Decision Library
Note You probably searched "fractional CMO." That's the right search, and this page addresses that model directly. I use the term Portfolio CMO to describe a specific embedded model that differs from traditional fractional arrangements. See the distinction in the FAQ below.

Marketing Hire vs. Portfolio CMO: How to Decide at Series A

Most founders frame this as a commitment question. It isn't. It's a sequencing question. The right answer depends on whether your GTM motion is proven, not on how much you want someone full-time.

Jump to: The Tension The Math Side by Side How to Decide The Verdict

The tension founders actually feel

You close your Series A. Your lead investor says, "Now build out the GTM motion." Your board wants to see marketing working. You have been running your own LinkedIn, writing your own emails, and closing the first 40 deals yourself. You know something needs to change. And the conventional answer is obvious: hire a VP of Marketing.

The conventional answer is wrong for most Series A companies. Not because full-time marketing leadership is a bad idea. Because the sequence is wrong.

Hiring a VP of Marketing before your GTM is proven is one of the most expensive experiments in the Series A playbook. You pay $200K to $275K per year in fully loaded cost. You wait 6 months for them to reach full productivity. And if your ICP, channel, or motion isn't settled yet, you have just handed someone a map that isn't finished and expected them to run a race.

First Round Capital research has found that the first marketing hire at a startup fails within 18 months roughly half the time. The failure is almost never about the person. It's about the role being undefined before it was posted.

The alternative isn't "hire cheap." It's "sequence right." A Portfolio CMO operates inside your leadership team, owns the same outcomes a full-time hire would, and does the strategy work that makes your eventual full-time hire productive from day one instead of month six.

This page walks through the decision clearly. No consultant pitch. Just the four questions that tell you which path is right for your company.

The math most founders skip

Before the strategic argument, there is a financial one. And it is sharper than most founders realize when they're in the excitement of a close.

Full-Time VP Marketing: Year One True Cost
Base salary (Series A market rate, 2025) $175,000 – $210,000
Benefits and payroll taxes (approx. 20%) $35,000 – $42,000
Executive recruiter fee (20–25% of base) $35,000 – $52,000
Equity (not cash, but real dilution) 0.3% – 0.6%
Total Year One cash cost $245,000 – $304,000

Then add the ramp. Egon Zehnder puts the median time-to-productivity for a VP Marketing hire at 6 months. That's half a year of full cost before you know whether the hire is working. At a company with 18 to 24 months of runway, that's a meaningful bet.

I know this pattern from both sides. Early in my career I was hired as VP of Marketing as one of the first dozen employees at a company that wasn't ready for the role. Not because I wasn't capable, and not because they didn't need marketing. Because they hired the title before they had the clarity the title required. I spent the first several months building the strategy that should have existed before I arrived. We got there, but slowly, and the company paid for the ramp twice: once in my salary, and once in the time it took to figure out what I was actually supposed to be doing.

The comparison isn't "pay less." It's "spend differently." Embedded senior leadership runs at roughly one-third the fully loaded cost of a full-time hire, without the 6-month ramp, the recruiter fee, or the equity dilution. The engagement ends when the GTM is proven and the full-time hire makes sense.

That's the model. Whether it's right for your company depends on the four questions below.

Side by side

This comparison assumes you are at Series A with $1M to $5M ARR and are deciding between your first dedicated senior marketing leader, hired full-time or brought in as an embedded Portfolio CMO.

Full-Time Hire
Portfolio CMO
Commitment signal Sends a clear signal to the team and board that marketing is a priority. Full-time presence is visible and accountable.
Commitment signal Reports directly to the CEO, owns pipeline goals, attends leadership meetings. Accountability is built into the engagement structure, not the employment status.
Time to productivity 6 months median before reaching full output. The first 90 days are typically orientation, relationship-building, and strategy formation.
Time to productivity Operational in week one. No orientation period. Senior practitioners have seen your situation before and do not need 90 days to understand it.
Flexibility Low. Once hired, you own the role, the salary, and the equity. Pivoting is slow and expensive.
Flexibility Month-to-month after an initial 90-day commitment. If priorities shift, the engagement adjusts. You are not locked into a hire that made sense in March.
What you get One senior person, full attention, deep institutional knowledge over time. The right choice once the GTM is proven and you need someone to scale a working engine.
What you get Senior judgment plus pattern recognition from multiple GTM situations. The right choice when the strategy is still being built and you need someone who has built it before.
Risk If GTM isn't proven before they start, they spend their ramp time figuring that out. Expensive for the work and slow for the timeline.
Risk Works best when the founder is operationally engaged. Not a fit if you want to hand off marketing entirely and check back in monthly.

The four questions that settle it

Stop thinking about this as "full-time vs. part-time." That's the wrong frame. The real question is whether your GTM is ready for a builder or still needs an architect.

