Founders without a technical co-founder
You need someone to own technology and product decisions so you can focus on business, sales and investors.
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.
In short
Fractional CTO / CPO support makes sense when a company is too early for a full-time executive, but too complex for product and technology decisions to be handled ad hoc by founders, senior developers or an external software house. This is not side-line consulting. ProLabs steps into the company's operating rhythm: roadmap, priorities, architecture, delivery, hiring, build-vs-buy decisions, metrics and communication with the board or investors.
Common signals that a company has outgrown ad-hoc product-tech decisions:
You need someone to own technology and product decisions so you can focus on business, sales and investors.
The company has traction but execution cannot keep up with growth. You need a system, not just more hands.
The fund is looking for an external operator to enter the company and deliver against round KPIs.
Your CTO left or you cannot yet justify a full-time hire — you need continuity at the decision level.
Every new feature costs more and release cycles are lengthening — you need someone who sees the systemic problem.
First 1–2 weeks: conversations with the team, review of backlog, architecture, metrics and delivery process. Identify the 3 biggest blockers.
Concrete changes in work rhythm, ownership and priorities. Not theory — first decisions and commitment to outcomes.
1–2 days per week in Slack, calls, sprint reviews and 1:1s with key people. I make decisions, not just recommendations.
Monthly progress summary against KPIs for the founder and board. Transparency about what is changing and why.
After 3–6 months: either we continue or I prepare the hiring of a permanent CTO/CPO with a ready-made working system.
| Criterion | Fractional CTO | Interim CTO |
|---|---|---|
| Commitment | 1–2 days/week, long-term | Full-time for 3–12 months |
| Accountability | Strategic and operational in rhythm | Full operational like a permanent CTO |
| Cost | 20–30% of full-time executive cost | Close to full-time salary + agency |
| Best fit | Scaling without a critical gap, VC-readiness | Critical gap: CTO left, exit prep |
| Equity | Rarely, retainer model | Rarely or symbolic |
| Availability | Regular, remote-first (CET timezone) | On-site or remote, intensive |
A technology advisor provides recommendations and finishes at the document. A Fractional CTO participates in the delivery rhythm — sprints, decisions, 1:1s with engineers, hiring and investor communication. They are accountable for implementation, not just advice.
The standard model is 1–2 days per week. During the intensive change phase (first 4–8 weeks) this is often 2–3 days. It depends on company complexity and scope of intervention.
Yes. In many companies, the Fractional CTO works alongside an existing technical leader — complementing them at the strategic, decision-making or product level. Often it also serves as mentorship for a technical CTO who needs support with business alignment.
A minimum of 3 months — that is how long it takes to diagnose, set up the system and see first results. Most engagements run 6–18 months. Some companies opt for a permanent arrangement as strategic C-level support.
In many startups at the seed-to-Series A stage — yes, for at least 12–18 months. If you plan to hire a permanent CTO, the Fractional CTO builds the operating system so the new executive has context and does not start from scratch.
Remote-first, CET timezone. For key moments (kick-off, workshops, QBR), on-site meetings in Poland are possible. I also work with founders and VC/PE across Europe — Germany, Scandinavia, UK, the Netherlands.
Due Diligence & Risk
I assess execution risk and a company's readiness to deliver its investment plan. Not just technology — architecture, ownership, roadmap, metrics and team competence.
Learn more →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".
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 →Teams & Scaling
A larger team does not automatically mean faster delivery. I help design the structure, roles and work rhythm that scales throughput — not just headcount.
Learn more →