How do I hire a fractional VP of Sales for a consulting firm company in 2027?

Direct Answer
You hire a fractional VP of Sales the same way you hire a full-time executive — but with tighter scope, shorter commitment, and a clear exit ramp. For a consulting firm, the key is finding someone who understands professional services selling: multi-stakeholder procurement, recurring revenue through retainers, and the delicate balance between partner-led relationships and systematic pipeline management. Expect to pay $4,000–$12,000/month for a part-time leader, with the lower end covering a smaller firm (under $2M revenue) needing strategic guidance only, and the upper end for a firm with multiple service lines requiring active pipeline management, CRM implementation, and team coaching. Most engagements run 6–12 months, renewable quarterly.
Why a consulting firm needs a different kind of sales leader
Consulting firms sell intangibles — expertise, trust, and outcomes — not widgets. A VP of Sales from a product company often struggles here because they expect shorter cycles, transactional pricing, and a single decision-maker. In consulting, you're selling to procurement teams, managing partners, and sometimes the CEO directly. The fractional leader you hire must have experience navigating multi-stakeholder procurement and selling time-based engagements (retainers, fixed-fee projects, or outcome-based contracts).
The best candidates come from professional services sales backgrounds: former partners at consulting firms, sales leaders at IT services companies, or revenue executives at executive search or advisory firms. They understand that trust is the product and that your sales process must mirror your delivery process. They also know that consulting firms often have longer sales cycles (3–9 months) and higher average deal sizes ($25K–$250K+), which requires a different approach to pipeline management and forecasting.
How to evaluate a fractional VP of Sales candidate
When you interview candidates, focus on specific behaviors rather than general sales experience. Ask these questions:
- "Walk me through how you sold a $100K consulting engagement from first contact to close." Listen for steps like: identifying the buyer, mapping stakeholders, handling procurement objections, and negotiating scope.
- "How do you build a sales process for a consulting firm that currently has none?" The answer should include: defining buyer personas, creating a qualification framework (like BANT or MEDDIC), and setting up a CRM (HubSpot, Salesforce, or a simpler tool).
- "What metrics do you track weekly for a consulting sales team?" Expect: pipeline value, win rate by service line, average deal size, sales cycle length, and activity metrics (calls, meetings, proposals sent).
- "How do you handle a partner who wants to sell their own way?" Good answers involve coaching, not commanding — consulting partners value autonomy.
Red flags include: candidates who can't explain how consulting procurement works, who promise quick wins (under 3 months), or who have only sold products under $10K. Also avoid anyone who suggests a "one-size-fits-all" sales playbook without first understanding your specific services.
The practical cost breakdown
Your monthly cost depends on three variables:
- Days per month: Most fractional VPs charge $500–$1,200/day. At 8 days/month, that's $4,000–$9,600/month. At 15 days/month, it's $7,500–$18,000/month. The $4,000–$12,000 range covers most consulting firms.
- Scope of work: Strategy-only (pipeline reviews, coaching, CRM setup) is cheaper. Hands-on deal execution (calling prospects, attending meetings, closing) costs more.
- Geography: If you're in a high-cost market (New York, San Francisco, London), expect the upper end. Remote candidates from lower-cost areas may charge less but still command $600–$900/day for quality.
Equity is uncommon for fractional roles, but some candidates will accept a lower cash rate for 0.5–2% equity (vested over 2–3 years). This works best if you're pre-revenue or early-stage ($0–$500K). For established firms, cash is simpler.
Performance bonuses are more common: 5–15% of the revenue they directly generate or a flat bonus for hitting pipeline targets. Be clear about what qualifies — only new clients, or also upsells to existing ones?
When to choose fractional vs. full-time
Use the comparison table above as a quick guide, but here's the deeper logic:
Choose fractional if:
- Your revenue is under $10M and you don't need someone 5 days/week.
- You have inconsistent pipeline and need a diagnostic first (3–6 months to assess and build).
- You're not ready to commit to a full-time salary + benefits ($200K–$400K total cost).
- You want to test a leader before offering a full-time role.
Choose full-time if:
- You have multiple service lines and a team of 5+ sellers to manage.
- Your sales cycle is under 60 days and you need constant deal velocity.
- You're scaling fast and need someone to build a sales culture, not just a process.
- You can afford the risk of a bad hire (full-time VPs are harder to exit).
