Fractional CMO Scope of Work: Responsibilities, Deliverables & Engagement Model (2026)

A fractional CMO's scope of work includes executive marketing strategy, go-to-market planning, demand generation oversight, team and agency management, pipeline accountability, and board reporting.

However, it excludes hands-on execution like ad management, content writing, or graphic design.

Scope varies by company stage. Early-stage companies ($2M-$5M ARR) focus on foundational strategy and team building. Scaling companies ($5M-$20M ARR) require multi-channel orchestration and revenue optimization.

Clear scope definition prevents misalignment, ensures accountability, and justifies investment by distinguishing executive leadership from tactical execution.

Scope Overview: What's Included vs Excluded

Included (Strategic)

  • Go-to-market strategy
  • Demand generation oversight
  • Team & agency management
  • Budget allocation decisions
  • Pipeline accountability
  • Board-level reporting
  • Sales alignment & SLAs

Excluded (Tactical Execution)

  • Daily ad management
  • Content writing
  • Graphic design
  • Social media posting
  • Technical SEO execution
  • Email campaign building
  • CRM data entry

Key principle: Fractional CMOs own strategy, make high-stakes decisions, and hold execution teams accountable. They delegate specialized, time-intensive execution work to appropriate resources.

What Is Included in a Fractional CMO's Scope of Work?

A fractional CMO's scope focuses on executive-level marketing responsibilities that drive revenue outcomes and strategic alignment.

Strategic Leadership

Fractional CMOs own the strategic direction of all marketing efforts.

They define go-to-market approach, positioning, target customer profiles, channel architecture, and growth roadmaps. They make high-stakes decisions about where to invest budget, which markets to enter, and how to differentiate competitively.

Note that this is CEO-peer level strategy, and not departmental planning.

Revenue Alignment

Fractional CMOs are accountable for marketing's contribution to revenue: pipeline targets, CAC optimization, lead quality standards, and marketing-attributed ARR.

They work cross-functionally with sales leadership to establish service-level agreements, improve conversion rates, and accelerate deal velocity.

Fractional CMOs help turn marketing into a measurable revenue engine.

Marketing Infrastructure Design

Fractional CMOs build the systems, processes, and frameworks that enable scalable growth.

These include attribution models, reporting dashboards, marketing operations workflows, tech stack optimization, and data governance.

They establish the infrastructure that allows marketing to scale from $5M to $50M+ ARR without breaking.

Executive Accountability

Fractional CMOs report to the CEO or board, present marketing performance in business terms (CAC trends, pipeline contribution, revenue attribution), and defend marketing investments with ROI data.

They operate as executive team members with strategic authority and accountability for outcomes-not middle managers executing plans created by others.

Core Strategic Responsibilities

The strategic layer represents the highest-value fractional CMO deliverables.

Go-to-Market Strategy

Fractional CMOs architect how the company acquires, converts, and retains customers across the entire customer lifecycle.

This includes:

  • Market segmentation and ICP definition (which customer segments to prioritize)
  • Buyer journey mapping and touchpoint optimization
  • Channel selection and sequencing (which channels support which funnel stages)
  • Product-market fit validation and messaging framework
  • Competitive positioning and differentiation strategy
  • Market entry plans for new segments, verticals, or geographies

Go-to-market strategy answers: "How do we systematically and profitably acquire customers at scale?"

Positioning & Messaging

Fractional CMOs define how the company and product are perceived in the market:

    • Value proposition development (why customers choose you over alternatives)
    • Messaging hierarchy (primary message, supporting pillars, proof points)
    • Competitive differentiation (what makes you uniquely valuable)
    • Narrative frameworks for sales, website, campaigns, and investor communications
    • Persona-specific messaging (how value proposition varies by buyer role)

This work ensures all marketing and sales communications reinforce a consistent, compelling market position.

Demand Generation Strategy

Fractional CMOs own the strategy for creating predictable, scalable pipeline:

    • Multi-channel demand architecture (how paid, content, events, partnerships work together)
    • Lead generation targets and conversion benchmarks by funnel stage
    • Nurture strategy and lifecycle marketing frameworks
    • Lead scoring and qualification criteria
    • Campaign strategy and testing roadmaps
    • Attribution modeling to measure channel contribution

They define what to build; specialists and agencies execute the builds.

