If you're researching fractional CMOs and marketing agencies at the same time, you're probably in one of two situations. Either your marketing feels all over the place and you're not sure who's supposed to be overseeing it, or you've been paying an agency for a while and you can't trace the spend back to how it’s exactly increased revenue. Both of those situations point to the same underlying question, and it's not really about which option is cheaper.
The real question is, who should own marketing strategy in your business, and who should be executing it?A fractional CMO and a marketing agency solve different problems. When you hire the wrong one for your stage, you either waste money on execution without direction or pay for strategic leadership you're not ready to use. Some fractional partners (including Her Business Alliance) also handle execution directly when you don't have a team or agency in place, which changes the math on what you actually need to hire. This article walks through the actual differences, the real costs, and a decision framework I use with the businesses I work with, so you can figure out which one your business needs right now.
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Fractional CMO vs Marketing Agency at a Glance A fractional CMO is a senior marketing executive who works with your business part-time, owns your overall marketing strategy, and is accountable to revenue outcomes. A marketing agency is an execution partner that runs specific campaigns or channels under someone else's direction. If your problem is giving strategic direction, then you need a fractional CMO. If your problem is "we have a clear plan but nobody to run the campaigns," you need an agency. Many growing businesses end up using both, with the fractional CMO directing the agency. |
A fractional CMO is a senior marketing executive who works with your business part-time, owns your overall marketing strategy, and is accountable to revenue outcomes. A marketing agency is an execution partner that runs specific campaigns or channels under someone else's direction. If your problem is giving strategic direction, then you need a fractional CMO. If your problem is "we have a clear plan but nobody to run the campaigns," you need an agency. Many growing businesses end up using both, with the fractional CMO directing the agency.
A fractional CMO owns strategy, prioritization, and accountability for marketing outcomes. A marketing agency owns execution of specific tactics like paid ads, SEO, or content production. The fractional CMO decides what to do and why. The agency handles how to do it within their specialty.
This distinction matters because the two roles constantly get confused, especially by agencies that market themselves as offering "strategy." Most agencies provide channel-level strategy, which means they'll tell you how to run better Meta ads or how to structure an SEO campaign. That's different from business-level marketing strategy, which involves deciding what your positioning is, which channels deserve investment, how marketing connects to sales, and how every dollar ties back to revenue.
According to Gartner's 2025 CMO Spend Survey of 402 marketing leaders, 22% of CMOs reported that generative AI has enabled them to reduce their reliance on external agencies for creativity and strategy building, and 39% plan to cut agency budgets this year. The shift is happening because businesses are realizing that what they actually needed was strategic leadership, not more execution capacity.
| The core distinction in one line: A fractional CMO leads your marketing function. An agency runs a piece of it. |
A fractional CMO sits inside your business, reports to or works alongside the CEO, and is responsible for the overall performance of marketing as a function. They're accountable for whether marketing is actually driving revenue, not only whether content and campaigns are being produced on time.
Here's what that includes in practice:
Agencies exist because executing modern marketing requires specialists, volume, and tooling that's hard to build internally. A good agency brings focused expertise in a specific channel, a team of people who do that work every day, and platform access that would be expensive to replicate.
Where agencies outperform:
The point isn't that agencies are worse than fractional CMOs. The point is that they're built for a different job. When an agency is briefed well by someone who owns the strategy, they produce great work and both see success! When they're hired to figure out the strategy themselves, the results are usually disappointing for both sides.
Fractional CMO retainers in the US typically range from around $3,000 to $15,000 per month depending on scope and experience, with hourly rates between $200 and $500 per hour. Marketing agency retainers vary enormously by specialty, with full-service agencies typically charging $5,000 to $25,000 per month plus ad spend, and specialist agencies ranging from $2,000 to $15,000 depending on channel.
Surface-level math makes it look like agencies are cheaper for execution and fractional CMOs are cheaper than a full-time hire. That's true, but it misses the real comparison.
Here's the actual cost breakdown, using executive search data from Spencer Stuart which places full-time CMO total compensation between roughly $250,000 and $400,000 annually:
The cost that usually gets missed: the hidden percentage-of-spend fee. Most full-service and media-buying agencies charge somewhere in the range of 10% to 20% of your ad budget on top of their retainer. On a $25,000 monthly paid media budget, that's an additional $2,500 to $5,000 every month on top of what you're already paying. And this structure creates a direct financial conflict of interest, since the agency earns more when you spend more, regardless of whether increased spend is actually the right move (MarketingProfs).
| Dimension | Fractional CMO | Marketing Agency |
|---|---|---|
| Primary role | Strategic leadership and accountability | Channel or campaign execution |
| Who owns strategy | The fractional CMO | Usually the client or undefined |
| Accountable to | Revenue, sales/lead pipeline, business outcomes | Deliverables and activity metrics |
| Typical cost (US, 2026) | $3,000 to $15,000 per month | $2,000 to $25,000 per month plus potential percentage of spend |
| Integration with team | Embedded, attends leadership meetings | External vendor relationship |
| Specialization | Generalist across marketing and business | Deep in a specific channel or function |
| Hidden fees | Typically none, transparent retainers | Percentage of ad spend, setup fees, tool fees, production markups |
| Scales with business | Flexible retainer, month-to-month | Scope-based, often requires larger contracts |
| Conflict of interest risk | Low, incentive is aligned with business outcomes | Higher, especially on percentage-of-spend models |
| Best for | Businesses needing direction, alignment, and accountability | Businesses needing execution capacity on a defined strategy |
This is the part most comparison articles skip, and it's worth understanding before you make the decision. Businesses default to agencies because agencies sell activity, and activity feels like progress.
