How do I hire a fractional VP of Sales for a life sciences company in 2027?

Direct Answer
You hire a fractional VP of Sales by first being brutally honest about what your life sciences company actually needs — not what you think a VP "should" do. In 2027, the best fractional leaders in this vertical have deep domain knowledge (regulatory pathways, clinical trial timelines, KOL relationships) and operate as player-coaches, not just strategists. Expect to pay $8k–$25k/month for 2–10 days per week, with equity often included at earlier stages. The process involves sourcing through specialized networks (Pavilion, CRO Syndicate, your own investor intros), vetting for both life sciences credibility and hands-on execution ability, and structuring a 90-day engagement with clear milestones. Avoid anyone who cannot name the last three deals they personally closed in the space.
Why Life Sciences Is Different in 2027
Life sciences sales in 2027 is not SaaS. Your buyers are principal investigators, hospital procurement committees, and regulatory affairs directors — not just a VP of Operations who can swipe a credit card. The sales cycle is driven by clinical milestones, not quarterly quotas. A fractional VP of Sales who came from a B2B SaaS background will struggle unless they have at least one prior life sciences engagement under their belt.
The regulatory market (FDA, EMA, 510(k), PMA, CE marking) dictates your go-to-market timing. A strong fractional leader knows that a Phase II readout is a better trigger for a sales call than a calendar quarter. They also understand that your channel partners (CROs, distributors, group purchasing organizations) are often the real buyers, not your end customers.
What to Look For in a Candidate
You need someone who has personally sold into the life sciences ecosystem — not just managed a team that did. Ask for their last three closed-won deals in the space. If they cannot describe the buyer persona, the regulatory hurdle, and the pricing model (per-patient, per-study, subscription, or capital equipment), they are not ready.
Look for hands-on skills that matter in 2027: CRM hygiene (Salesforce or HubSpot), pipeline generation via LinkedIn Sales Navigator and industry events, and the ability to coach your existing team (if you have one) on discovery calls. The best fractional VPs in life sciences also bring a network of KOLs (key opinion leaders) and CRO contacts that can be activated immediately.
Avoid anyone who talks about "building a sales culture" or "hiring a team" in the first conversation. In a fractional role, your goal is revenue, not headcount. The right candidate will focus on pipeline, deal velocity, and closing gaps — not org charts.
How to Structure the Engagement
A fractional VP of Sales engagement should be time-boxed and outcome-focused. Use a 90-day contract with clear KPIs:
- Month 1: Audit your CRM, review your current pipeline, identify the top 5 target accounts, and create a messaging document tailored to life sciences buyers.
- Month 2: Run 10–15 discovery calls with prospects (the fractional VP should be on the phone, not just reviewing reports), advance 3–5 deals to proposal stage, and coach your team (if any) on objection handling.
- Month 3: Close at least one deal (or have a clear path to close), document your sales process, and recommend whether to extend, convert to full-time, or end the engagement.
Compensation should be monthly, with a 30-day out clause. Equity (0.5%–2% depending on stage) can be offered to align incentives, but only if the fractional VP is willing to accept a lower cash rate. Do not offer a commission-only structure — fractional leaders need predictable income to prioritize your account.
Where to Find Candidates
The best fractional VP of Sales for life sciences in 2027 will not be on a generic job board. Source through:
- Pavilion (joinpavilion.com) — the largest community of revenue leaders; search for "life sciences" in the member directory.
- RevOps Co-op — a community of revenue operations professionals who often know strong fractional sales leaders.
- Your investor network — VCs and angel investors in life sciences frequently have a bench of fractional executives they trust.
- LinkedIn — search for "fractional VP Sales life sciences" and look for profiles that show specific deal examples, not just generic "strategic leadership" language.
When NOT to Hire a Fractional VP of Sales
A fractional VP of Sales is not the right choice if:
- Your company is pre-revenue and you need someone to build a sales process from scratch while also closing the first 10 deals — that's a founding sales role, not a fractional one.
- You have a large team (10+ reps) that needs daily management and coaching — a fractional leader at 2–3 days/week cannot provide that.
- You are raising a Series A or B and investors expect a full-time commercial leader on the cap table — fractional roles can signal instability to some VCs.
- Your sales cycle is longer than 12 months and you need consistent relationship-building over years — fractional engagements are designed for speed, not long-term account farming.
In those cases, consider a part-time sales consultant (lower cost, less commitment) or a full-time VP of Sales with a performance-based compensation plan.
How to Evaluate a Candidate's Plan
Ask each finalist to submit a 30-day plan in writing. A strong plan will include:
- CRM audit — what's missing, what's wrong, and how to fix it.
- Pipeline review — top 10 opportunities by value, stage, and next step.
- Target account list — 5 accounts with names, titles, and a specific outreach strategy for each.
- Messaging shift — how your current pitch needs to change for life sciences buyers (regulatory language, ROI framing, risk mitigation).
- First 10 calls — who they will call, when, and what the objective is.
If the plan is generic ("I'll assess your sales process and build a forecast"), reject it. You need specificity — account names, deal stages, and a clear hypothesis about why those buyers will buy.
FAQ
What is the typical cost range for a fractional VP of Sales in life sciences? $8,000 to $25,000 per month, depending on days per week (2–10), company stage, and whether equity is included. Pre-revenue companies typically pay $8k–$12k; companies with $5M+ ARR pay $15k–$25k.
How many days per week should I expect from a fractional VP of Sales? 2–5 days per week is standard. For early-stage companies, 2–3 days is often enough for strategy and deal support. For companies with a team of 3+ reps, 4–5 days is better.
Can a fractional VP of Sales close deals themselves, or do they just manage? The best ones do both. In 2027, a fractional VP of Sales in life sciences should be a player-coach — they can run discovery calls, negotiate terms, and close deals, while also coaching your team. If they only want to "manage," they are not the right fit.
How do I know if a candidate has real life sciences experience? Ask them to describe a specific deal they closed — what was the product, who were the buyers (PI, procurement, legal), what was the regulatory hurdle, and how long did the cycle take? If they cannot name the drug, device, or study, they lack domain depth.
What should I include in the contract? A 90-day term, monthly payment, 30-day out clause, 3–5 KPIs (pipeline created, deals advanced, coaching sessions), and a confidentiality agreement. Equity (0.5%–2%) can be added for lower cash compensation.
Is a fractional VP of Sales better than a sales consultant? Yes, for building a revenue engine. A consultant gives advice; a fractional VP of Sales executes — they run calls, manage pipeline, and close deals. Choose a consultant if you only need a playbook; choose a fractional VP if you need someone to run the playbook.
What happens after the 90-day engagement? You can extend the contract, convert the fractional VP to full-time (if they are interested and you have the budget), or end the engagement. Many companies extend for 6–12 months while they search for a full-time hire.
How do I onboard a fractional VP of Sales quickly? Give them access to your CRM, Slack, and key customer calls within 48 hours. Share your current pipeline, past deal data, and competitive market. Schedule a 1-hour walkthrough of your product and regulatory status. Do not hold back information — fractional leaders thrive on speed.
Sources
- Pavilion — Revenue Leader Community
- RevOps Co-op — Revenue Operations Community
- Harvard Business Review — On Hiring Sales Leaders
- First Round Review — Sales Hiring Playbooks
- SaaStr — Fractional vs Full-Time Sales Executives
- LinkedIn — Life Sciences Sales Network
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