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Industry Specialization

Fractional CMO for Food and Beverage Brands

Brand strategy, retail marketing, and direct-to-consumer growth for emerging food and beverage brands competing against established category leaders.

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4.9★193 Reviews
90%Retention Rate
19+Ventures Built
$50M+Revenue Generated
30Days to First Results
Quick Answer

A fractional CMO for food and beverage companies is a part-time Chief Marketing Officer with expertise in CPG and F&B go-to-market -- retail placement strategy, DTC demand generation, distributor marketing support, brand storytelling, and the category management approach that drives shelf velocity and reorder rates. Food and beverage brands at $1M to $20M engage fractional CMOs to build the brand infrastructure and demand generation systems needed to accelerate retail distribution, grow DTC revenue, and create the consumer preference that sustains premium pricing in competitive categories.

The Food and Beverage Marketing Challenge

Food and beverage is one of the most competitive consumer categories in the world. Shelf space is limited. Buyer attention is fragmented. Consumer trust is earned through authentic brand story and consistent experience - not marketing spend alone. A fractional CMO with CPG experience brings the brand strategy, retail marketing discipline, and digital-to-shelf thinking that emerging F&B brands need to scale.

Who You're Marketing To in Food and Beverage

The primary buyers in Food and Beverage: Retail buyers, distributors, DTC consumers, food service procurement, corporate wellness buyers. Each of these decision-makers evaluates vendors differently and responds to different proof points. A Food and Beverage fractional CMO understands the buying committee dynamics and builds messaging that resonates with each stakeholder at the right stage of the decision process.

Channels That Work in Food and Beverage Marketing

The most effective marketing channels for Food and Beverage companies: brand storytelling and packaging, retail and trade marketing, DTC e-commerce, social media and influencer, food media and PR, sampling and events. Channel selection must match where your specific buyers spend attention - not where your competitor is spending budget.

Who We Serve in Food and Beverage

Emerging CPG brands, craft beverage companies, better-for-you food brands, specialty food distributors, food tech companies

What a Fractional CMO Delivers for Food and Beverage Companies

What You Get

  • 15+ years of CMO-level experience
  • Industry-specific ICP and positioning
  • Demand generation built for your buyers
  • Revenue accountability, not activity reports
  • Starts in 1-2 weeks, not 4 months

Cost Comparison

Fractional CMO: $36K-$144K/year

Full-Time CMO: $200K-$450K/year

Marketing Agency: $60K-$200K/year (no strategy)

Frequently Asked Questions

What does a fractional CMO do for Food and Beverage companies?

Sets marketing strategy, builds the demand generation engine, defines ICP and positioning, manages your team and agencies, and is accountable to pipeline and revenue - not activity metrics. Specifically in Food and Beverage, this means understanding your buyer's unique decision process and building marketing that matches it.

How much does a fractional CMO cost for a Food and Beverage company?

$3,000 to $15,000 per month depending on scope and engagement hours. Most Food and Beverage companies at $1M-$15M revenue engage at $5,000 to $10,000 per month for 15-20 hours per week.

What Fractional CMO Actually Involves

When companies in Food Beverage hire a fractional executive for fractional cmo, they are not buying a deck. They are buying execution against a clear strategic framework. Here is what every engagement covers:

Who This Is Right For

Companies between $3M and $50M in revenue that need CMO-level leadership without a full-time CMO's $300K+ salary. PE portfolio companies that need rapid marketing transformation. Founder-led businesses where the CEO is still making every marketing decision. Companies that have tried marketing agencies or consultants and need real executive accountability.

Free Food and Beverage Strategy Call

30 minutes. We'll review your current Food and Beverage marketing situation, identify the biggest gaps, and give you a straight recommendation. No pitch.

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What Clients Say About Food and Beverage Marketing

Results measured in pipeline generated, CAC reduced, and revenue compounded -- not reports delivered or hours billed.

★★★★★

"Food and beverage marketing is brutal on margin and brutally competitive for shelf space and consumer attention. The fractional CMO built a go-to-market system that used digital channels to build brand awareness before retail placement and digital velocity data to prove consumer demand to retail buyers. We went from 30 SKU locations to 1,200 in 18 months.",

Rachel S.
Founder, Natural Food Brand, $5M Revenue
★★★★★

"We were a B2B food ingredient supplier with a product that outperformed competitors but a sales team that could not communicate the technical differentiation in commercial terms. The fractional CMO built the value proposition framework, the technical sales collateral, and the digital demand generation program. New accounts grew 90% in the first year.",

David M.
CEO, Specialty Food Ingredients Company, $18M Revenue
★★★★★

"Restaurant and food service marketing requires reaching operators who make purchasing decisions based on cost, consistency, and menu flexibility -- not brand stories. The fractional CMO rebuilt our messaging around operational impact rather than origin stories and built the demand generation program around distributor relationships and operator direct outreach. Food service revenue grew 55% in twelve months.",

Christine B.
VP Sales, Food Service Distribution Company, $30M Revenue
Zero Lock-In

Month-to-Month. No Contracts. No Risk.

Every MarkCMO engagement is structured to protect you. You stay because the results are compounding -- not because you are locked in. Cancel any time. No fees, no questions.

No long-term contracts
No cancellation fees
First results in 30 days
Transparent scope and pricing
Free diagnostic first
Exit any time, no questions asked

CPG and Food and Beverage Marketing: Retail, DTC, and Foodservice Channels

Food and beverage marketing is a multi-channel problem that requires different commercial strategies for retail, direct-to-consumer, and foodservice. Each channel has different buyer economics, different decision-making processes, and different content requirements. Retail requires category management strategy and trade marketing that wins shelf placement. DTC requires content and paid media that drives acquisition and subscription retention. Foodservice requires relationship development and sampling programs that convert menu opportunities into volume commitments. The fractional CMO builds a channel-specific strategy that allocates resources based on the margin and growth profile of each channel rather than spreading evenly across all three.

