The fractional Head of PMM, explained.
You've found product-market fit and the customers are real. Then growth gets harder to predict, and nobody owns the story that ties Product, Sales, and Marketing together. That's the job a fractional Head of Product Marketing does, before you're ready to hire a full-time one.
What a fractional Head of PMM actually is.
A fractional Head of Product Marketing is a senior PMM leader who works with you part-time and embedded, not from the outside. You get someone who has owned positioning, launches, and go-to-market at scale, pointed at the exact constraint slowing your growth. I do the work myself instead of handing it to a junior, I start in days rather than months, and it's a flat monthly fee with no full-time commitment.
Full-time seniority, on the problem in front of you, without the full-time bet.
The signs you need one.
If a few of these sound familiar, the constraint is usually Product Marketing, not the product.
Growth got less predictable
The early traction was real, but the same effort no longer moves the numbers the way it used to.
Customers don't get your value
You know why you're better. It isn't landing, so the market defaults to price or to the incumbent.
Launches don't drive adoption
You ship features, but they land as announcements. Usage and revenue don't follow the release.
Every team tells a different story
Sales says one thing, the site says another, Product builds toward a third. No one owns the through-line.
Fractional or full-time?
A full-time Head of PMM is the right call once the role is big enough to fill five days a week and you can carry the salary, equity, and ramp. For most post-PMF teams that day is coming, but it isn't here yet. Hiring ahead of it is expensive, and hiring the wrong senior person is worse.
Fractional closes that gap. You get the senior thinking now, the foundation gets built, and your team learns to run it. When the work is genuinely a full-time job, you hire for it with a clear brief instead of a guess, and often a system already in place.
You don't need a full-time Head of Product Marketing yet. You probably do need someone thinking like one.
Experimentation programs I ran generated $11M+ in annual revenue at a Series C neobank, and repositioning work lifted qualified conversion 25%.
Twelve-plus years across Fi Money, Practo, MakeMyTrip, and Raymond. A Top 100 Global Product Marketing Influencer, 2025. This is how I work, on revenue that showed up.
Fractional PMM, answered.
What is a fractional Head of PMM?
A senior product marketing leader who owns your positioning, messaging, launches, and go-to-market on a part-time, embedded basis. You get the judgment of someone who has run PMM at scale, focused on the specific thing capping your growth, without the cost or commitment of a full-time executive hire.
When should I hire a fractional Head of PMM instead of a full-time one?
When you have paying customers and real traction, but growth has become less predictable and no single person owns the story that connects Product, Sales, and Marketing. If you can find a senior full-time PMM, afford the salary and equity, and wait three to six months for them to ramp, hire one. Most post-PMF teams aren't there yet. A fractional lead gives you that seniority now, on the problem in front of you.
How is this different from an agency or a generalist consultant?
An agency executes campaigns you brief. A generalist advises from the outside. I work as your embedded Product Marketing leader: I diagnose where growth is stalling, decide what to build, and do the work with your team. I'm accountable for whether growth moves, not for volume of deliverables.
What does a fractional PMM engagement cost?
It depends on scope. Most engagements start around $500, month to month, with no long lock-in. Book a call, tell me what's stalled, and I'll give you a straight scope and the cost before you commit.
Think a fractional Head of PMM is what you need?
A 20-minute call, no pitch. Tell me what's stalled and you'll leave with a clear first move.