How Part-Time CFOs Help Small Businesses Scale Profitably

Do I Need a CFO? 7 Signs Your $3M–$25M Business Is Ready for a Fractional CFO

 

Introduction

If you’re asking “do I need a CFO?”, the fact that the question reached your desk means the answer is probably yes — or close to it. Most $3M–$25M founders don’t ask the question casually. They ask it after a missed forecast, a tax surprise, a stalled raise, or a Sunday night spent rebuilding a cash flow spreadsheet at the kitchen table. This guide gives you a 7-sign diagnostic to know whether you’re ready for a fractional CFO, what one actually does, and the cost of waiting.

Sign 1 — You’re Operating Above $3M but Still Running on Bookkeeper Reports

A bookkeeper records what already happened. A controller cleans it up. A CFO tells you what to do next. Once revenue crosses $3M, the cost of a wrong decision (a bad hire, a stretched line of credit, an under-priced contract) usually exceeds the annual cost of a fractional CFO. If your most strategic financial input is a QuickBooks P&L emailed monthly, you’ve outgrown your stack.

Sign 2 — Cash Flow Surprises Are a Recurring Event

Healthy businesses still have tight weeks. Unhealthy ones get surprised by them. If payroll Friday is a sweat-it-out moment despite a profitable P&L, you have a working capital and forecasting gap — not a revenue gap. A CFO builds a 13-week rolling cash forecast so the next 90 days are never a surprise.

Sign 3 — You Can’t Answer Board, Bank, or Investor Questions Quickly

Lenders ask for trailing-twelve EBITDA, debt service coverage, and customer concentration. Investors ask for unit economics, CAC payback, and gross margin trends. If pulling these numbers takes you a weekend — or worse, you don’t track them at all — you’re leaving capital and credibility on the table.

Sign 4 — Margins Are Compressing and You Don’t Know Why

Revenue can grow while profit shrinks. It happens to almost every business between $5M and $15M. Without a CFO running margin analysis by service line, customer, or geography, the leak gets bigger every quarter. A fractional CFO typically identifies 2–4% in recoverable margin within the first 60 days.

Sign 5 — You’re Preparing for a Raise, a Sale, or a Major Investment

If a transaction is on the 12-month horizon, the cost of not having a CFO is measured in valuation multiples. Buyers and lenders pay more for clean books, defensible forecasts, and a finance leader who can stand in the room. A fractional CFO makes you transaction-ready months before you actually transact.

Sign 6 — Your Team Is Making Decisions Without Financial Guardrails

Sales is closing deals at margins you’d reject. Operations is hiring against budgets nobody has modeled. Marketing is spending without CAC targets. Without a CFO setting guardrails — pricing floors, hiring thresholds, ROI hurdles — every department is improvising on your dollar.

Sign 7 — You’re the Bottleneck on Every Financial Decision

If your team can’t move forward without your approval on a $7,500 software contract, you don’t have a financial leadership gap — you have a bandwidth and judgment gap. A fractional CFO gives your team a second financial brain so you can stop being the human approval queue.

🤔 So… Do You Need a CFO Yet?

If 3 or more of the signs above describe your business today, the answer is yes. The next question is what kind — and for most $3M–$25M companies, [a fractional CFO is the right fit, not a full-time hire](#) (we break the math down in [Blog 2: Fractional CFO vs Full-Time CFO](#)).

📋 CFO Readiness Self-Assessment

Answer the questions below honestly. If you answer “No” to even a few of these, it may be time to consider strategic CFO support.

1. Do you have a written, forward-looking budget and forecast to manage your business?

☐ Yes
☐ No

2. Do you review your cash flow at least weekly?

☐ Yes
☐ No

3. Can you clearly explain your current margins and profitability drivers?

☐ Yes
☐ No

4. Does your leadership team have accurate financial data to make decisions confidently?

☐ Yes
☐ No

5. Are your financial reports delivered consistently and reviewed monthly?

☐ Yes
☐ No

6. Do you have visibility into the next 90 days of cash flow?

☐ Yes
☐ No

7. Are you making strategic decisions based on financial forecasting instead of guesswork?

☐ Yes
☐ No

If you answered “No” to even a few of these questions, it may be time for strategic CFO guidance.

“Your CFO without the CFOverhead™”

Need clearer visibility into your cash flow, margins, and growth?

(602) 832-7070
ron@cfoformybusiness.com


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❓ Frequently Asked Questions

At what revenue do I need a CFO?
Most owners benefit from CFO-level support starting at $3M in revenue, and it becomes nearly essential at $5M+. Below $3M, a strong controller and a quarterly fractional CFO check-in often does the job. Above $5M, the cost of not having one usually exceeds the fee.
How much does a fractional CFO cost vs. a full-time CFO?
A full-time CFO in Phoenix, Las Vegas, or Salt Lake City typically costs $220K–$320K all-in. A fractional CFO delivers the strategic layer for $4K–$10K per month — roughly 20–30% of the full-time cost.
What’s the difference between a CFO and a controller?
A controller looks backward (accuracy, compliance, closing the books). A CFO looks forward (strategy, capital, forecasting, decisions). You usually need both, but most $3M–$25M businesses get the controller in-house and the CFO fractionally.
How quickly will I see results from a fractional CFO?
Most clients see a 13-week cash forecast and a clean monthly reporting package within the first 30 days, and tangible margin or working capital improvements within 60–90 days.

🎯 Conclusion

If you’ve made it this far, you’re past the “do I need a CFO” question and into the “how do I hire one” question. The good news: you don’t need to commit to a full-time executive to get full-time-grade financial leadership. CFO For My Business helps founders of $3M–$25M companies across Phoenix, Las Vegas, and Salt Lake City get clarity on cash, margin, and growth — without the six-figure salary.

Ready to find out exactly which of the 7 signs apply to you? Book a free 30-minute discovery call and we'll walk through your numbers together.

👤 About the Author

Ron Elwood is the Founder of CFO For My Business and a fractional CFO with 20+ years of experience helping owner-led businesses across the Southwest scale profitably. He has guided more than 100 companies through cash flow turnarounds, raises, and exits. Connect with Ron on LinkedIn.

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