Not All Roles Need to Be Full-Time

Not All Roles Need to Be Full-Time

Not All Roles Need to Be Full-Time

Is Fractional Leadership the Future?

Dear Reader,

I’ve been thinking a lot about the rise of fractional leadership. Traditionally, this model has thrived in startups, scale-ups, and private equity – where part-time CFOs, CTOs, or Operating Partners step in during key moments.

But as this recent HBR podcast explores, fractional leadership is now showing up in other spaces including mission-driven organisations. And I believe the social impact sector needs to pay attention.

Because when funding is tight but the stakes remain high, we can’t afford not to invest in talent. Fractional roles offer a powerful middle ground: senior expertise without permanent overhead.

The questions for our sector are real:

  • Do enough experienced leaders actually want fractional roles?
  • Where would you even find them? (We don’t yet have a true marketplace.)
  • What’s the right structure – by time, deliverables, or outcomes?
  • How do you manage boundaries in high-pressure environments?

In some countries, part-time or shared leadership is already the norm – Europe especially. Perhaps it’s time we explored how that might work more widely.

And here’s where it becomes more personal.
I’ve started asking myself if this might also be a path for ex-CEOs like me. Not just as interims to hold the fort, but as fractional partners – Chief Strategy Officers, Chief Clarity Officers, Operating Partners – supporting other leaders in deeper way than mentoring or advising for a few weeks or months.

The idea excites me: being embedded enough to share the camaraderie and drive of a team, while still having the freedom to work across multiple organisations. At the same time, I wonder if it’s simply a passing curiosity or something I should intentionally create.

I’ve joined a board recently, which I hope will meet some of that need to belong more deeply. But I’m still wrestling with the balance between depth and freedom, between independence and being “in it” with others.

I don’t have the answers. But I suspect I’m not alone.

So I’d love to hear from you:
Would you consider bringing in a fractional leader or becoming one?
And what might it take for this model to take a greater hold in our sector in more areas?

Warmly,
Liz

Strategic Advisor | Former CEO | Founder, Volante

Based in Kenya, available globally