Channel Strategy & Prioritization

Fractional CMOs determine where to invest marketing resources:

    • Channel mix optimization (paid search, paid social, content, SEO, events, ABM, partnerships)
    • Budget allocation across channels based on CAC, LTV, and payback economics
    • New channel experimentation frameworks (when to test, how to validate, when to scale)
    • Channel retirement decisions (killing underperforming programs)
    • Integrated campaign orchestration (how channels support each other)

This prevents the common failure mode of running every channel mediocrely instead of excelling in prioritized channels.

Pricing & Packaging Input

While not owning final pricing decisions (typically CEO or product), fractional CMOs provide market-informed input:

    • Competitive pricing analysis and positioning
    • Packaging strategy (tiers, feature bundling, upsell paths)
    • Pricing psychology and perception management
    • Value metric optimization (per user, per seat, usage-based)
    • Discount strategy and promotional frameworks

Marketing must understand and influence pricing because it directly impacts positioning, conversion rates, and customer acquisition economics.

Growth Roadmap Creation

Fractional CMOs build multi-quarter growth plans connecting marketing initiatives to revenue targets:

    • Quarterly and annual marketing objectives tied to company goals
    • Initiative prioritization and sequencing (what to build when)
    • Resource requirements (budget, headcount, tools, agencies)
    • Milestone definitions and success criteria
    • Risk identification and mitigation plans

This roadmap becomes the strategic plan the CEO and board evaluate marketing performance against.

Annual Marketing Planning

Fractional CMOs lead the annual planning process:

    • Marketing budget development and justification
    • Headcount planning and organizational design
    • Technology and vendor planning
    • Campaign calendar and major initiative scheduling
    • Goal-setting and KPI alignment with company objectives

Annual planning ensures marketing investments align with business priorities and available resources.

Budget Allocation

Fractional CMOs control how marketing budget is distributed:

    • Channel budget optimization based on ROI and strategic priorities
    • Agency and vendor budget management
    • Campaign budget allocation and reallocation based on performance
    • Tool and technology budget optimization (eliminating redundant martech)
    • Experimental budget for testing new channels or tactics

Budget authority is essential-fractional CMOs can't drive results if they recommend strategy but don't control resource allocation.

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What Is NOT Included in a Fractional CMO's Scope

Clarifying what fractional CMOs don't do prevents misalignment and sets appropriate expectations.

Day-to-Day Ad Management

Fractional CMOs define paid advertising strategy (audience targeting, budget allocation, creative direction, testing frameworks).

But they don't log into Google Ads or Facebook Ads Manager daily to adjust bids, write ad copy, or upload creatives.

That's specialist work requiring 20-40 hours weekly.

Fractional CMOs review performance weekly and make strategic adjustments (shift budget, change targeting, kill underperforming campaigns). The execution part belongs to agencies or in-house performance marketers.

Graphic Design

Fractional CMOs provide creative direction (brand positioning, messaging, campaign concepts). They don't design landing pages, create social graphics, or produce visual assets.

Design execution requires specialized tools and skills (Figma, Adobe Creative Suite) that are inefficient uses of executive time.

Fractional CMOs approve designs and provide feedback, but designers-internal or agency-create the assets.

Copywriting Production

Fractional CMOs define messaging frameworks, value propositions, and content strategy.

However, they don't write every blog post, email, case study, or web page.

Writing production is time-intensive execution work.

Fractional CMOs might write high-stakes copy (pitch deck positioning, website hero message, key sales collateral) but delegate ongoing content production to writers, content managers, or agencies.

Technical SEO Execution

Fractional CMOs own SEO strategy (keyword prioritization, content architecture, link-building approach).

They don't perform technical audits, fix site speed issues, implement schema markup, or optimize crawl budgets.

Technical SEO requires specialized expertise (HTML, JavaScript, server configuration) outside typical CMO skill sets.

Fractional CMOs hire SEO specialists or agencies and hold them accountable to traffic and ranking targets.

Social Media Posting

Fractional CMOs define social media strategy (platform prioritization, content themes, posting cadence).

As with other things mentioned earlier, they don't schedule daily posts, respond to comments, or create social graphics.

Social media management is ongoing tactical work requiring daily attention.

Fractional CMOs review performance monthly and adjust strategy, but social media managers or agencies handle execution.

