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Don't Hire a CTO. Hire the Decisions You Actually Need.
Before hiring a CTO, ask what decisions you truly need. Fractional may fit better. Most founders ask the wrong question.
Don't Hire a CTO. Hire the Decisions You Actually Need.
Most founders ask the wrong question.
"Should I hire a full-time CTO?"
That's not the decision.
That's the symptom.
What's Really Happening
Here's the pattern:
- Tech starts feeling complex
- Decisions feel heavier
- Investors start asking deeper questions
- You want "senior leadership"
So you default to a $220K hire + equity.
It feels responsible.
It feels mature.
Six months later?
Wrong fit. Wrong stage. Expensive lesson.
The Title Confusion
When I hear:
"They'll manage devs, review code, build features."
I know immediately:
That's not a CTO.
That's a VP of Engineering.
A CTO defines:
- Architecture direction
- Technical risk strategy
- Build vs. buy decisions
- Long-term platform leverage
A VP of Engineering manages:
- Developers
- Sprints
- Delivery
- Hiring pipelines
Those are different jobs.
And at $2-5M in revenue, most companies don't need either one full-time.
What You Actually Need at This Stage
At this level, the real needs look like:
- Better technical decisions
- Clear architectural direction
- Risk reduction before scale
- Someone who's seen this stage before
Notice something?
Those are monthly needs.
Not daily ones.
You don't need someone sitting in every standup.
You need someone making the right calls on:
- Platform direction
- Infrastructure maturity
- Security posture
- Hiring timing
That's strategic leverage.
Why Fractional Makes Sense
Fractional leadership works because it matches the stage.
You get:
- Senior-level judgment
- Pattern recognition from past mistakes
- Clear decision frameworks
- No equity dilution
And when the company truly needs full-time technical leadership?
You hire with clarity.
Not panic.
The Real Risk
The biggest mistake isn't hiring a CTO too late.
It's hiring one too early for the wrong reasons.
Titles feel like progress.
But progress comes from better decisions, not bigger payroll.
Before you commit to a $220K salary + equity, ask:
What decisions do we actually need help with?
If the answer is strategic and periodic not operational and daily you don't need a full-time CTO.
You need the right level of leverage.
If you're thinking about a CTO hire in the next 6 months:
Don't hire a title.
Hire the decisions you actually need.