If you've been researching ways to bring senior leadership into your business without a full-time hire, you've probably encountered three terms used almost interchangeably: fractional leader, consultant, and interim executive. They're not the same thing, and choosing the wrong model for what your business actually needs can cost you time, money, and momentum.
Here's a plain-language breakdown of each, where they genuinely overlap, and how to know which one your situation calls for.
A fractional leader is a senior operator who works with your business on a part-time, ongoing basis. Embedded in your team, owning a function, and accountable for outcomes. The "fractional" part means you're accessing a portion of their time, not all of it. They might work two days a week with your company, or ten hours, or whatever scope the engagement requires.
What distinguishes a fractional leader from the other models is the nature of the relationship: they're inside the organization, not outside it. They attend your leadership meetings. They work with your tools. They manage your people. They set the direction for the function they own and carry the day-to-day responsibility for it. Accountabilities are accomplished the same way a full-time hire would, just without the full-time cost or the permanence.
A consultant is engaged to solve a specific, defined problem ... and then leave. They come in, assess the situation, develop a recommendation or a strategy, deliver it, and the engagement ends. The quality of the work can be excellent. The insight can be genuinely valuable. But the delivery mechanism is advisory: they tell you what needs to happen. Your team implements it.
This is a meaningful distinction, not a semantic one. When a consultant delivers a GTM strategy, you still need someone to run it. When a consultant recommends a CRM, you still need someone to implement it, drive adoption, and troubleshoot when it doesn't go as planned. The consultant's job ends with the recommendation. Everything after that lands back with the founder, or whoever on the internal team has capacity.
For businesses that have the internal leadership to execute on good advice, consulting is a sensible model. For businesses in the gap where the founder is already at capacity and there's no senior operator to pick up the implementation, it often doesn't deliver what the business actually needs.
An interim executive fills a leadership vacancy on a full-time, temporary basis. They step into a role which is typically a C-suite or VP-level position while the organization conducts a permanent search, manages a transition, or navigates a specific crisis or transformation. The engagement is full-time and finite: it has a defined end, usually tied to the permanent hire being in place.
Interim executives are the right model when there's a genuine vacancy, and the organization needs full-time presence to maintain continuity. A sudden CEO departure. A COO on extended leave. A post-acquisition integration that needs dedicated full-time leadership for a defined period.
What they're not designed for is an ongoing, part-time need. If your business doesn't need someone full-time but needs someone senior and embedded, an interim executive is an expensive and structurally misaligned solution.
Fractional leadership sits in a specific gap that neither consulting nor interim executive work fills cleanly.
It's the right model when:
A fractional leader isn't a temporary band-aid while you find the "real" hire. For many businesses at the scaling stage, fractional leadership is the right long-term model. Not a stopgap, but a deliberate structural choice that matches the actual demand for senior leadership with the actual cost of providing it.
If you need expert advice on a defined question = hire a consultant.
If you have a full-time vacancy and need someone in the seat while you search = hire an interim executive.
If you need a senior operator who owns the function, does the work, and is accountable for outcomes on a part-time basis, for as long as you need it = that's fractional leadership.
The model that most businesses default to when they can't afford or justify a full-time hire is consulting. It feels safer with a bounded scope, clear deliverables, and defined cost.
But the businesses that get the most from outside senior expertise are almost always the ones that bring someone in with genuine ownership, not just input. A fractional leader who runs your marketing function part-time will almost always outperform a consultant who advises on your marketing strategy because implementation is where strategy actually lives or dies.
The question worth asking isn't "can I afford fractional leadership?" It's "can I afford to keep operating without senior ownership of this function?"
The Learning Plan provides embedded fractional leadership across product, marketing, and operations for growing businesses in Ontario. If you're trying to figure out which model is right for your situation, start with a conversation.