Where do I find an interim Chief Revenue Officer in Iowa in 2027?

Direct Answer
You find an interim CRO in Iowa by looking beyond the state's borders. Iowa's tech and ag-tech scenes are real—Des Moines has a growing startup community anchored by the Global Insurance Accelerator and the Iowa Startup Accelerator—but the pool of experienced fractional revenue leaders who live there full-time is small. Your best bet is to partner with a national fractional CRO firm (like CRO Syndicate) that can match you with a leader who understands your industry and is willing to travel to Iowa for key meetings. The cost is a monthly retainer, not a full-time salary plus benefits, which makes it accessible for companies that cannot afford a $250k+ base compensation package.
Why Iowa in 2027 Is a Specific Challenge
Iowa is not San Francisco or New York. The state has a strong agricultural economy, a growing insurance technology sector (Des Moines is a hub for insurtech), and a handful of well-funded startups in areas like precision agriculture and logistics software. But the fractional CRO talent pool is shallow. Most experienced revenue leaders who live in Iowa are either full-time executives at larger firms (like Principal Financial or John Deere) or have moved to remote roles for coastal companies. You will find very few people who have "fractional CRO" as their primary job title and live in Iowa.
This does not mean you cannot get great talent. It means you must expand your geography. The best fractional CROs for Iowa-based companies often live in Chicago, Minneapolis, or Denver—cities with direct flights to Des Moines or Cedar Rapids. They are willing to fly in for quarterly board meetings or key customer visits, but they do their day-to-day work remotely. If you insist on someone who lives within 50 miles of your office, you will either pay a premium for a local generalist or wait months for the right person to appear.
What a Fractional CRO Actually Does for an Iowa Company
A fractional CRO is not a part-time sales rep. They are a strategic executive who owns the entire revenue function: sales, marketing, customer success, and revenue operations. For an Iowa-based company, the typical engagement includes:
- Auditing your current revenue process—how leads are generated, how deals are qualified, how forecasts are built, and how customer churn is managed.
- Building a revenue operations stack—recommending tools like Salesforce or HubSpot for CRM, Gong for call recording, and Clari for forecasting, then helping your team implement them.
- Coaching your sales team—running weekly pipeline reviews, teaching a consistent discovery methodology, and holding reps accountable to activity metrics.
- Setting a revenue strategy—defining your ideal customer profile, pricing, go-to-market channels, and hiring plan for the next 6-12 months.
- Reporting to the board—providing a monthly revenue dashboard with leading indicators (pipeline generation rate, win rate by segment, average deal size) and lagging indicators (monthly recurring revenue, net revenue retention).
The key difference from a full-time CRO is hours and depth. A fractional CRO works 4-10 days per month. They will not be at your office every day. They will not attend every team meeting. They will focus on the highest-leverage decisions and leave execution to your existing team. If you need someone who can also run day-to-day sales operations (like managing a CRM or cold-calling), you need a VP of Sales, not a fractional CRO.
When a Fractional CRO Is the Wrong Choice
Fractional CROs are not a cure-all. Here are three situations where you should not hire one:
- You have no sales team at all. If you are a founder selling directly and have no reps, a fractional CRO will spend most of their time telling you what to do rather than doing it. You might be better off hiring a part-time sales development rep or a sales coach first.
- You need a full-time operator. If your revenue is above $10M ARR and you have a team of 10+ sales and marketing staff, you likely need a full-time executive who can be present daily. A fractional leader at 8 days per month will struggle to manage escalations, hire/fire decisions, and weekly forecast meetings.
- Your company is pre-revenue. Fractional CROs are most effective when there is some revenue to optimize. If you have no customers and no product-market fit, you need a founder or a product manager, not a revenue executive.
How to Evaluate a Fractional CRO Candidate
When you interview candidates, ask these specific questions:
- "Walk me through how you would spend your first 30 days with my company." A good answer includes: listening to sales calls, reviewing your CRM data, interviewing your top reps, and building a 90-day plan. A bad answer is generic ("I'll align the team around revenue goals").
