Business Growth Strategies For CEOs: Top CMOs On Marketing Strategy Implementations

Should I Hire a Fractional CMO?

Written by Vickie Sherman | Fri, May 8, 2026

 

Should I Hire a Fractional CMO?

The Right CMO for the Right Moment

Why fractional marketing leadership wins in specific, definable contexts—and what every skeptical CEO should consider before signing the next offer letter.

By Vickie Sherman | Chief Outsiders

For nearly 17 years, Chief Outsiders has worked alongside CEOs to sharpen their market position and drive growth. This series draws on thousands of engagements and our own research to offer a CEO’s view of Marketing—what it is, where it fits, and how to lead it without getting dragged into tactics.

How Much Does it Cost to Hire a CMO?

The $1 Million Question Nobody’s Asking

Before you extend that offer letter, it’s worth asking what you’re actually signing up for.

The fully loaded cost of hiring a mid-market Chief Marketing Officer—base salary, bonus, benefits, executive search fees, and onboarding—can easily land between $600,000 and $1.2 million in year one. That’s before the six to nine months it typically takes a new executive to find their footing, and well before the first campaign ships. If the fit isn’t right, the clock resets. Spencer Stuart’s most recent CMO Tenure Study shows the average CMO at an S&P 500 company stays just 4.1 years—the second-shortest tenure in the entire C-suite. Most mid-market companies will cycle through two or three CMOs in a single decade of growth.

I spent 15 years on the inside of that model. As a CMO at financial institutions ranging from $5 million to $22 billion in assets, I led marketing through mergers and acquisitions, sat on ALCO and ESG committees, and built teams from the ground up. I believed in the full-time CMO model because I was the full-time CMO model. Then I stepped out of it—and the view from the outside changed something.

What I saw wasn’t primarily a talent problem or a strategy problem. It was structural. Companies were defaulting to a full-time, permanent, fully embedded leader without asking whether that model fit where they actually were—not where they hoped to be or where they’d been, but their current growth stage, current inflection point, and current set of marketing challenges.

The rise of fractional CMO leadership—experienced marketing executives engaging with companies on a part-time, defined-scope basis—is not a budget compromise or a stopgap. It is the market’s answer to a question most CEOs haven’t thought to ask:

“Is a full-time CMO what my company actually needs right now, or is that just what companies are supposed to hire?”

Is the Demand for Fractional Executives on the Rise?

Something Is Shifting. The numbers don’t tell the whole story, but they point in a consistent direction. A few years ago, only a couple thousand professionals on LinkedIn identified themselves as fractional executives. By early 2024, that number had crossed 110,000, and one recent industry report estimates there are now about 120,000 fractional leaders in the U.S.—roughly double what it was two years earlier. Analyst firms tracking demand from the client-side project that more than half of enterprises will be using external fractional talent by 2025; one in four U.S. businesses already does.

Skeptics call this a supply-side story—a wave of senior executives, displaced by layoffs or lured by flexibility, rebranding themselves as “fractional” and flooding the market. There is some truth in that. But supply doesn’t sustain itself without demand, and here the demand signal is structural, rooted in pressures that aren’t going away.

Rise in Fractional CMOs from Increased Pressure for Value Creation

Consider what’s happening to the full-time CMO role itself. Spencer Stuart’s data shows average tenure at S&P 500 companies has hovered stubbornly around four years since 2022, even as compensation has climbed. At the same time, roughly one-third of S&P 500 companies now have no named CMO at all, shifting responsibility to chief growth officers, president roles, or regional structures. Read together, those data points tell a coherent story: the traditional full-time CMO construct is increasingly misaligned with how a growing number of organizations really operate.

There’s another pressure that shows up in the CMO Survey—a longitudinal study now in its 34th edition. In 2025, 61% of marketing leaders reported increased pressure from their CEO to prove marketing’s financial value, up from 51% just two years earlier. The CFO pressure figure hit 63%. Boards climbed to 50%. That is not a problem a bigger salary solves. It is a problem that calls for a different kind of expertise: specific, current, cross-industry pattern recognition that tells a CEO not just what to do, but why it has worked before and where the landmines are. This is not a market fad correcting back to a prior equilibrium. It is a market adjusting to how companies actually grow and operate today.

