How much does an interim Chief Revenue Officer cost in Nevada in 2027?

Direct Answer
There is no single "Nevada rate" because fractional CROs price by time commitment, company complexity, and expected outcome. In 2027, a Nevada-based founder can expect to pay $8,000–$12,000/month for a light-touch advisory role (1–2 days/week, under $3M ARR), $12,000–$18,000/month for a hands-on operator (2–3 days/week, $3M–$15M ARR), and $20,000–$40,000/month for a full-time interim CRO who owns the entire revenue function. Equity (0.5%–2%) is common for full-time roles but rare for fractional engagements under 3 days/week. Nevada’s relatively thin pool of experienced revenue leaders means that strong fractional CROs often work remotely from California or Texas, so geography alone does not guarantee a discount.
Why Nevada matters (and why it doesn't)
Nevada is a mixed market for revenue leadership. On one hand, the state has a growing tech and gaming-tech ecosystem in Las Vegas and Reno, plus a strong logistics corridor (think Amazon, Zappos, Switch). On the other hand, the pool of experienced CROs who live in Nevada full-time is small — likely fewer than 100 individuals with true CRO experience at a venture-backed company. Most fractional CROs serving Nevada clients are based in California, Texas, or remote-first hubs. That is fine. Remote fractional CROs are the norm in 2027, and a good one will visit quarterly or as needed.
The cost range above reflects national fractional CRO rates adjusted for the Nevada market's lower cost of living (no state income tax, lower office rent). However, do not expect a "Nevada discount." Strong fractional CROs price on value, not geography. If you want a CRO who has scaled a company from $5M to $20M ARR, they will charge national rates regardless of where your office is.
The three pricing models you will encounter
Fractional CROs in 2027 typically use one of three pricing models:
1. Monthly retainer (most common). You pay a fixed fee for a set number of days per week (e.g., 2 days/week for $14,000/month). This is predictable and easy to budget. The CRO attends weekly leadership meetings, runs pipeline reviews, and works with your sales and marketing teams. This is the best model for most founders because it aligns cost with commitment.
2. Hourly or project-based. Some fractional CROs will charge $200–$400/hour for specific projects (e.g., building a sales compensation plan, hiring a VP of Sales, or restructuring territories). This is less common for ongoing roles because it creates friction around tracking hours. Use this only for short-term, defined projects (e.g., a 6-week sales process audit).
3. Retainer + performance bonus. A growing trend in 2027: base retainer ($10,000–$15,000/month) plus a bonus tied to revenue milestones (e.g., 10% of new ARR above a baseline). This aligns incentives but can create scope creep — the CRO may push for aggressive targets that require more time than you agreed to. Negotiate the bonus cap upfront.
What you get for your money (and what you don't)
A good fractional CRO in Nevada in 2027 will deliver:
- Weekly pipeline and forecast reviews using your CRM (Salesforce, HubSpot) and tools like Gong or Clari.
- A revenue operations audit — they will assess your tech stack, data hygiene, and sales process.
- Hiring and coaching — they will help you recruit AEs, SDRs, and a VP of Sales if needed.
- Strategy and planning — a quarterly revenue plan with targets, territory assignments, and compensation design.
- Board and investor updates — they will prepare revenue slides and speak at board meetings.
What they will not do (unless you pay for full-time):
- Cold calling or closing deals — that is your sales team's job. A fractional CRO is a manager, not a closer.
- Full-time availability — if you pay for 2 days/week, do not expect Slack responses at 10 PM on a Saturday.
- Build your entire sales process from scratch — they will design it, but your team must execute.
Full-time vs. fractional: the real trade-off
The table above gives the numbers, but here is the decision framework:
Choose fractional if:
- You have a functioning sales team that needs strategy, coaching, and accountability.
- Your ARR is between $2M and $15M and you are growing 20–50% year-over-year.
- You cannot afford a full-time CRO salary ($300k–$500k total comp) plus benefits.
- You want to test a leader before committing to a full-time hire.
Choose full-time interim if:
- Your revenue team is broken — high turnover, no process, no pipeline.
- You need someone to own the full revenue function (sales, marketing, CS) and make hires/fires.
- You have $10M+ ARR and can justify a $400k+ annual cost.
- You need a "turnaround" — a CRO who will fire underperformers and rebuild.
How to evaluate a fractional CRO in Nevada
Since the local talent pool is thin, you will likely interview candidates from outside the state. Here is how to vet them:
1. Ask for specific Nevada experience. Have they worked with companies in gaming, logistics, or hospitality tech? If not, do they understand the local talent market? A CRO who has never hired in Las Vegas may struggle to recruit local sales talent.
2. Check their references — hard. Call three former clients. Ask: "Did they actually show up for the agreed days? Did they improve forecast accuracy? Did they help you hire good people?" Avoid references who only give vague praise.
3. Test their tool fluency. In 2027, a CRO should be proficient in Salesforce or HubSpot, plus at least one of Gong, Clari, or Outreach. If they say "I'll learn it," that is a red flag.
4. Negotiate the scope of work in writing. Specify exactly what they will deliver each week: number of pipeline reviews, hiring interviews, board meetings, etc. Ambiguity kills fractional relationships.
FAQ
Can I get a fractional CRO for under $8,000/month in Nevada? Yes, but only for a very limited scope (e.g., 1 day/week, no hiring, no board meetings). At that price, you are getting a coach, not an operator. If you need hands-on execution, budget at least $12,000/month.
Do fractional CROs charge travel expenses? Most do not charge travel if you are within driving distance (e.g., Las Vegas to Reno). For cross-country travel (e.g., Bay Area CRO flying to Nevada), expect to reimburse airfare and hotel, or negotiate a flat travel fee of $500–$1,000 per trip.
How long should a fractional CRO engagement last? Typical engagements are 6–12 months. Shorter than 3 months is rarely effective (the CRO needs time to diagnose and implement). Longer than 18 months suggests you should hire a full-time CRO.
What if I want to convert the fractional CRO to full-time? Some fractional CROs will convert, but expect to pay a full-time salary ($300k–$500k total comp) plus equity. The fractional retainer usually ends, and a new employment contract begins. Discuss this possibility upfront to avoid surprises.
Is equity standard for fractional CROs in Nevada? No. Most fractional CROs do not take equity because they are not full-time employees. If you want equity, you are likely looking at a full-time interim CRO. A small equity grant (0.25%–0.5%) can be offered as a retention incentive, but it is not standard.
How do I know if the CRO is actually working the agreed days? Track their activity in your CRM. A good CRO will log calls, meetings, and pipeline updates. If you see no activity for a week, that is a problem. Set the expectation of CRM transparency on day one.