
FoodTech companies hit a wall when founder-led marketing runs out of gas. You need senior leadership to build the team, set the strategy, and fix the unit economics. But a full-time CMO costs $300K+ and takes six months to hire. A fractional CXO gives you the experience now, at a fraction of the cost, for exactly as long as you need it.
Founder-led marketing stops working after product-market fit
The founder who hustled the first 10,000 orders through personal networks and scrappy tactics isn't the same person who should be building a marketing organization. Founder-led marketing creates dependency on one person's instincts, lacks process and measurement rigor, and doesn't scale. But the company isn't ready for a $350K CMO hire. The gap between founder-led marketing and professional marketing leadership is where most foodtech companies stall.
Marketing hires without senior leadership fail
You hired a growth marketer. Maybe a content person. Perhaps a social media manager. They're executing tactics without strategy. Nobody is setting priorities, building the measurement framework, or connecting marketing activity to business outcomes. Junior marketers without senior leadership produce activity without impact. They run campaigns without understanding unit economics, create content without an editorial strategy, and spend budget without attribution. The result is wasted spend and frustrated teams.
Marketplace dynamics require specialized marketing experience
FoodTech marketing isn't standard B2C marketing. You're acquiring consumers, onboarding restaurants, retaining drivers, and managing brand across a three-sided marketplace. A marketing leader who's only worked in single-audience businesses won't understand the complexity. They'll over-invest in consumer acquisition while neglecting the supply-side marketing that keeps restaurants and drivers on the platform. Marketplace marketing requires specific experience that most CMO candidates don't have.
Full-time CMO hiring is slow, expensive, and risky
The average CMO search takes 4-6 months. During that time, your marketing operates without leadership. When you finally hire, there's a 3-month ramp period before they're effective. And CMO tenure across industries averages under three years — in startups, it's often under eighteen months. You're looking at 7-9 months before impact and a meaningful risk of a mis-hire that costs you a year of progress plus severance.
A fractional CXO engagement starts with a 30-day diagnostic. We assess your current marketing organization, channel performance, unit economics, and marketplace health across consumers, restaurants, and drivers. This isn't a surface-level audit — it's the same deep assessment a new CMO would do in their first month, compressed into two weeks because we've done it in foodtech before.
Strategy development follows the diagnostic. We build the marketing roadmap for the next 12 months: channel strategy, team structure, budget allocation, and measurement framework. For foodtech, this means balancing consumer acquisition with restaurant supply growth, designing promotional strategies that don't destroy unit economics, and building the brand program that reduces long-term acquisition costs.
Team building is a core part of the engagement. We help you hire the right people, define the right roles, and create the management structures that let a lean team execute effectively. In foodtech, this often means a consumer growth lead, a restaurant partnerships marketer, and a brand/content person — rather than the generic marketing org chart that doesn't fit marketplace dynamics.
Ongoing leadership provides the strategic guidance your team needs week to week. This includes marketing leadership team meetings, budget and performance reviews, agency and vendor management, and executive-level marketing perspective in leadership discussions. The fractional model means you get senior leadership at 20-30% of the cost of a full-time hire, for exactly the duration you need it.
Transition planning ensures the engagement has a clear endpoint. Whether you're building toward a full-time CMO hire, a strong VP of Marketing, or a self-sufficient team, we design the transition from day one. The goal is to make ourselves unnecessary — not to create permanent dependency.
The best time to bring in a fractional CMO is before you need a full-time one. The diagnostic, strategy, and team-building work that a fractional leader does in 90 days sets the foundation for the full-time hire to succeed — instead of spending their first six months figuring out what you could have already solved.
The 90-day sprint is structured around three phases: diagnose (days 1-30), build (days 31-60), and lead (days 61-90). The diagnostic phase assesses everything — channels, team, tech stack, unit economics, competitive position, and marketplace health. The build phase creates the strategy, hires the first key roles, and establishes the measurement infrastructure. The lead phase focuses on execution — running the marketing function, coaching the team, and proving the model works.
What distinguishes this from a consulting engagement is the operational involvement. A fractional CXO doesn't hand you a deck and leave. They run the marketing standup. They review the campaign performance. They sit in the leadership meeting and represent marketing with the authority of a C-suite executive. The value is in the doing, not the advising.
Most foodtech fractional engagements run 6-12 months. The first 90 days establish the foundation. Months 4-6 optimize and scale. Months 7-12 focus on transition — either hiring the full-time replacement or proving the team can operate independently. Every engagement has a defined exit plan from the start.
The first 30 days are intensive: stakeholder interviews, channel audit, unit economics analysis, competitive review, and team assessment. You get a marketing diagnostic document and a 12-month roadmap by day 30. This phase requires significant time from your leadership team — we need to understand the business deeply to lead it effectively.
Days 31-60 focus on building. We launch priority initiatives, begin hiring for key roles, establish the measurement framework, and start the regular cadence of marketing leadership meetings. This is where the fractional model proves its value — you get immediate execution from someone who's done this before, not a learning curve.
Days 61-90 shift to steady-state leadership. The team is forming, channels are running with proper measurement, and the marketing function operates with professional rigor. We're running weekly leadership meetings, monthly performance reviews, and quarterly strategy sessions.
Typical involvement is 15-20 hours per week. The engagement includes a senior marketing executive with foodtech marketplace experience. Your team needs to provide a point of contact for day-to-day coordination and access to existing marketing tools, data, and vendor relationships.
If your foodtech & delivery company needs fractional cxo leadership, we should talk.

Let us take a custom approach to your growth goals by assembling and leading the best-in-class marketing team to support your next stage.
Fractional CXO engagements for foodtech companies typically range from $15K-$30K per month depending on scope and time commitment. Compare that to a full-time CMO at $300K-$400K annual salary plus equity plus benefits. The fractional model delivers senior leadership at roughly 20-30% of full-time cost, with no long-term commitment and no severance risk.
Most engagements run 6-12 months. The first 90 days establish the strategy, team, and measurement foundation. Months 4-6 optimize and scale. Months 7-12 focus on transition. Some companies extend beyond 12 months if the fractional model continues to be the right fit for their stage. Every engagement has a defined exit plan from day one.
The fractional CXO operates as a member of your leadership team with full marketing authority. They attend leadership meetings, manage marketing team members, and make budget decisions within agreed parameters. The integration is designed to be indistinguishable from a full-time executive to your team — the only difference is the hours per week and the defined engagement timeline.
We specialize in marketplace and foodtech dynamics that generalist fractional CMOs don't understand. Multi-sided marketplace marketing — balancing consumer acquisition, restaurant supply, and driver retention — requires specific experience. We also bring a team behind the fractional leader: strategy support, creative resources, and analytics capabilities that a solo fractional CMO can't provide.
We measure against the outcomes defined in the 12-month roadmap: channel performance improvements, team hiring and ramp timelines, unit economics trends, and marketing's contribution to revenue. The clearest ROI metric is time-to-impact — a fractional CXO delivers marketing leadership in 30 days versus 6+ months for a full-time hire. We also track the cost of the engagement versus the marketing budget decisions it influences.
It depends on the gap. If your VP of Marketing is strong on execution but needs strategic guidance, a fractional CXO provides the senior mentorship and strategic framework they need to level up. If your VP is struggling with marketplace complexity, the fractional CXO can diagnose whether the issue is skill, strategy, or support — and fix it. The fractional model works alongside existing leadership, not as a replacement.
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