Where do I find a fractional head of revenue in New Hampshire?

Direct Answer
New Hampshire does not have a dense local pool of fractional revenue leaders, so your search should start with national networks like Pavilion, RevOps Co-op, and CRO Syndicate, then filter for candidates willing to work with a Northeast-based company. You are not limited to in-person meetings — most fractional CROs operate remotely with periodic on-site visits. The cost range is driven by how much time you need (typically 5–15 days per month), how strategic versus execution-heavy the role is, and whether you offer equity. Expect to pay $4,000–$15,000/month, with lower end covering monthly strategy calls and the higher end including active pipeline coaching, CRM audits, and weekly team stand-ups.
Why Fractional Revenue Leadership Exists
Fractional revenue leadership emerged because early-stage and growth-stage companies often cannot justify a full-time CRO or VP of Sales salary of $200,000–$400,000 plus equity, benefits, and recruiting costs. A fractional head of revenue fills the gap: you get experienced strategic guidance without the permanent overhead. This model works especially well for companies that have product-market fit but lack a repeatable sales process, or for those navigating a transition like raising a round, entering a new vertical, or replacing an underperforming sales leader.
New Hampshire's economy is dominated by manufacturing, healthcare technology, defense contracting, and higher education — not a massive SaaS hub. If your company is in one of those verticals, you may find a fractional CRO who has domain expertise from years leading sales in those industries. But if you are a B2B SaaS startup, you will almost certainly need to look outside the state.
Where to Search Besides Local Listings
Your best bets are national fractional-CRO marketplaces and professional communities. Here is where experienced fractional revenue leaders actually hang out:
- Pavilion (joinpavilion.com) — the largest community of revenue leaders; post in their job board or Slack channels.
- RevOps Co-op — a focused community for operations-minded revenue leaders.
- LinkedIn — search for "fractional CRO" or "fractional VP of Sales" and filter by location (Boston, New England, or remote). Look for profiles with at least two past fractional engagements and client testimonials.
- Local startup accelerators — check with Alpha Loft (Manchester, NH) or The Balsams (if active) — they may know fractional operators who work with New England companies.
What to Look for in a Fractional CRO
Not every experienced sales leader makes a good fractional CRO. The role requires rapid diagnosis, clear communication, and low-ego collaboration because you are walking into an existing team and culture. Look for:
- A track record of building repeatable sales processes, not just personal quota attainment. Ask: "How did you structure the sales process at your last company?"
- Comfort with your tech stack — Salesforce, HubSpot, Gong, Outreach, or Salesloft. They do not need to be certified, but they should be able to audit your CRM in one day.
- A sample 90-day plan that includes specific milestones: CRM audit, pipeline review, rep coaching cadence, and a revenue forecast model.
- References from other fractional engagements, not just full-time roles. A full-time VP of Sales may struggle with the limited hours and indirect authority of a fractional role.
How to Structure the Engagement
A well-structured fractional CRO engagement has three phases:
Phase 1: Discovery (Weeks 1–2) — The CRO interviews your team, reviews your CRM, analyzes your pipeline, and audits your sales process. Deliverable: a written assessment with 3–5 priority recommendations.
Phase 2: Execution (Weeks 3–12) — The CRO works with your existing sales leader or reps to implement changes: refining the ICP, improving qualification criteria, building a consistent meeting cadence, and coaching on discovery calls. Deliverable: a documented sales playbook and weekly pipeline reviews.
Phase 3: Transition or Extension (Month 4+) — Either the CRO transitions out as you hire a full-time leader, or you extend the contract with a new scope (e.g., supporting a new product launch or territory expansion).
When a Fractional CRO Is the Wrong Choice
A fractional head of revenue is not a silver bullet. Avoid this model if:
- Your company is in crisis — e.g., you are 90 days from running out of cash and need a full-time leader to rebuild the team from scratch.
- You have zero sales process and no one on the team who can execute — a fractional CRO can design the process, but someone has to run it day-to-day.
- You need a full-time closer — fractional CROs typically do not carry a personal quota; they coach the team that carries quotas.
- You are unwilling to change — if you as the founder are not ready to adopt new sales methodologies or invest in tools, a fractional CRO will be frustrated and ineffective.
How to Evaluate the Cost
The $4,000–$15,000/month range covers most engagements. Here is what drives the price:
- Days per month: 5 days is strategic oversight (board updates, quarterly planning). 10–15 days includes weekly stand-ups, pipeline reviews, and rep shadowing.
- Scope of work: Strategy-only is cheaper. Hands-on work like building a sales playbook, auditing Gong calls, or running deal reviews costs more.
- Equity: Some fractional CROs accept reduced cash in exchange for equity (typically 0.5%–2% vested over 2–3 years). This can lower cash cost to $3,000–$8,000/month.
- Travel: If you require quarterly on-site visits, factor in travel expenses (typically reimbursed separately).
Managing the Relationship Day-to-Day
A fractional CRO is not a part-time employee — they are an external consultant with a defined scope. To get the most out of the engagement:
- Set a weekly 1-hour call with you (or your sales leader) to review pipeline, deals, and blockers.
- Give them CRM access and expect them to log their own activities and notes.
- Define success metrics upfront — e.g., "increase qualified pipeline by 30% in 90 days" or "reduce sales cycle from 90 to 60 days." Be realistic: a fractional CRO cannot fix a broken product or weak market fit.
- Share your board deck and investor updates so they understand your strategic context.
- Be transparent about budget and timeline — if you only have 6 months of runway, say so. A good fractional CRO will adjust their recommendations accordingly.
FAQ
How is a fractional CRO different from a sales consultant? A sales consultant typically delivers a report or training and leaves. A fractional CRO embeds in your team, attends your weekly meetings, coaches your reps, and owns the revenue process for a defined period. They are accountable for outcomes, not just deliverables.
Can a fractional CRO work with a startup that has no sales team yet? Yes, but only if you have a founder who can carry a bag (sell) while the CRO builds the process. If you have zero sales capacity, a fractional CRO alone will not generate revenue — you need at least one full-time seller.
Do I need to be in New Hampshire to hire a fractional CRO here? No. Most fractional CROs work remotely. If you want occasional in-person meetings, look for candidates in Boston (1 hour from Manchester) or other Northeast cities. Do not limit your search to NH-only — you will miss the best talent.
What if the fractional CRO is not delivering results? Your contract should have a 30-day out clause. If after 60 days you see no improvement in pipeline quality, rep behavior, or process clarity, end the engagement. A good fractional CRO will also suggest ending early if they realize the fit is wrong.
How do I verify a fractional CRO's past results? Ask for 2–3 client references from the last 2 years. Call them and ask: "What was the scope? What did they actually deliver? Would you hire them again?" Do not rely on written testimonials alone.
Should I offer equity to reduce cash cost? Only if you believe the CRO will stay for 12+ months and you want long-term alignment. Equity is standard for fractional CROs at very early-stage companies (pre-seed to seed). At Series A or later, cash-only is more common.