Portland’s tech ecosystem has carved out a distinctive niche in open source, developer tools, and sustainable technology, with a growing cluster of B2B SaaS companies. The city’s lower cost of living than Seattle or San Francisco, combined with a strong engineering culture, makes it an attractive base for companies that want to build thoughtfully rather than chase hypergrowth for its own sake.
Thoughtful products still need systematic revenue growth. That’s where the gap usually appears.
This is the gap a fractional Chief Revenue Officer is designed to close.

Product Culture Without Revenue Architecture
Portland’s B2B companies tend to be product-first and sales-second. That’s a feature when building something people genuinely need. It becomes a bug when the company needs to scale revenue predictably and the sales function was built as an afterthought. The challenge isn’t convincing Portland companies to sell – it’s giving them a system that doesn’t feel like it compromises their product-first values.
What a Fractional CRO Actually Does
A fractional CRO is not a sales trainer. Not a consultant who hands you a slide deck and disappears. Not someone who runs demos or makes cold calls.
A fractional Chief Revenue Officer is an executive who owns your revenue function – pipeline architecture, forecast integrity, sales process, team performance, tech stack, and board reporting – delivered on a fractional basis. They sit in your leadership meetings. They own the number. They rebuild the system that produces the number.
For Portland’s B2B companies between $5M and $75M ARR, this is the role that bridges the gap between “the founder can’t be in every deal anymore” and “we’re not ready to commit $400,000+ to a full-time CRO.” It’s executive-level revenue leadership at a fraction of the cost, with none of the ramp time.
Why Fractional Over Full-Time
A full-time CRO commands $350,000 to $500,000 in total compensation – base, bonus, equity. Then add six to nine months of ramp time before they’re fully operational. That’s north of half a million dollars committed before you know if the hire is right.
A fractional engagement starts with a Revenue Diagnostic – a deep, structured assessment of your pipeline, forecast, team, process, and tech stack. Four weeks. Clear deliverables. Then, if the fit is right, ongoing fractional leadership at a fraction of the full-time cost. You get the strategic capability of a CRO who has built revenue engines before, without the overhead of a full-time executive hire that may or may not work out.
For companies managing burn rate while scaling revenue, that math matters.
A Different Revenue Operating System
Most fractional CROs will audit your pipeline and give you a report. The engagement I bring goes further – it installs a revenue operating system built on a fundamentally different understanding of how modern buyers buy.
The core principle is simple: the harder you push, the more buyers resist. Every legacy sales methodology was built for a seller-controlled information environment. Buyers now complete 70-80% of their journey before they ever talk to your team. The approach has to match that reality.
That means replacing hope-based pipeline with math-verified pipeline. It means qualifying deals by the cost of inaction, not the buyer’s budget. It means building a forecast your board can actually trust, because it’s based on buyer agreements – not seller activity metrics.
This isn’t theory. It’s an operating system that gets installed, measured, and refined until the revenue engine runs without the founder in every deal.
Is This Right for Your Company
This engagement is built for a specific situation. If you’re a B2B or SaaS company in Portland with $5M-$75M in ARR, board pressure to scale, and a revenue function that isn’t converting the way the pipeline suggests it should – this is worth a conversation.
If you need someone to make calls, run demos, or provide a temporary lift with a new talk track – this isn’t the right fit. And I’d rather tell you that upfront than waste your time.
I help B2B companies fix the revenue systems that legacy methodologies broke. If something on this page made you uncomfortable, it was probably the part that’s true. Stop the bleeding.
I help B2B companies fix the revenue systems that legacy methodologies broke. If something in this post made you uncomfortable, it was probably the part that's true. Stop the bleeding.