The pattern: Fractional CMOs own strategy, make high-stakes decisions, and hold execution teams accountable. They delegate specialized, time-intensive, or repetitive execution work to appropriate resources.

Operational & Leadership Responsibilities

Beyond pure strategy, fractional CMOs integrate into the organization and build execution capacity.

Marketing Team Leadership

Fractional CMOs provide strategic direction and coaching to internal marketing teams:

  • Setting team goals and individual KPIs
  • Weekly or bi-weekly team meetings and performance reviews
  • Skill development and capability building
  • Career coaching and professional development
  • Conflict resolution and team dynamics management
  • Establishing accountability frameworks and work processes

Team sizes vary from 1-2 people at early-stage companies to 5-15 at scaling companies. The fractional CMO ensures the team executes strategically, not just tactically.

Hiring & Organizational Structure Design

Fractional CMOs determine what marketing roles to hire and when:

  • Organizational structure design (which functions, reporting relationships, seniority levels)
  • Job description creation for new roles
  • Candidate interviewing and hiring decisions
  • Onboarding and 30/60/90-day goal-setting for new hires
  • Compensation benchmarking and offer negotiation
  • Performance management and termination decisions when necessary

This ensures marketing team growth aligns with strategic needs rather than reactive gap-filling.

Agency & Vendor Management

Fractional CMOs select, manage, and hold agencies accountable:

  • RFP creation and agency selection
  • Contract negotiation and scope definition
  • Weekly or bi-weekly agency performance reviews
  • Creative and strategic direction
  • Budget oversight and ROI evaluation
  • Agency replacement when performance is inadequate

Without executive oversight, agencies optimize for their metrics (impressions, clicks, MQLs) rather than business outcomes (pipeline, CAC, revenue). Fractional CMOs ensure alignment.

KPI Dashboard Creation

Fractional CMOs establish the metrics and reporting infrastructure:

  • Defining primary KPIs (CAC, LTV, pipeline contribution, conversion rates)
  • Building or specifying dashboard requirements
  • Establishing reporting cadence (weekly, monthly, quarterly)
  • Data governance and attribution methodology
  • Forecasting models for pipeline and revenue contribution

Clear KPIs enable data-driven decision-making and performance accountability.

Reporting to CEO / Board

Fractional CMOs translate marketing performance into business outcomes for executive and investor audiences:

  • Monthly CEO updates on pipeline, CAC trends, and initiative progress
  • Quarterly board presentations showing marketing's revenue contribution
  • Investor communications during fundraising (due diligence data, growth narratives)
  • Executive team participation (strategy discussions, cross-functional alignment)

Board-level reporting requires translating marketing activity into language CEOs and investors understand: growth rates, unit economics, competitive positioning, and risk mitigation.

Sales Alignment

Fractional CMOs work directly with VP Sales or CRO to ensure marketing-sales coordination:

  • Lead handoff process and SLA definition (what qualifies as sales-ready)
  • Sales enablement (pitch decks, case studies, competitive battle cards)
  • Territory and account planning for ABM programs
  • Pipeline review meetings (lead quality, conversion bottlenecks, deal velocity)
  • Revenue attribution and source tracking

Marketing-sales misalignment is one of the most common growth bottlenecks; fractional CMOs own the resolution.

RevOps Collaboration

Fractional CMOs partner with revenue operations teams on:

  • CRM and marketing automation integration (Salesforce, HubSpot, Marketo)
  • Lead routing and assignment logic
  • Data hygiene and deduplication processes
  • Attribution modeling and multi-touch tracking
  • Funnel analysis and conversion optimization

RevOps executes the technical implementation; fractional CMOs define the strategic requirements.

Scope by Company Stage

Fractional CMO scope adjusts based on company maturity, revenue, and strategic priorities.

Early-Stage Startup ($1M-$5M ARR)

Primary focus: Foundation-building and validation

Scope emphasizes:

    • ICP validation and target market definition
    • Positioning and messaging framework creation
    • Early channel experimentation and validation (which channels show promise?)
    • Basic attribution and metrics infrastructure
    • Agency or contractor selection for execution
    • Founder coaching on marketing strategy and storytelling

Deliverables:

  • Go-to-market strategy document
  • Messaging framework and value proposition
  • Channel testing roadmap with success criteria
  • Marketing budget and hiring plan
  • Investor-ready marketing narrative

What's different: Less focus on optimization (insufficient data) and more on establishing foundations. Scope is narrower but foundational-building the frameworks that enable future scale.

