Startups without a CPO or Head of Product
The company is growing but no one owns product strategy. PMs execute but do not set direction.
Fractional Leadership
I step in at the product strategy level and own the roadmap, priorities and product decisions — when the company asks "how quickly can we ship it" but not "why are we building this".
In short
A Fractional CPO helps when product managers are delivering tasks, but no one owns product direction, metrics, strategy and the difficult decisions about what not to build. This is not another PM on the backlog — it is engagement at the level of product strategy and connecting the roadmap to business KPIs.
Symptoms of missing product leadership at the C level:
The company is growing but no one owns product strategy. PMs execute but do not set direction.
The CTO is strong in technology but is not equipped for product decisions and go-to-market strategy.
Investors will ask about product strategy, metrics, retention and monetization. You need someone who can structure this.
Many features, low coherence. The product is growing in different directions without product architecture.
Review of current roadmap, metrics, backlog and product decisions from the last 3 months. Identification of product debt and strategic gaps.
Definition or update of product strategy. Metrics hierarchy from business to product level. Initiative prioritization.
Setting up cycles: discovery, prioritization, sprint planning, review. Every week has a clear product decision rhythm.
1–2 days per week: product decisions, discovery, alignment with engineering and business. Available in Slack, on calls.
After 3–6 months: the system works, PMs are equipped. Either we continue or I prepare the hiring of a permanent CPO.
| Criterion | Fractional CPO | Product Manager |
|---|---|---|
| Level | C-level strategy and ownership | Execution and backlog management |
| Scope | Product strategy, roadmap, metrics, discovery | Epics, user stories, sprint execution |
| Accountability | For product direction and business outcomes | For delivering initiatives |
| When needed | No CPO, product without direction | You have a CPO, you need execution |
| Decisions | What we build and what we do NOT build | How to build what has been decided |
A PM manages the backlog and delivers initiatives. A Fractional CPO owns product strategy, metrics, direction and the difficult decisions about what not to build. A PM asks "how?", a CPO asks "why?" and "what instead?".
A CPO when the problem is about product strategy, prioritization, market alignment and decisions about what to build. A CTO when the problem is about technology, delivery, architecture and how to build. Often both roles are needed simultaneously — that is when Fractional CTO/CPO covers both.
1–2 days per week is standard. The initial phase (first 4 weeks) often requires 2–3 days for diagnosis and system setup. Then the operating rhythm: prioritization, decision calls, 1:1s with PMs.
At the seed-to-Series A stage — in most cases, yes. If you plan to hire a permanent CPO, the Fractional CPO builds the operating system, documents decisions and prepares onboarding so the new person does not start from scratch.
PMs gain structure and a decision framework. Instead of operating without strategic context, they get a clear KPI tree, prioritization and a decision rhythm. Most PMs experience this as unblocking, not oversight.
Fractional Leadership
I step into the company's operating rhythm and own product-tech decisions at C-level — without the full-time cost and without advisory work that ends at the slide deck.
Learn more →Growth & Execution
I diagnose where the company is losing conversion, retention and throughput — and build an experiment system that moves KPIs, not just closes tickets.
Learn more →Engineering Leadership
I step in as interim or fractional VP Engineering when engineering loses velocity: sprints are not closing, release cycles grow, seniors are overloaded with management. I restore delivery rhythm and ownership systems.
Learn more →