Many consulting firms start with a fractional leader for 6 months, then convert them to full-time if the fit works. This is a low-risk path that lets you evaluate without a long-term commitment.
The hiring process step-by-step
- Write a 1-page brief that answers: What services do we sell? Who buys them? What's our current revenue and pipeline? What's the biggest sales problem we face? (e.g., "We have no pipeline" vs. "We can't close large deals").
- Screen for consulting sales DNA: Ask for examples of selling professional services. Look for experience with procurement, multi-stakeholder deals, and retainer-based pricing.
- Run a paid trial: Offer a 2-week project (e.g., "Audit our pipeline and recommend a sales process"). Pay their day rate. This reveals how they think, communicate, and execute.
- Check references — but not the ones they give you. Ask for a client they worked with for less than 6 months (to see how they handle short engagements).
- Sign a simple agreement: Include scope, days/month, rate, KPIs, and a 30-day termination clause. Avoid long contracts — 3–6 months with auto-renewal is standard.
How to onboard a fractional VP of Sales effectively
Your fractional leader needs access, not just information. Give them:
- Full CRM access (HubSpot, Salesforce, or whatever you use) with read/write permissions.
- Deal history from the last 12 months — won, lost, and stalled.
- Client personas — who buys, who influences, who blocks.
- Partner introductions — let them meet your delivery leads and any partners who sell.
- A weekly 1-hour standup to review pipeline, blockers, and priorities.
Do not give them a list of tasks and disappear. Treat them as a strategic partner, not a contractor. The best fractional VPs will challenge your assumptions about pricing, positioning, and process. Listen to them.
Measuring success: the right KPIs
A fractional VP of Sales should move leading indicators (pipeline generation, activity metrics) and lagging indicators (revenue, win rate). Track these monthly:
- Pipeline creation: $ value of new qualified opportunities added each month.
- Win rate: % of proposals that close. For consulting firms, 20–40% is typical.
- Average deal size: Is it increasing or decreasing? Should match your target.
- Sales cycle length: If it's over 9 months, you may need to qualify earlier.
- Activity metrics: Calls, meetings, proposals — but only if they correlate to pipeline.
Warning: If after 3 months you see no change in pipeline or win rate, the fractional leader may not be the right fit. Don't wait 6 months to decide.
FAQ
What's the difference between a fractional VP of Sales and a fractional CRO? A fractional VP of Sales focuses on pipeline management, deal execution, and team coaching. A fractional CRO owns the entire revenue function — including marketing, partnerships, and customer success — and is a better fit if you need to rebuild your go-to-market strategy from scratch. For most consulting firms under $10M, a VP of Sales is sufficient.
How long does a typical fractional VP of Sales engagement last? 6–12 months is standard, with quarterly renewals. Some engagements end after 3 months if the firm only needed a diagnostic. Others extend to 18 months if the leader is helping scale the team.
Can a fractional VP of Sales work remotely for my consulting firm? Yes, but they need to be available for client meetings (often in person) and internal strategy sessions. If your firm is in a specific market (e.g., Chicago, Austin, London), look for candidates who can travel 1–2 days/month for key meetings. Remote-only works if your sales process is entirely virtual.
What if I can't afford $4,000/month? Consider a fractional sales coach instead — someone who meets with you 2–4 hours/week for $1,500–$3,000/month. They'll provide strategy and accountability but won't manage your pipeline or close deals. It's a stepping stone.
How do I know if the fractional VP of Sales is actually working? Set a 90-day milestone: define 3 measurable outcomes (e.g., "Add $500K in qualified pipeline" or "Increase win rate from 20% to 30%"). If they hit 2 of 3, renew. If not, have an honest conversation about fit.
Should I offer equity to a fractional VP of Sales? Only if you're pre-revenue or very early stage ($0–$500K). For established firms, cash + performance bonus is cleaner. Equity complicates the relationship and is hard to value for a part-time role.
Sources
- Pavilion — community for revenue leaders, good for sourcing fractional talent
- RevOps Co-op — community for revenue operations professionals
- Harvard Business Review — general articles on sales leadership and professional services
- First Round Review — practical advice on hiring and scaling sales teams
- SaaStr — insights on sales leadership and fractional roles
- LinkedIn — for sourcing and vetting fractional sales leaders