Consumer trust in food and beverage brands is built through ingredient transparency, sourcing stories, and health or sustainability claims that are credible and verifiable. The fractional CMO for a food and beverage company builds the content infrastructure that supports the brand claim: sourcing documentation, third-party certifications, founder story content, and social proof from real customers. This trust infrastructure serves multiple commercial purposes simultaneously -- it improves DTC conversion, supports premium pricing at retail, and gives foodservice operators the story they need to sell the product to their own customers.

The metrics that matter in food and beverage marketing differ by channel. In retail, the key metrics are velocity (units sold per store per week), distribution (number of doors carrying the product), and ACV (all commodity volume -- the percentage of total retail volume in stores that carry the product). In DTC, the key metrics are customer acquisition cost, subscription retention rate, and LTV by cohort. In foodservice, the key metrics are accounts converted, cases per account per month, and account churn rate. The fractional CMO builds reporting infrastructure that tracks the right metrics for each channel and allocates investment based on which channel is producing the highest return on commercial spend.

  1. Audit the current channel mix and calculate gross margin contribution by channel -- use this to identify which channels deserve more investment and which are consuming resources without proportional return
  2. Build a retail trade marketing calendar that aligns promotional investment with the category buyer's planning cycle and the company's velocity and distribution goals
  3. Develop a DTC content and email strategy that builds a subscriber base before paid acquisition investment scales -- email list is the only owned channel in DTC that survives algorithm changes
  4. Create a foodservice sampling and conversion program with a defined account qualification criteria, a structured sampling protocol, and a 90-day follow-up sequence that converts tasted accounts to volume commitments
  5. Build a unified content library -- ingredient stories, sourcing documentation, certifications, founder narrative -- that can be adapted for each channel's specific trust-building requirements
  6. Establish channel-specific reporting dashboards with the metrics that predict channel health: velocity and ACV for retail, CAC and LTV for DTC, accounts and cases per account for foodservice

Food and Beverage Industry Marketing: Distribution-Led Growth and Brand Building

Food and beverage marketing has two fundamentally different commercial objectives that must be managed simultaneously and that require different marketing strategies. The first objective is trade marketing: the activities directed at distributors, retailers, foodservice operators, and other channel partners that affect placement, shelf space, menu inclusion, and distribution footprint. The second objective is consumer marketing: the activities that build brand awareness and purchase intent among end consumers, which in turn supports the trade marketing objective by demonstrating consumer demand to channel partners. For most emerging food and beverage brands, trade marketing delivers more near-term revenue impact than consumer marketing -- but consumer marketing is what creates the demand signal that makes trade marketing more effective.

The digital and content marketing opportunity in food and beverage is increasingly important for the direct-to-consumer channel, but it also plays a role in the trade channel that is often underestimated. Buyers at regional grocery chains, foodservice distributors, and natural food retailers evaluate brands not just on the product but on the brand's consumer marketing capability -- a brand that has built a credible digital following, a substantive social media presence, and an email community demonstrates to trade buyers that the consumer demand signal will support shelf placement. For emerging brands seeking distribution expansion, the fractional CMO builds both the consumer-facing marketing that generates demand pull and the trade-facing materials (sell-in decks, sell-through data, consumer demand evidence) that support distribution expansion.

Regulatory compliance in food and beverage marketing shapes what claims can be made on packaging, advertising, and digital content. FDA guidelines on health claims, organic and natural labeling standards, allergen disclosure requirements, and state-specific labeling rules all constrain the marketing message. The fractional CMO who serves food and beverage companies builds the brand and marketing system within these constraints, which -- as in wellness and insurance -- actually produces better commercial content by forcing the brand story to be grounded in substantiated claims rather than aspirational language.

  1. Map the distribution footprint and identify the highest-priority expansion targets: which regional chains, foodservice distributors, or natural food retailers represent the most valuable next-step distribution expansion, and what evidence of consumer demand will each channel partner require before extending placement
  2. Build a sell-in presentation that documents consumer demand signals: velocity data from current retail partners, e-commerce review volume and ratings, social media following and engagement, and earned media coverage -- these signals demonstrate to prospective channel partners that consumer demand exists before they take the placement risk
  3. Develop a consumer acquisition strategy for the direct-to-consumer channel: email list building through content and sampling programs, paid social for consumer acquisition at target cost-per-acquisition, and influencer or UGC programs that generate authentic consumer content create the consumer community that supports trade marketing
  4. Build a foodservice-specific marketing program if the brand competes in foodservice: foodservice buyers (restaurant chains, institutional foodservice, hospitality) have different evaluation criteria than retail buyers -- case studies from comparable foodservice operations, portion-cost modeling, and menu engineering support create the evidence base for foodservice distribution conversations
  5. Create a trade show and industry event strategy: Natural Products Expo, Fancy Food Show, and regional food and beverage trade shows are where retail buyers and distributors evaluate emerging brands -- booth presence, sampling programs, and buyer appointment calendars are the primary trade marketing activities at these events
  6. Implement a broker relationship program if the distribution model uses food brokers: brokers represent multiple brands and prioritize the brands with the strongest consumer demand signals and the most effective trade marketing support -- building the broker enablement materials and maintaining regular broker communication increases share of broker attention

Get a Free Revenue Strategy Call

30 minutes with Mark Gabrielli. No pitch. A direct read on your biggest marketing gaps and what moves revenue fastest. Responds personally within 24 hours.

$135M+ in qualified B2B pipeline built for clients
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