When Should You Hire a Fractional CFO?
Most founders bring in senior finance leadership later than they should. By the time the need becomes obvious — a cash crunch, a stalled fundraise, or a board that no longer trusts the numbers — the business has often already paid for the gap. A fractional CFO gives you that leadership without the full-time cost. Here are the signals that it is time.
Your revenue has outgrown your reporting
Once you pass roughly €1m in turnover, spreadsheet bookkeeping stops being enough. If your monthly numbers arrive weeks after month-end, or you cannot quickly answer how much cash you will have in 90 days, you are running the business with limited instruments. A fractional CFO puts timely management accounts and a forward view in place so you lead with facts.
You are raising — or planning to
Investors and lenders expect a credible model, clean historicals and someone who can defend the numbers in diligence. A fractional CFO prepares the data room, the forecast and the narrative so your raise does not stall on financial questions.
Cash feels unpredictable
Profitable businesses still fail when cash is mismanaged. If working capital, debtor collections and runway are not actively managed, a rolling 13-week cashflow forecast and tighter controls usually pay for themselves within a quarter.
Big decisions are made on instinct
Pricing changes, key hires, new markets — each has a financial shape. A CFO-level partner brings ROI thinking and scenario modelling, so the decisions that move the business are made with eyes open.
You are scaling fast
A 50% jump in revenue stresses every system. A fractional CFO builds the finance function — people, processes and reporting — that can carry growth instead of buckling under it.
If two or more of these sound familiar, it is worth a conversation. The fractional model gives you experienced, strategic finance leadership for a few days a month rather than a six-figure salary, scaled up or down as needs change.
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