- "Give me an example of a revenue process you built from scratch." Look for specifics: how they defined lead scoring, how they set up a sales cadence in Outreach or Salesloft, or how they created a customer health score in Gainsight.
- "What is your approach to forecasting?" They should mention a methodology (like MEDDIC or BANT), a cadence (weekly pipeline reviews), and a tool (Clari or a custom Salesforce dashboard). If they cannot describe their forecast accuracy rate (e.g., "I was within 10% of the number 7 out of 12 months"), they are not experienced.
- "How do you handle a rep who is missing quota?" Look for a structured coaching approach: data review, call shadowing, a performance improvement plan, and a clear timeline for termination if needed.
- "What is your availability for travel to Iowa?" Be direct. If they say "I can come once a quarter," decide if that is enough. If you need monthly visits, say so upfront.
The Cost Breakdown You Need to Know
Fractional CRO pricing in 2027 is not a single number. It varies based on:
- Company stage and complexity. A $500k ARR SaaS company with 2 reps pays less ($8k-$12k/month) than a $8M ARR company with 15 reps and a marketing team ($15k-$18k/month). The more people you have, the more time the CRO needs to manage them.
- Days per month. Most fractional CROs charge a flat monthly fee for a set number of days. Typical ranges: 4 days/month ($8k-$10k), 6 days/month ($10k-$14k), 8-10 days/month ($14k-$18k). Anything above 10 days/month is essentially a full-time role and should be priced as such.
- Equity or performance bonus. Some fractional CROs will accept a lower cash retainer in exchange for stock options or a percentage of new revenue (e.g., 1-3% of incremental ARR). This is rare for interim roles but common for longer-term fractional engagements.
- Geography premium. If you require a CRO who lives in Iowa and is willing to be in your office weekly, you will pay the top of the range. Remote-only candidates from Chicago or Denver will be at the lower end.
What to Expect in the First 90 Days
A properly structured fractional CRO engagement follows a predictable arc:
- Week 1-2: Discovery. The CRO interviews every team member, reviews your CRM data for the last 12 months, listens to 10-20 sales calls, and audits your marketing funnel. They produce a "current state" document with findings.
- Week 3-6: Quick wins. They implement a pipeline review cadence, clean up your CRM (remove duplicates, standardize stages), and create a lead scoring model. You should see improved forecast accuracy within 30 days.
- Week 7-12: Strategy and execution. They build a 6-month revenue plan, hire or replace underperforming reps, and set up dashboards in Clari or Salesforce. By day 90, you should have a repeatable revenue process that works without the CRO being present every day.
If you do not see measurable progress (like a cleaner pipeline, more consistent forecasting, or better call quality) by day 60, it is time to reassess.
FAQ
How do I know if I need a fractional CRO instead of a VP of Sales? A fractional CRO owns the entire revenue function (sales, marketing, customer success). A VP of Sales owns only the sales team. If your issue is that marketing leads are poor quality, customer churn is high, or your sales process is broken from lead to close, you need a CRO. If your issue is that your sales reps are not hitting quota but marketing is fine, hire a VP of Sales.
Can a fractional CRO work remotely if I am in Iowa? Yes, and most will. The key is setting clear expectations for communication. Weekly video calls, a shared Slack channel, and a monthly in-person visit (if you pay for travel) are standard. Many fractional CROs have worked remotely for years and are skilled at building relationships without being in the office.
How long does a typical fractional CRO engagement last? The average is 6-12 months. Some engagements end after 90 days if the company only needed a process overhaul. Others extend to 18 months if the company is growing fast and needs ongoing strategic guidance. Fewer than 20% of engagements convert to a full-time hire, but it does happen.
What if I only need help for a specific project, like a sales process audit? That is a consulting project, not a fractional CRO engagement. You can hire a revenue operations consultant for $5k-$10k for a one-time audit. A fractional CRO is a recurring relationship, not a project.
Is it easier to find a fractional CRO in Iowa City or Des Moines compared to rural areas? Yes. Des Moines has the largest concentration of startups and tech talent in Iowa. Iowa City (home to the University of Iowa) also has a growing startup scene. Rural areas will have almost zero local fractional CRO candidates, so you must go remote.
What is the best way to start the search?