[('Can one person serve as both fractional CRO and fractional CGO?', 'Yes, at the fractional level. A full-time CRO or CGO typically operates in one lane. A fractional engagement at 15-20 hours per week can cover both functions because the work is sequential: diagnose the architecture first (CGO), then install the execution system (CRO).'), ('How do I know if my technology services company needs a CRO or CGO?', 'If your top reps are succeeding but the team cannot replicate their results, you need a CRO. If your revenue has plateaued despite strong execution, you need a CGO. If both are true - which is common - you need someone who can play both roles.')]

Revenue Leadership Strategy

CRO vs CGO:
Which One Does
Your Company Need?

Most companies hire a CRO when they actually need a CGO. The distinction is not just a title. It determines whether the revenue problem gets fixed at the execution layer or at the architecture layer.

The Core Difference

What CROs and CGOs Actually Do

Chief Revenue Officer

Owns the number, the pipeline, and the team

The CRO optimizes a go-to-market system that already exists. They run the forecast, manage the VP of Sales, set quotas, and drive execution. They are experts at making a functioning revenue machine run better.

Chief Growth Officer

Owns the model, the market, and the architecture

The CGO asks whether the go-to-market system itself is built for the right buyer in the right market. They address positioning, pricing strategy, business model evolution, and the transition from one growth phase to the next.

When You Need a CRO

Your go-to-market architecture is sound but execution is broken

Pipeline stages are undefined. Forecast methodology is optimistic. Rep performance is inconsistent. If the system is right but the execution is wrong, a CRO fixes it.

When You Need a CGO

Your go-to-market architecture is built for a market that no longer exists

Sales motion designed for the wrong buyer. Pricing model facing AI-driven commoditization. Revenue growth that has stalled despite good execution. If the system itself is wrong, a CRO cannot fix it.

The Inversion GTM Approach

Playing Both Roles

Kevin French serves as Fractional CRO & CGO - playing both roles because most technology services companies need both. The CRO work (forecast, pipeline, team) and the CGO work (architecture, positioning, model evolution) cannot be separated when the go-to-market needs to be rebuilt from the foundation.

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