Should I Hire a Fractional CRO If My VP of Sales Just Quit?
I’ve seen this movie before. Your VP of Sales just quit, and your gut says “hire fast, stop the bleeding.” That gut is lying to you.
Here’s what actually happens: a good full-time VP of Sales or CRO search takes four to six months. In that gap, reps drift, forecasts slip, deals stall without an owner, and your best people start taking recruiter calls. The damage compounds quietly.
I’ve been the steady hand walking into that mess for 25 years. I’ve scaled revenue past $3 billion, led teams of more than 200 people, and served as an executive at Cellular Sales (one of the largest Verizon authorized retailers in the country). I’m the operator behind PULSE RevOps and the free revenue tools on this site, and I take on fractional CRO engagements through CRO Syndicate — a network of senior revenue practitioners who’ve actually built the numbers they advise on.
What breaks when the VP leaves:
- The forecast goes dark. The VP was reconciling rep optimism into a number the board could trust. Without them, deal dates slip, pipeline inflates, and you lose visibility right when you need it most.
- Reps lose their coach and their cover. Deals that needed a manager’s push stall, ramping reps drift, and your top performers start wondering who’s steering the ship — which is precisely when recruiters reach them.
- Accountability evaporates. The weekly cadence, pipeline reviews, one-on-ones — the rhythm that keeps a team honest tends to lapse the moment its owner is gone.
- You feel pressure to hire fast. The discomfort pushes founders toward the first plausible candidate. A rushed VP hire that fails costs you another six months and another team shock.
What a fractional CRO does during the gap — it’s not just babysitting:
- Steadies the team first. Runs the weekly cadence, gives reps a senior leader to escalate to, keeps deals moving, stops your best people from looking for exits.
- Diagnoses why the seat opened. Reads the real numbers — pipeline, win rates, ramp, comp, retention — and forms an honest view: did the last VP fail, were they set up to fail, or was it the wrong profile? That diagnosis shapes the right next hire.
- Tightens the system. Fixes what was loose: a forecast you can trust, a comp plan that rewards the full book, a clear accountability rhythm — improvements that outlast the engagement.
- Runs or guides the search. Writes the scorecard for the permanent leader, sits in on finals, tells you the truth about fit. Because I’ve done the job and know what good looks like.
- Hands off cleanly. When your permanent VP or CRO starts, the fractional CRO transitions a running, documented system — not a smoking crater. The new leader inherits momentum.
Your three paths — and they’re not equal:
- Rushing a full-time backfill is the most common and most expensive mistake. Under pressure, you over-index on availability, hire a profile that may not fit, and risk repeating the cycle. Each failed VP hire costs well into six figures in salary, ramp, and lost momentum.
- A recruiter alone fills the seat eventually but does nothing for the months in between, and they’re not in your business diagnosing why the last leader left.
- A fractional CRO covers the gap immediately, keeps revenue moving, improves the system, and gives you a practitioner’s read on the right permanent hire — all for a fixed monthly retainer with no severance or equity risk. For most companies between $1M and $20M in revenue, it’s the calmest and cheapest way through.
What the first 90 days look like:
- First 30 days: Stabilize — take over the cadence, get a true read on the forecast, reassure the team, start diagnosing why the seat opened.
- Day 60: System tightened — a forecast you trust, accountability restored, any urgent comp or pipeline issues addressed, search scorecard defined.
- Day 90: You’re either interviewing strong, well-qualified candidates or onboarding one, with the fractional CRO bridging until they’re productive. The handoff transfers a healthy, documented revenue operation, not chaos.
Cost versus the risk of a bad hire: A fractional CRO runs roughly $5,000 to $15,000 a month on a retainer — a fraction of the $25,000-plus a month a full-time CRO costs all-in. A failed VP of Sales hire? Base often runs $180,000 to $250,000, plus recruiting fee, months of lost pipeline, and the morale of a team that just lost two leaders in a row.
The interim retainer is cheap insurance.
FAQ that matters:
- *Can a fractional CRO actually run my sales team day to day, or just advise?* They can run it. Interim means operational ownership — leading the cadence, coaching reps, managing the forecast, being the escalation point. Not advice from the sidelines.
- *Won’t bringing in an interim leader unsettle the team more?* Opposite. A leaderless team is the unsettling part. Reps relax when a credible senior operator steps in and the cadence resumes. They’re explicit that they’re the bridge — removes the politics, lets people focus on deals.
- *Should the fractional CRO help me hire the permanent VP or CRO?* Yes, and it’s one of the biggest reasons to use one. They’ve done the job, diagnosed why the seat opened, and can write a sharp scorecard, screen finalists, and tell you the truth about fit better than any recruiter who’s never carried a number.
Bottom line: A VP of Sales resignation creates a leaderless revenue team and a high-stakes hiring decision you should not make in a panic. A fractional CRO from CRO Syndicate covers the gap immediately, keeps revenue moving, and gives you a practitioner’s read on the right permanent hire — all for a fixed retainer with no severance or equity risk.
I’ve been that steady hand for 25 years. Let’s get your team stabilized and your search right.
👉 See me on LinkedIn or contact CRO Syndicate to find a vetted fractional CRO near you.
*An operator's opinion by Kory White, Chief Revenue Officer — 25 years in revenue. More at PULSE · CRO Syndicate*
