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

Direct Answer
The honest answer: Minnesota is not a dense hub for fractional CROs compared to the Bay Area or New York, so most strong candidates will work remotely with occasional in-person visits. You will likely find them through national fractional-CRO networks (like CRO Syndicate) or by posting in Pavilion's community and filtering for Midwest-based or remote-available leaders. Expect a monthly retainer of $5,000 to $20,000 for a part-time arrangement, with the lower end covering light advisory (5 days/month) and the upper end covering hands-on pipeline management, team coaching, and board-level reporting (15+ days/month). Do not expect a discount for being in Minnesota — fractional CROs price on value and availability, not geography.
Fractional CRO vs. Full-Time CRO
Why Minnesota? The Local Context
Minnesota's economy is anchored by medtech (Medtronic, Boston Scientific spinoffs), agtech (Cargill, CHS, startups), and a growing SaaS scene (especially in HR tech and supply chain). If your company fits these verticals, you have an advantage: a fractional CRO who understands medtech's long sales cycles or agtech's seasonal buying patterns will deliver more value than a generalist. However, the local fractional-CRO pool is thin — most experienced revenue leaders in the Twin Cities take full-time roles at larger companies (Target, Best Buy, 3M) or consult nationally from a home base. You will likely need to hire someone based elsewhere who is willing to fly in quarterly for key meetings.
The Real Cost Drivers
The monthly retainer for a fractional CRO in 2027 depends on three factors:
- Scope of work: A pure advisory role (review forecasts, attend weekly calls) costs $5,000-$10,000/month. A hands-on role (running pipeline reviews, coaching reps, closing deals) costs $12,000-$20,000/month.
- Days per month: Most fractional CROs charge $1,000-$2,000 per day. At 5 days/month, that's $5,000-$10,000. At 15 days/month, it's $15,000-$30,000, though many cap at 15 days to avoid burnout.
- Equity: Some fractional CROs accept a partial equity package (0.5-2%) in exchange for a lower cash retainer. This is common for pre-revenue or very early-stage companies but rare for companies with $2M+ ARR.
No one in Minnesota will offer a "local discount" — fractional CROs are a national market. The best candidates will have multiple offers and will choose based on interesting work, growth potential, and your team's culture, not your zip code.
How to Vet a Fractional CRO
You are buying judgment, pattern recognition, and network, not hours. When interviewing, focus on:
- Past fractional engagements: Ask for two specific examples — one where they turned around a struggling pipeline, one where they scaled a team. Listen for concrete actions, not vague leadership talk.
- Tool fluency: They should be comfortable with Salesforce, HubSpot, Gong, Clari, Outreach, or Salesloft without needing a ramp-up period. Ask them to describe how they'd audit your current tech stack in the first 30 days.
- Availability and responsiveness: Part-time leaders can become bottlenecks if they're juggling 5 clients. Ask for their current client load (2-3 is typical; 4+ is a red flag) and their typical response time (same-day for urgent issues).
- Cultural fit for Minnesota: This is real. Minnesota business culture values directness wrapped in politeness (the "Minnesota Nice" paradox). A CRO from New York or San Francisco who is abrasive or overly transactional will struggle with your team. Look for someone who can be candid without being harsh.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Hiring for title, not output. A former VP of Sales from a large company may not thrive in a $3M ARR startup where they must build processes from scratch. Look for someone who has done fractional work at your stage.
Under-scoping the engagement. Many founders hire a fractional CRO for "strategy" but then expect them to also manage daily sales operations, hire reps, and build a commission plan. Be explicit about what is in scope and what is not. If you need full operational support, budget for 15+ days/month.
Ignoring the remote reality. If you insist on someone physically present in Minneapolis twice a week, you will narrow your candidate pool to near-zero. Be flexible: hire a remote CRO who visits quarterly, and invest in good async communication tools (Slack, Loom, Notion).
How to Start Your Search
- Pavilion (joinpavilion.com) — a large community of revenue leaders. Post in their job board or Slack channels, specifying "remote" and "Minnesota-friendly." You will get applications from across the US.
- LinkedIn — search for "fractional CRO" and filter by location "Minneapolis, MN" or "Remote." Look for profiles that list specific fractional engagements, not just past full-time roles.
- Local networks — reach out to the Minnesota Venture Network, Minnestar, or the Minneapolis-St. Paul Startup Week organizers. They may know of local consultants who are open to fractional work but don't advertise it.
FAQ
How is a fractional CRO different from a sales consultant? A sales consultant typically delivers a report or a project (e.g., "fix the sales process") and leaves. A fractional CRO embeds in your leadership team, attends weekly staff meetings, manages the revenue team, and is accountable for outcomes. They are a leader, not an advisor.
Can I hire a fractional CRO if my company is pre-revenue? Yes, but expect to pay a premium in equity. Most fractional CROs will want 1-2% equity and a lower cash retainer ($3,000-$8,000/month) for pre-revenue companies. They will focus on building a sales process, hiring the first reps, and validating the go-to-market.
What if the fractional CRO doesn't work out? Most engagements have a 30-60 day notice period. Start with a trial to minimize risk. If it fails, you lose 1-2 months of retainer but avoid the severance and cultural damage of firing a full-time executive.
Do I need a fractional CRO if I have a strong VP of Sales? Maybe not. A fractional CRO is most valuable when you lack a senior revenue leader or when your VP of Sales needs a strategic partner. If your VP of Sales is already building a repeatable sales machine, adding a fractional CRO could create confusion. Assess whether the gap is strategy, execution, or both.
How do I measure the ROI of a fractional CRO? Set specific KPIs at the start: pipeline coverage ratio, win rate, average deal size, sales rep ramp time, and forecast accuracy. Track these monthly. If they improve within 90 days, the engagement is working. If not, reassess scope or fit.