How do I hire a fractional head of revenue for a HR tech company in 2027?

Direct Answer
You hire a fractional Head of Revenue by first determining whether you need strategy and coaching or full-cycle pipeline execution — the role varies wildly by your company's stage and existing team. For an HR tech company in 2027, you must also account for the specific buyer dynamics: HR buyers are more risk-averse than ever, procurement cycles are longer, and your fractional leader must understand compliance-heavy selling (e.g., GDPR, SOC 2, AI bias regulations). The hiring process involves writing a clear scope of work, sourcing from vetted networks (not general job boards), conducting a rigorous reference check focused on fractional experience, and negotiating a month-to-month agreement with clear KPIs. Do not expect a fractional CRO to single-handedly close deals — they should build the system, coach the team, and hold the forecast accountable.
Why HR Tech in 2027 Is Different
Hiring a fractional revenue leader for an HR tech company in 2027 is not the same as hiring one for a generic SaaS business. The HR tech market has matured significantly. Buyers — CHROs, VP of People, procurement teams — are more skeptical of new vendors than they were five years ago. They demand proof of data privacy compliance (SOC 2 Type II, GDPR, AI Act readiness), integration with existing HRIS systems (Workday, SAP SuccessFactors, BambooHR), and clear ROI metrics tied to retention or hiring velocity. A fractional CRO who cannot speak fluently about these requirements will lose credibility in the first meeting.
Additionally, the sales cycle in HR tech is structurally longer because decisions involve multiple stakeholders: HR, legal, procurement, IT, and sometimes the C-suite. Your fractional leader must design a multi-threaded selling process that keeps all parties engaged without overwhelming them. This is not a role for a "hunter" who only wants to close — it requires a builder who can create repeatable systems.
When to Go Fractional vs. Full-Time
The decision to hire a fractional Head of Revenue instead of a full-time VP of Sales hinges on predictability and budget. If your HR tech company is pre-Series A, has less than $2M ARR, or is still iterating on product-market fit, a fractional leader is the smarter choice. You get senior expertise without the long-term commitment or the high cash comp of a full-time hire. If you are at $5M+ ARR with a proven sales motion and a team of 5+ reps, a full-time VP of Sales may be warranted — but even then, many founders use a fractional CRO for 6-12 months to build the playbook before hiring full-time.
Key signal to go fractional: You are spending more time managing sales than building product, but you cannot yet afford a $350k+ full-time executive.
Key signal to go full-time: You have a repeatable sales process, a team that needs daily management, and the cash runway to support a full-time hire for at least 18 months.
How to Vet a Fractional CRO for HR Tech
Your interview process should be domain-specific, not generic. Ask these questions:
- "Walk me through how you would structure a sales process for a new HR analytics tool targeting mid-market companies with 500-2,000 employees."
- "What compliance certifications do you expect your buyers to require, and how have you handled those requirements in past roles?"
- "Describe a time you had to coach a founder-CEO on giving up control of the sales forecast. What happened?"
- "How do you approach pricing for an HR tech product that has both a per-employee-per-month and a flat subscription model?"
Check references ruthlessly. Ask the reference: "On a scale of 1-10, how much did this person improve your forecast accuracy? What was your biggest frustration working with them?" Fractional leaders who are responsive and transparent about their limitations are worth more than those who promise the moon.
The Cost Breakdown — What You Actually Pay
Costs vary by scope and stage:
- Strategy-only (10-15 hrs/week): $8,000 - $12,000/month. The fractional leader provides a revenue audit, builds a forecast model, coaches the founder on sales, and attends weekly pipeline reviews. No direct deal involvement.
- Hands-on pipeline management (20-30 hrs/week): $15,000 - $25,000/month. The leader runs weekly forecast calls, participates in key deals, builds sales collateral, and manages any existing sales team. They may also handle partner/channel strategy.
- Equity component: Pre-revenue or seed-stage companies often offer 0.5% - 1.5% equity (with a 3-4 year vest, 1-year cliff) to offset lower cash comp. Series A+ companies typically pay all cash.
Hidden costs: You may need to pay for a CRM admin (if the fractional leader requires customization), sales enablement tools (like Gong or Outreach), or a part-time SDR to support the pipeline. Budget an additional $2,000 - $5,000/month for these.
The Onboarding and Offboarding Process
Onboarding (first 30 days): The fractional CRO should spend the first week in discovery — meeting with your top 5 customers, reviewing your CRM data, and auditing your sales process. By day 14, they should deliver a 30-page revenue assessment with gaps and recommendations. By day 30, they should have a 90-day plan with specific KPIs (e.g., pipeline generation rate, conversion by stage, forecast accuracy).
Offboarding: Because the engagement is month-to-month, offboarding is straightforward. The fractional leader should provide a handoff document that includes your current sales process, key deals in flight, and recommendations for the next hire. Expect a 2-week transition period.
How to Measure Success
Do not measure a fractional CRO by revenue alone — that is a lagging indicator. Instead, track these leading indicators:
- Forecast accuracy: Within 10% of actuals each month.
- Pipeline coverage ratio: 3x or more of your quarterly target.
- Sales team confidence: Survey your reps monthly on whether they feel supported and clear on priorities.
- Deal velocity: Time from first meeting to closed-won should decrease over 3 months.
If after 90 days you see no improvement in these metrics, the engagement is not working. Have an honest conversation about scope or consider a replacement.
FAQ
What is the difference between a fractional CRO and a fractional VP of Sales? A fractional CRO owns the entire revenue function — sales, marketing, customer success, partnerships. A fractional VP of Sales focuses exclusively on the sales team and pipeline. For most HR tech companies under $5M ARR, a fractional CRO is overkill; a fractional VP of Sales is more practical.
Can I hire a fractional head of revenue remotely for my HR tech company? Yes, and most fractional leaders work remotely. However, for HR tech, some buyers prefer in-person meetings for compliance-heavy deals. Expect 1-2 days per month on-site if your company is in a major metro area. If you are in a smaller market, remote is the norm.
How do I know if the fractional leader has real HR tech experience? Ask for specific examples of deals they closed in HR tech, the buyer personas they sold to, and the compliance requirements they navigated. A good candidate will name real tools (Workday, BambooHR, Rippling) and real compliance frameworks (SOC 2, GDPR, AI Act) without prompting.
What if the fractional leader doesn't deliver? Your contract should have a 30-day out clause. If you see no improvement in pipeline coverage or forecast accuracy after 60 days, exercise the clause. The risk is low because you pay month-to-month.
Should I offer equity to a fractional CRO? Only if you are pre-Series A and cannot afford the full cash comp. Even then, keep equity below 1.5% and vest it over 3-4 years. Most experienced fractional leaders prefer cash.
How long does it take to see results? Expect a 30-day assessment period, then measurable improvements in pipeline and forecast accuracy by month 3. Revenue impact typically appears in month 4-6 because of the long HR tech sales cycle.
Can I hire a fractional CRO through a platform like CRO Syndicate?