Post-PMF Growth Company ($5M-$10M ARR)

Primary focus: Systematization and repeatability

Scope emphasizes:

    • Demand generation system design (repeatable, scalable pipeline creation)
    • Multi-channel orchestration (how paid, content, events work together)
    • Sales-marketing alignment and SLA definition
    • Marketing operations buildout (attribution, dashboards, workflows)
    • Team hiring and capability development
    • CAC/LTV optimization and unit economics improvement

Deliverables:

  • Integrated demand generation strategy
  • Channel budget allocation with ROI targets
  • Marketing-sales SLA and handoff process
  • KPI dashboard and reporting cadence
  • Marketing org structure and hiring roadmap

What's different: Shift from validation to optimization. Scope expands to include team management, cross-functional alignment, and metrics rigor.

$10M-$20M ARR Scaling Company

Primary focus: Optimization and expansion

Scope emphasizes:

    • Multi-channel performance optimization and budget reallocation
    • New market or segment expansion strategy
    • Advanced attribution and revenue modeling
    • Marketing team scaling and specialization
    • Agency performance management across multiple vendors
    • Board-level reporting and investor communication
    • Product marketing and launch strategy for new offerings

Deliverables:

  • Annual marketing plan with quarterly milestones
  • Channel mix optimization with CAC benchmarks by source
  • Expansion market go-to-market strategy
  • Marketing org redesign for specialized functions
  • Board presentation template and quarterly review process

What's different: Scope is comprehensive. Fractional CMO operates as full executive with authority across all marketing functions, deep cross-functional integration, and accountability for significant revenue contribution.

Mature Organization Restructuring ($20M+ ARR)

Primary focus: Turnaround or transformation

Scope emphasizes:

    • Rapid diagnostic assessment (what's broken? why?)
    • Strategic reset and repositioning
    • Underperforming program elimination
    • Team restructuring and performance management
    • Agency consolidation or replacement
    • Marketing-sales realignment after drift
    • Interim leadership during full-time CMO search

Deliverables:

  • 30-day diagnostic report with strategic recommendations
  • Restructuring plan (team, budget, agency changes)
  • Quick-win implementation (2-3 high-impact fixes in 60 days)
  • Updated marketing strategy aligned with current business priorities
  • Hiring plan for permanent CMO or VP Marketing

What's different: Faster pace, more ruthless prioritization, focus on stabilization before optimization. Engagements often shorter (6-12 months) as fractional CMO fixes issues then transitions to permanent leadership.

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Typical Deliverables in the First 90 Days

Clear deliverables create accountability and demonstrate value quickly.

Days 1-30: Assessment & Quick Wins

Marketing audit:

  • Current state analysis: channels, campaigns, performance, spend efficiency
  • Team and agency capability assessment
  • Tech stack audit (redundancies, gaps, integration issues)
  • Competitive positioning review
  • Data and attribution assessment

Funnel analysis:

  • Conversion rate analysis at each funnel stage
  • Bottleneck identification (where are we losing prospects?)
  • Lead quality assessment (are marketing leads converting to revenue?)
  • Attribution breakdown (which channels drive revenue vs vanity metrics?)

Quick wins implementation:

  • Budget reallocation from underperforming to high-ROI channels
  • Messaging updates on high-traffic pages
  • Lead handoff process fixes between marketing and sales
  • Obvious conversion blockers removed (broken forms, unclear CTAs)

Output: 30-day assessment report with strategic recommendations and quick-win results.

Days 31-60: Strategic Roadmap & Foundation

Strategic roadmap:

  • 6-12 month marketing strategy document
  • Go-to-market plan for target segments
  • Channel strategy and budget allocation
  • Positioning and messaging framework
  • Campaign calendar and major initiatives

KPI alignment:

  • Define primary success metrics (CAC, pipeline contribution, conversion rates)
  • Establish baseline performance and targets
  • Build or specify dashboard requirements
  • Set reporting cadence (weekly, monthly, quarterly)

Team assessment:

  • Individual capability evaluations
  • Skill gap identification
  • Hiring or development priorities
  • Organizational structure recommendations

Output: Strategic roadmap, KPI framework, and team development plan delivered to CEO and executive team.