When you hire an agency, something starts happening immediately; ads go live, content goes out, and reports arrive. There's a sense that marketing is being "handled." That feeling is valuable in the early days of a business, when founders need to offload pieces of their mental to-do list and see visible motion.
Strategic leadership looks and feels different. In the first 30 to 60 days, a fractional CMO is often doing research, audits, stakeholder interviews, and pipeline analysis. From the outside, that doesn't physically "feel" like progress in the same way. A founder who doesn't understand what strategic work produces can feel impatient during that window.
There's also a pricing psychology factor. A $3,500 agency retainer paying for visible deliverables feels more concrete than a $3,500 fractional CMO retainer paying for decisions and direction. Both produce value, but one is tangible in the moment while the other is what sets the business up for long term success.
The businesses that figure this out the fastest are the ones that have already been burned by agencies. They've paid for execution without strategy, watched their money disappear into campaigns nobody could tie to revenue, and realized that the missing piece was more direction rather than tactics.
Hire a fractional CMO instead of an agency when your primary problem is strategic, not executional. Here are your clearest signals:
A marketing agency is the better choice when you already have strategic clarity and the gap is execution capacity. Specifically:
The failure mode for this choice is hiring an agency before strategy is defined or before you have someone overseeing performance of them, and expecting them to figure it out. They might try, but channel-level agencies are not set up to make business-level strategic decisions, and they shouldn't be held accountable for outcomes they don't control.
Yes, and this is often the strongest structure for growing businesses with execution already in motion. A fractional CMO owns strategy and oversight, while the agency executes within their specialty. The fractional CMO briefs the agency, sets KPIs tied to revenue, reviews performance, and holds the agency accountable.
This hybrid model solves the two main problems with each approach on its own. The agency gets clear direction and is set up to succeed with a good brief, which they rarely get when they're hired directly by a founder. The business gets execution capacity plus strategic leadership, which is what most growth-stage companies actually need.
In practice, the structure looks like this → The fractional CMO is active 10 to 40 hours per month depending on tier, sets the marketing strategy, decides which channels to invest in, and manages the agency relationship. The agency handles the specialist execution, whether that's paid media, SEO, content, or creative.
The work doesn't end at setup. A fractional CMO is constantly evaluating performance and optimizing based on what the data actually shows. That means reviewing agency reports, then connecting those numbers back to internal business data the agency doesn't see, like closed deals, sales velocity, customer lifetime value, and where deals are getting stuck. Agency reports show channel performance. The fractional CMO layers that against revenue reality and decides whether to pivot, double down, or reallocate.
The founder gets weekly or biweekly updates from the fractional CMO, who has synthesized agency performance and internal data into business-level takeaways, so every update answers what's working, what's not, and what's changing next.
This is where some fractional models differ. Most fractional CMOs operate strategy-only and expect you to bring execution separately, which means hiring an agency or freelancer on top of them. At Her Business Alliance, the model is built to flex across the full execution spectrum. Strategy-only when you already have a team or agency doing the work, and full strategy plus hands-on implementation (paid ads, SEO, landing pages, dashboards, tracking, CRO) when you don't. That means you're not forced to add another vendor just to get the work moving.
The honest truth about oversight is this: when you're already paying agencies and can't trace the spend back to revenue, the problem is almost certainly a lack of strategic oversight, not a failure of the agencies themselves. A fractional CMO stepping into that situation is often the fastest way to rescue the agency investment you're already making.
Most businesses assume their agency is the problem when results are underwhelming, but the diagnosis is usually more nuanced.
Before you fire your agency, check whether these things are true:
If you check all of those and results are still underwhelming, the agency might be the issue. But in my experience, when businesses hire a fractional CMO to audit "underperforming" agency relationships, the issue usually turns out to be that strategic oversight was missing. Once the oversight is in place, the same agency often starts performing better inside of 60 to 90 days.
Choose a fractional CMO when your business is missing strategy, leadership, accountability, or cross-functional alignment. Choose a marketing agency when it lacks execution capacity in a specific channel where strategy is already clear.
If you're still not sure, ask yourself one question: when you think about marketing in your business, is the problem that things aren't getting done, or that the things getting done aren't moving the needle?
The right answer also depends on what you already have in place. If you have internal marketers or an agency running, a fractional CMO leading strategy and oversight is usually the cleanest structure. If you don't have either, and building a team or managing a new agency isn't where you want to spend your energy, look for a fractional partner who operates across strategy and execution so you're hiring one person instead of three.
Most growing businesses I work with end up in a hybrid setup inside six months. A fractional CMO owning the strategy and measurement infrastructure, while a specialist agency or two handling the execution-heavy channels, and the founder freed up to run the business instead of marketing it. Now the business can grow!