The rise of fractional executives has become a popular talking point on LinkedIn. A label being inherited by many young CMO’s who find themselves out of work. But beneath the ambitious commentary lies a far more practical question for CEOs and boards:
Which leadership model delivers the right level of experience, pace, influence and value, for where the business is today?
Most are choosing between four models at C-suite level:
- Permanent executive
- Interim executive
- Fractional executive
- Consultancy
Each has strengths. Each has limitations. And cost, flexibility and experience—visible and hidden — can play a major role.
The Real Cost Comparison (CMO / Chief Growth Officer Level – UK)
Below are typical UK benchmarks for senior C-suite commercial leadership. Figures vary by sector and complexity, but this reflects market reality rather than recruitment marketing.
| Model | Typical Cost | Commitment | Key Reality |
| Permanent CMO | £150k–£200k+ salary (+ bonus, NI, pension, benefits) | Full-time | Deep immersion, slower pace, high fixed cost. Political and stakeholder management. |
| Interim CMO | £1,000–£1,500 per day | 4–5 days/week | Immediate impact, IR35 complexity, Deep experience in 1-2 sectors. |
| Fractional CMO | £1,200–£1,800 per day (typically 2–3 days/week equivalent) | Flexible | Board-level leadership without full-time cost. Pace flexible to the business. Broad experience cross sector. Trusted business advisor. |
| Consultancy | £1,500–£3,000+ per day (often blended teams) | Project-based | Insight-rich, ownership-light |
The difference is not just price — it’s how value is created and sustained.
Permanent Leadership: Depth, Continuity… and a Slower Burn
A permanent CMO can be the right choice when:
- The business is stable
- The growth model is proven
- Long-term cultural stewardship is the priority
Permanent leaders offer ownership, continuity and internal credibility.
However, at the right level of experience (£150k–£200k+), this model:
- Is unaffordable for many SMEs and mid-market businesses
- Moves at an inherently slower pace
- Requires time to earn boardroom gravitas and internal trust
There’s also a strategic risk: deep sector specialists often bring depth, but not always breadth.
Churning the same category playbooks rarely:
- Revolutionises culture
- Sets new paradigms
- Shifts consumer behaviour
Cross-sector perspective is often where real transformation comes from.
Interim Executives: Immediate Cover, Immediate Complexity
Interim CMOs excel when:
- There’s a sudden leadership gap with sector knowledge
- A business is in crisis or transition
- Five-day-a-week, on-site presence is essential
They bring pace, authority and operational certainty. However:
- Day rates are high over sustained periods
- IR35 has made genuine “outside” contracting harder and riskier
- Lack of continuity can unsettle a marketing team
- The role often focuses on covering rather than building
Interims stabilise. They don’t always future-proof.
Consultancies: Accepted Expertise, Limited Belonging
Consultancies offer:
- Strong frameworks
- Market insight
- Analytical horsepower
But culturally, they remain external.
Internal teams often:
- Don’t see consultants as “one of us”
- Feel strategies are done to them, not with them
- Struggle to maintain momentum once the project ends
Consultants advise.
They rarely own the outcome.
Fractional Leadership: Board-Level Thinking, Commercially Applied
Fractional executives sit in a different space altogether.
A true fractional CMO is not a “part-time marketer”.
They are business leaders and trusted board advisors who:
- Operate at exec and board level
- Influence strategy beyond marketing
- Bring cross-sector pattern recognition
- Build capability, not dependency
- Offer breadth of knowledge gathered from many businesses in next stage of growth
- Share a wide network of valuable contacts for business development and ‘virtual’ execution teams that flex around business needs.
They flex between:
- Strategic clarity
- Commercial decision-making
- Hands-on leadership when required
And crucially, they do this without the cost, risk or rigidity of a full-time hire.
Why Breadth Matters More Than Category Repetition
Many businesses default to sector specialists — assuming relevance equals impact.
In reality:
- Innovation comes from outside the category
- Culture shifts when assumptions are challenged
- Consumer behaviour changes when new reference points are introduced
Fractional leaders who’ve operated across:
- FTSE
- Private equity
- Founder-led growth
- Turnarounds and exits
Bring boardroom gravitas and commercial judgement that no single-sector career can replicate.
Choosing the Right Model for the Moment You’re In
There is no “best” option — only the best fit.
| Business Context | Most Effective Model |
| Stable, long-term growth | Permanent |
| Crisis or leadership gap | Interim |
| Discrete strategic project | Consultancy |
| Growth, change, ambition with flexibility | Fractional |
Fractional leadership is not a halfway house.
It’s a deliberate, senior, commercial choice.
Final Thought
The real question isn’t “Why fractional?”
It’s:
Why pay for more structure than you need — or less leadership than your ambition demands?
When delivered with experience, rigour and accountability, fractional leadership offers something rare: Board-level impact, operational credibility and commercial realism — without locking the business into yesterday’s model.