Four Decision Criteria
Hire
Your ICP is locked and your sales motion is repeatable. You know exactly who buys, why they buy, and how they find you. The job is scaling what already works, not figuring out what works. A full-time hire thrives here.
Embedded
You're still testing ICP, channel, or motion. You have a product that closes deals, but you can't yet describe the pattern that predicts which deals close. This is a strategy problem before it is an execution problem. Embedded leadership does strategy work.
Hire
You have a marketing team of two or more who need a full-time leader. A team without a dedicated leader loses momentum fast. If you have headcount to manage, a Portfolio CMO structure doesn't give them the daily presence they need.
Embedded
Your last marketing hire didn't work out, and you're not sure why. If the role was wrong before, hiring again into the same undefined role produces the same result. Embedded leadership clarifies the role before the next hire is made.
Hire
You are at $3M ARR or above with a clear path to $10M. Above this threshold, you typically have enough GTM signal to make a full-time hire productive. Below it, the risk of the wrong hire is higher than the cost of staying embedded.
Embedded
You want to know the strategy before you commit to the person. The GTM Sprint plus embedded model lets you validate the approach, then hire someone to execute it. You are not asking a full-time hire to figure out and execute simultaneously.

A note on the "I need someone all in" instinct. It's real and worth taking seriously. But full commitment is not the same as full-time employment. A Portfolio CMO who owns pipeline goals, reports to the CEO, and is operational twice a week is more committed to outcomes than a full-time hire who is still figuring out the ICP in month four. Ownership comes from accountability structures, not org chart boxes.

One thing worth saying directly

I have a financial interest in this comparison. I run a Portfolio CMO practice. You should weigh that when reading my view.

Here is what I would tell you if I had no stake in the outcome: hire full-time as soon as you can make the hire productive. The embedded model is a bridge, not a destination. The goal is to build enough GTM clarity that the full-time hire doesn't spend their ramp time doing the work that should have been done before they arrived.

If you are at $3M ARR with a proven ICP and a repeatable sales motion, the bridge is built. Hire the person.

If you are at $1.2M ARR with three segments you're still testing and a sales motion that varies deal by deal, the bridge is still under construction. Hiring full-time now doesn't accelerate the crossing. It just puts a more expensive person on an unfinished bridge.

If you want to talk through where you are, that is exactly what a 30-minute call covers. No pitch. Just a direct read on which path makes sense for your situation →

The Summary

Hire full-time when the GTM is proven. Use embedded leadership when it isn't.

Full-Time Hire: Right When...

The engine is built and needs to scale

  • ICP is locked and repeatable
  • Sales motion is documented and working
  • Marketing team has two or more people to lead
  • ARR is at $3M or above with clear $10M path
  • You want deep institutional knowledge over time
Portfolio CMO: Right When...

The strategy still needs to be built

  • ICP is still being tested across two or more segments
  • Previous marketing hire didn't work out
  • You need the strategy before you can define the role
  • ARR is under $3M and GTM motion is still forming
  • You want flexibility as priorities evolve post-raise
Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about this decision

Should a Series A company hire a full-time VP of Marketing or use a Portfolio CMO?
It depends on whether your go-to-market motion is proven. If your ICP is locked and your sales process is repeatable, hire full-time. If you are still testing ICP, channel, or motion, bring in embedded leadership first. Hiring full-time before GTM is proven costs $180K-$240K per year plus 6 months of ramp time before you know whether the hire will work.
What is a Portfolio CMO and how is it different from a fractional CMO?
A Portfolio CMO works in an embedded capacity inside the leadership team, typically 2-3 days per week, and owns outcomes the same way a full-time CMO would. The fractional CMO label often describes an advisory model where someone advises from outside without deep operational involvement. The distinction matters: advisory doesn't move pipeline. Embedded operational leadership does.
How long does it take for a full-time VP Marketing to become productive?
Egon Zehnder research puts the median time-to-productivity for a VP Marketing hire at 6 months. At a Series A company with 18-24 months of runway, that is a significant portion of your operating window before you know whether the hire will work. If GTM isn't proven before they arrive, those 6 months are spent building the strategy the company should have had before the hire.
What does a full-time VP Marketing actually cost at Series A?
Total cash cost for a VP Marketing hire at Series A typically runs $245K-$304K in year one when you include salary, benefits, and recruiter fees (standard executive search runs 20-25% of base). That is before any marketing budget, tools, or headcount. The question isn't whether you can afford the hire. It's whether you have enough GTM clarity to make the hire productive on arrival.
When does it make more sense to hire full-time?
Four conditions point toward a full-time hire: your ICP is locked, your sales motion is repeatable, you have a marketing team of two or more who need a dedicated leader, and you are at $3M ARR or above with a clear path to $10M. Below those thresholds, the risk of hiring the wrong person into an undefined role is higher than the benefit of having someone full-time.
Why do first marketing hires fail so often at Series A startups?
First Round Capital research has found the first marketing hire at a startup fails within 18 months roughly half the time. The failure is almost never about the person. It's about the role being undefined, the GTM being unproven, and the company expecting the hire to figure out the strategy and execute it simultaneously. Embedded leadership addresses the strategy layer first, so the full-time hire executes against a clear foundation.

Ready to talk?
30 minutes. No agenda.

Tell me where you are. ARR, team size, what's broken, what you've already tried. I'll tell you honestly which path makes sense and whether I think I can help.