The Benefits of Hiring a Fractional CMO

A full-time CMO is built for the long game: deep organizational knowledge, team building, and cultural continuity over time. A fractional CMO is built for a different kind of impact: immediate traction on a defined problem, with senior expertise that's ready to deploy from day one. And yes, we execute as well. For CEOs navigating a specific growth challenge, market inflection, or leadership gap, the fractional model offers three distinct advantages worth understanding.

Fractional CMOs Focus on Immediate Business Outcomes, Not Long-Term Careers

It’s Not About Hours. It’s About Orientation.

The most common misconception about fractional CMO leadership is that it’s a reduced version of the “real” thing: fewer hours, narrower scope, lighter commitment, more advisory, less execution. A full-time CMO with the volume turned down.

That framing misses the real distinction—and why it matters more than the price tag.

The difference isn’t hours. It’s orientation. Specifically, it’s about what that leader is trying to achieve when they make decisions. Those forces look very different depending on whether a CMO is building a long-term career inside your organization or delivering outcomes on a defined engagement outside of it.

How Career Goals Influence a CMO

Time horizon. A full-time CMO is, by design, playing a long game inside your company. They’re managing their reputation, their team’s loyalty, their relationship with the CEO, and their visibility with the board. Those are not illegitimate concerns—they are the natural result of embedding a person’s livelihood and professional identity inside a single organization. But they create a gravitational pull toward the cautious, the consensus-driven, the politically navigable. Recommendations get softened. Uncomfortable truths get timed carefully. Ambiguity and lack of accountability grows, particularly if it’s politically astute.

How Business Goals Influence a Fractional CMO

A fractional CMO’s time horizon is the engagement. Their currency is outcomes, not tenure. They have the advantage of clear goals straight from the CEO. Results are usually revenue and profit. They have no internal ladder to protect, no annual performance review to manage, no successor to outmaneuver. What they have is a track record that travels—across clients, across industries, across the next engagement after yours.

Expertise Patterns in Fractional CMOs vs Full-Time CMOs

Full-time CMOs, even exceptional ones, tend toward generalization over time. The longer they sit inside one organization, the deeper they go into that company’s products, politics, and challenges—and the more their world narrows. Fractional CMOs, by contrast, work across multiple engagements simultaneously or in close succession. They bring compressed cross-industry learning: the demand-generation playbook that worked in fintech applied to a founder-led professional services firm; the brand repositioning framework from a credit union merger stress-tested against a PE-backed healthcare roll-up. That kind of portable, pressure-tested expertise is difficult to hire full-time, because the full-time model, almost by definition, stops producing it.

Rapid Deployment of the Fractional CMO

Speed to value. The conventional wisdom is that any executive needs six to nine months to be effective. That may be true for someone learning a new organization from scratch. It is less true for someone who has diagnosed the same category of problem dozens of times and arrives with a framework that has already been field-tested.

Here’s a simple way to think about the contrast between fractional and in-house CMOs:

Dimension

In-House CMO

Fractional CMO

Time horizon

Career-long; optimizes for internal optics and politics

Engagement-scoped; optimizes for outcomes

Incentives

Promotion path and internal alliances matter

No internal ladder; candor is less risky than silence

Expertise

Deep in one org; generalist over time

Cross-industry pattern recognition; reusable playbooks

Speed to value

6–9-month ramp typical

Short ramp; can act quickly on familiar problem types

Risk if wrong

High switching cost; disruption to team and momentum

Easier to course-correct; less structural disruption

They are not auditioning for the permanent role. They are accountable to outcomes on a timeline short enough that candor is the only viable strategy. You can see this in practice across many Chief Outsiders client engagements, where fractional CMOs arrive with proven approaches and begin delivering clarity and traction in a matter of weeks, not quarters.

Where We Go Next

So far, the argument has been structural: two different leadership models, built for different realities, with different strengths and trade-offs. Fractional leadership doesn’t “win” everywhere. It wins in specific, definable contexts.

In the next article, I’ll get practical: when a fractional CMO is the better choice, when a full-time CMO is still the right answer, and how to match the leadership model to the moment instead of defaulting to habit.