Days 61-90: Execution Launch & Early Results

Budget realignment:

  • Shift budget based on strategic priorities and quick-win learnings
  • Kill or pause underperforming programs
  • Invest in validated high-ROI channels
  • Establish budget governance and approval processes

Execution kickoff:

  • Launch priority initiatives from strategic roadmap
  • Agency or vendor adjustments (new hires, scope changes, terminations)
  • Marketing-sales alignment formalized with SLAs
  • Team goals and individual KPIs set

Early results tracking:

  • Measurable improvements in 1-3 key metrics (10-20% CAC reduction, 15-30% pipeline growth typical)
  • Executive dashboard operational with weekly updates
  • Board presentation prepared showing progress and strategy

Output: Quarterly business review presentation showing strategy, progress, early wins, and next 90-day priorities.

How Scope Impacts Cost

Scope breadth and depth directly influence fractional CMO pricing.

Hours Per Week

Scope determines time commitment:

  • 1-2 days/week ($8K-$12K/month): Narrow scope, early-stage company, limited team oversight, foundational strategy only
  • 2-3 days/week ($12K-$18K/month): Standard scope, growth-stage company, demand gen oversight, team and agency management
  • 3-4 days/week ($18K-$25K/month): Comprehensive scope, scaling company, multi-channel optimization, extensive cross-functional work

More responsibilities require more time; fractional CMOs can't deliver full executive scope in 8 hours monthly.

Engagement Model

Scope complexity affects structure:

  • Retainer (most common): Fixed monthly fee for defined scope and time commitment, predictable costs
  • Hourly ($250-$500/hr): Limited scope projects (strategy audit, messaging workshop, interim leadership), unpredictable total cost
  • Hybrid: Base retainer + performance incentives for scope tied to specific outcomes (pipeline targets, CAC goals)

Broader scope favors retainers; narrow project scope works hourly.

Level of Oversight

Scope responsibility impacts cost:

  • Strategy-only: Fractional CMO creates plans, others execute with minimal oversight ($10K-$15K/month)
  • Strategy + oversight: Fractional CMO creates plans and manages execution teams weekly ($15K-$20K/month)
  • Full executive ownership: Fractional CMO owns all decisions, manages all teams/agencies, reports to board ($20K-$25K+/month)

Higher accountability and integration increase cost.

Strategic Depth

Scope complexity drives pricing:

  • Single-channel focus: (e.g., "fix our paid ads") requires less strategic depth ($8K-$12K/month)
  • Multi-channel orchestration: (integrate paid, content, events, ABM) requires sophisticated strategy ($15K-$20K/month)
  • Full go-to-market transformation: (repositioning, new markets, organizational restructuring) requires maximum strategic depth ($20K-$25K+/month)

Complex scope requires more senior expertise, commanding higher rates.

Fractional CMO vs Marketing Director Scope

Fractional CMOs and marketing directors operate at different strategic altitudes.

Strategic Ownership

Fractional CMO:

Owns the "what should our marketing strategy be?" question. Defines go-to-market approach, positioning, channel mix, and budget allocation. Creates the strategy the company executes.

Marketing Director:

Executes strategies defined by CMO or CEO. Manages campaigns, optimizes channels, and coordinates team-but doesn't set strategic direction or challenge foundational assumptions.

Cross-Functional Authority

Fractional CMO:

Operates as CEO peer with authority to influence product roadmap, pricing strategy, sales process, and company positioning. Participates in executive decision-making beyond marketing.

Marketing Director:

Authority limited to marketing function. Provides input to cross-functional discussions but doesn't drive decisions outside marketing domain.

Budget Accountability

Fractional CMO:

Full P&L-style accountability for marketing ROI. Defends budget to CEO and board with CAC, LTV, pipeline contribution, and revenue attribution data. Can reallocate or cut spend without approval.

Marketing Director:

Manages budget but doesn't own final allocation decisions. Requests budget changes through CMO or CEO. Accountable for execution efficiency, not strategic ROI.

Board-Level Reporting

Fractional CMO:

Presents directly to board, frames marketing in business terms (unit economics, competitive positioning, growth trajectory), and fields investor questions during fundraising.

Marketing Director:

Rarely presents to board. Reports through CMO or CEO. Prepares materials but doesn't deliver executive-level strategic narrative.

