days-per-month agreement with an option to add days at a pre-negotiated rate.
Common Mistakes
- Hiring a fractional CRO to fix a product problem. If your churn is high because the product doesn’t work, no amount of sales process will save you. A fractional CRO can diagnose this, but they cannot fix it.
- Expecting them to close deals. A part-time CRO should coach your reps, build process, and manage pipeline—not carry a personal quota. If you need a closer, hire a full-time sales rep or VP of Sales.
- Under-investing in RevOps. A fractional CRO can design a revenue operations stack, but they cannot maintain it on 4 days/month. You will need a part-time RevOps person or a tool like Clari to keep the engine running.
- Not defining an end date. Fractional engagements should have a clear duration (3–6 months) with a renewal option. Open-ended arrangements lead to scope creep and reduced accountability.
FAQ
What is the typical engagement length for a fractional CRO? Most engagements run 3–6 months, with a monthly renewal after that. Some companies keep a fractional CRO for 12–18 months if they are between full-time hires or in a long turnaround. Shorter than 3 months is rarely effective—the CRO needs time to diagnose, implement, and see results.
Do I need to give equity to a fractional CRO? Not always. Many fractional CROs work for cash only. Equity is common when the cash rate is lower (e.g., $3,000–$5,000/month) or when the CRO is expected to help raise funding. If you give equity, vest it over 2–3 years with a 3-month cliff.
How do I know if a fractional CRO is actually working? Set clear KPIs in week one: pipeline coverage ratio, sales cycle length, win rate, CRM data completeness, and rep satisfaction. Review these monthly. If you cannot see improvement in 60 days, the engagement is failing.
Can a fractional CRO replace my VP of Sales? No. A fractional CRO is a strategic advisor and coach, not a day-to-day manager. If you have a VP of Sales, the fractional CRO should work with them, not around them. If you have no VP of Sales, the fractional CRO can act as interim VP of Sales, but only if they commit 8+ days/month.
What if I hire a fractional CRO and they don’t deliver? Most agreements have a 30-day termination clause. Exercise it early if you see no progress. The cost of a bad fractional CRO is not just the fee—it’s the lost time and momentum.
How do I find fractional CROs in Salt Lake City specifically? Post in Pavilion’s Utah chapter, the RevOps Co-op Slack, and on LinkedIn with the hashtag #FractionalCRO. Ask your local VC partners for referrals. Expect to interview candidates from outside Utah—the best fit may be remote with quarterly visits.
Sources
- Pavilion — Community for revenue leaders with local chapters and job boards.
- RevOps Co-op — Community for revenue operations professionals; good for finding fractional CROs with RevOps skills.
- Harvard Business Review — General articles on fractional leadership and executive hiring.
- First Round Review — Practical advice on early-stage revenue leadership and hiring.
- SaaStr — SaaS-focused content on scaling sales teams and fractional roles.
- LinkedIn — Search for “fractional CRO” + “Salt Lake City” or “remote” to find candidates.