The most expensive hidden cost in most scaling companies is the friction between marketing and operations. Marketing promises what operations cannot deliver. Operations constrains what marketing wants to promise. The result is a company that either over-promises to customers (and damages retention) or under-promises to prospects (and loses deals to competitors who market more boldly).
This tension is structural when CMO and COO are different people with different incentives, different performance metrics, and different accountability frameworks. The CMO is measured on pipeline and revenue. The COO is measured on margin, efficiency, and delivery reliability. These goals are frequently in tension, and when they conflict, the person with more CEO access wins - while the company loses.
The solution is not better communication between CMO and COO. The solution is a single executive who holds both perspectives simultaneously and makes integrated decisions that optimize for the company's actual goals - not departmental metrics.
This is not a common arrangement. Most fractional CMOs are marketing specialists. Most fractional COOs are operations specialists. Mark Gabrielli is one of the very few fractional executives with genuine depth in both functions - built through 20+ years of operating roles that spanned both revenue generation and operational execution.
When the same executive sets marketing messaging and owns operational delivery, the claims you make to prospects reflect what you can actually provide. No more "we can definitely do that" from sales followed by "operations says we cannot" six weeks into the engagement. The promise and the delivery are designed by the same person.
Pricing decisions require simultaneous understanding of market positioning (CMO lens: what can we charge?) and operational cost structure (COO lens: what does it cost to deliver?). When these are held by different executives, pricing is always a negotiation between functions. When held by one, pricing decisions are made with full information in real time.
Customer success and retention are operationally owned but marketing-leveraged. The NPS score, the case study, the testimonial, the referral program - these all sit at the intersection of operations (what you deliver) and marketing (how you communicate and amplify it). One executive who owns both can build the feedback loop that turns operational excellence into marketing advantage.
Product launches require simultaneous operational readiness (capacity, process, team training) and market readiness (positioning, demand gen, sales enablement). When CMO and COO are separate, launches are a coordination project. When they are the same person, launches are a single integrated decision about timing, scope, and resource allocation.
Revenue operations (RevOps) is the discipline of aligning marketing, sales, and customer success around shared data and processes. It naturally belongs under a leader who holds both the marketing and operational perspectives. One executive owning the full revenue cycle eliminates the RevOps alignment tax that separate CMO and COO structures always pay.
Investors and acquirers ask marketing and operational questions simultaneously. "How do you generate demand?" and "Can you scale delivery?" and "What are your unit economics?" are three dimensions of the same question. An executive who holds all three gives you a coherent answer where separate CMO and COO presentations often tell slightly incompatible stories.
Professional services firms, agencies, and B2B service companies where delivery quality and marketing reputation are directly linked. When what you sell is the experience of working with your company, the CMO and COO functions are inherently unified. One executive who understands both the positioning and the delivery creates service businesses that grow through reputation rather than despite it.
If sales is consistently over-promising what operations can deliver, if delivery margins are eroding because marketing attracted the wrong customer profile, or if operational constraints are limiting what marketing can credibly offer - this is the exact problem the CMO + COO engagement resolves. Both the strategic tension and the structural misalignment go away when one person holds the whole picture.
Early-stage companies often have a technical founder and a commercial founder but no operational infrastructure. A fractional CMO + COO gives you both the go-to-market engine and the operational foundation simultaneously - for a cost that is lower than hiring two separate fractional executives and eliminates the integration overhead entirely.
PE-backed companies are often told to "grow revenue and improve margins" simultaneously. These are in tension when marketing (revenue growth) and operations (margin improvement) are run separately with competing incentives. One executive who owns both levers can make the integrated tradeoffs that genuinely advance both goals - rather than trading one off against the other at every leadership meeting.
| Engagement Tier | Hours/Week | Monthly Investment | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| CMO + COO Essentials | 6-8 hrs/week | $8,000-$12,000/mo | $1M-$5M ARR, foundational build |
| CMO + COO Growth | 10-15 hrs/week | $12,000-$18,000/mo | $5M-$15M ARR, active scaling |
| CMO + COO Intensive | 15-25 hrs/week | $18,000-$28,000/mo | Pre-exit, turnaround, or rapid expansion |
Pricing is approximately 30-40% less than engaging separate fractional CMO and COO independently. All engagements are month-to-month after initial 3-month commitment with 30-day exit clause.
Most marketing executives understand marketing. Most operations executives understand operations. Very few executives have spent significant time at the leadership level in both functions - because career paths in corporate structures rarely allow it.
Mark's career ran through both paths: building demand generation programs and brand strategies while simultaneously managing the operational delivery, team structures, and client experience systems that determined whether the marketing promise was actually kept. Over 20+ years across SaaS, services, manufacturing, and PE-backed businesses, the recurring pattern was that revenue and operations problems were almost always the same problem viewed from different departments.
The dual-function engagement model was built from that pattern. When one executive holds both functions, the most expensive source of organizational friction - the gap between what marketing promises and what operations delivers - simply does not exist.
This is not a model that can be replicated by pairing two separate fractional executives. Two executives with separate accountabilities, separate board presentations, and separate billing relationships will optimize their individual functions - which is exactly the dynamic that creates the problem in the first place.
Both simultaneously. The value of the model is that decisions are made with the whole picture in view - not by alternating between hats. In a given week, Mark might develop the ICP positioning for a new market segment (CMO) and redesign the onboarding process that determines whether customers in that segment succeed (COO) and present both to the board as an integrated narrative. The functions are genuinely unified, not compartmentalized.
The combined CMO + COO model is most effective in companies with $500K-$20M ARR where the scale does not yet justify two full-time C-suite positions. Above $20M ARR, the operational and marketing complexity typically justifies separate dedicated executives who can each go deeper in their own domain. The transition point - when to split the functions - is something we plan and execute as part of the engagement.
The CMO + COO role functions as the senior executive layer above existing marketing managers, operations managers, and department leads. The existing team does not change - the engagement adds the senior strategic layer that most early-stage companies are missing. In practice, existing team members typically find that having clear strategic direction from a single executive makes their own work more focused and effective.
A well-run CMO + COO engagement builds the infrastructure for its own transition. The playbooks are documented, the processes are systematized, the team is developed, and the hiring criteria for full-time replacements are defined. When the engagement ends (or scales down to an advisory role), the company has the operational and marketing foundation to run the functions at a higher level than before the engagement started.
If your marketing and operations are misaligned - or if you simply need both functions built without two separate engagement fees - book a strategy call to discuss whether the combined CMO + COO model is the right structure for your company.
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