When you need both:

The optimal structure for many $10M-$20M ARR companies is fractional CMO (executive strategy, $180K-$240K annually) managing a marketing director (execution leadership, $120K-$150K salary)-delivering complete marketing leadership for $300K-$390K total, less than a single full-time CMO.

FAQs About Fractional CMO Scope

No.

Fractional CMOs own campaign strategy (objectives, targeting, messaging, budget, success metrics) and provide execution oversight (weekly reviews, performance evaluation, optimization direction).

They delegate hands-on work to specialists, agencies, or internal team members.

They define what to build, approve creative and targeting, and hold execution teams accountable. However, they don't log into ad platforms daily, write every email, or create graphics. Using a $200-$500/hour executive for execution work is economically inefficient.

Most fractional CMOs work 2-3 days per week (16-24 hours) or 8-12 days per month.

This involves strategic planning, executive meetings, team coaching, agency oversight, performance reviews, and board presentations. Availability for urgent decisions between scheduled days varies by agreement. Fractional CMOs don't provide 40-hour-per-week presence but deliver high-leverage strategic work in concentrated time blocks.

Yes. Managing agencies is a core fractional CMO responsibility.

They select agencies through RFP processes, negotiate contracts and scope, provide strategic direction and creative briefs, review performance weekly or bi-weekly, audit ROI, and replace underperforming vendors.

Without executive oversight, agencies optimize for their metrics (clicks, impressions) rather than business outcomes (pipeline, CAC, revenue). Fractional CMOs ensure agency work aligns with strategic priorities and delivers measurable results.

Yes. Fractional CMOs design organizational structure (which roles, when to hire), write job descriptions, interview and select candidates, negotiate offers, onboard new hires, set 30/60/90-day goals, and manage performance.

They determine whether to hire specialists (demand gen manager, content lead, product marketer) or use agencies, and ensure team capabilities match strategic needs.

For smaller teams (1-5 people), the fractional CMO provides hands-on coaching and leadership. For larger teams, they may recommend hiring a marketing director to handle day-to-day management.

Essential contract elements:

  • Scope definition: Specific responsibilities, deliverables, and time commitment (e.g., "2 days/week, strategic planning, team oversight, board reporting")
  • Exclusions: What's explicitly not included (e.g., "excludes ad management, content writing, graphic design")
  • Compensation: Monthly retainer, payment terms, reimbursable expenses
  • Term: Initial commitment (3-6 months), renewal process, termination notice period (30-60 days)
  • KPIs: Success metrics and reporting requirements (e.g., "pipeline contribution, CAC trends, monthly executive updates")
  • Authority: Decision-making power (budget control, hiring authority, strategic autonomy)
  • Ownership: Work product belongs to company, confidentiality terms

Clear contracts prevent scope creep and misaligned expectations.

Defining the Right Scope for Your Company

Use these factors to determine appropriate fractional CMO scope.

By revenue:

  • $1M-$5M ARR: Focus on foundational strategy, positioning, early channel validation, and metrics infrastructure. Narrow scope, 1-2 days weekly.
  • $5M-$15M ARR: Comprehensive demand generation oversight, team management, multi-channel orchestration, sales alignment. Standard scope, 2-3 days weekly.
  • $15M-$30M ARR: Full executive responsibilities including board reporting, organizational design, advanced attribution, expansion strategies. Broad scope, 3+ days weekly or transition to full-time.

By growth goals:

  • Maintaining current growth: Strategy refresh, optimization focus, limited scope
  • 50-100% growth target: Comprehensive scope including new channel development, team scaling, aggressive optimization
  • Market expansion or repositioning: Full executive scope with strategic transformation, organizational restructuring

By team size:

  • 0-2 people: Fractional CMO + agencies/contractors, focus on strategy and vendor management
  • 3-8 people: Strategy + team leadership + agency oversight, standard scope
  • 10+ people: Consider fractional CMO + marketing director or transition to full-time CMO

By budget:

  • $200K-$500K total marketing budget: Narrow scope, foundational work
  • $500K-$1M budget: Standard scope, demand gen optimization
  • $1M+ budget: Comprehensive scope, multi-channel sophistication, consider full-time CMO

By strategic complexity:

  • Single product, single ICP, straightforward positioning: Focused scope on execution optimization
  • Multiple products, segments, or markets: Comprehensive scope including portfolio strategy
  • Regulated industry, complex sales cycles, technical buyers: Deep strategic scope requiring specialized expertise

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