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Org Design · Hiring Decisions

Fractional data leader vs. your first data hire: a decision guide for GCs doing $20M–$200M

By Addison HowardMay 24, 202610 min read

Most GCs doing $20M–$200M in annual volume hit the same fork in the road: the controller can't keep up with the reporting, leadership wants real numbers faster, and someone says “we need a data person.” The question is whether that's a hire or a fractional engagement — and the answer isn't the same at $25M as it is at $150M.

Why this question comes up

At roughly $20M in annual volume, the spreadsheet-and-Sage workflow stops scaling. The controller is doing a job and a half. The PMs are making committed-cost calls off Monday's numbers on Thursday. Someone — usually the owner's spouse or the strongest project accountant — has started building dashboards in Excel on nights and weekends.

At that point three paths open up:

  1. Hire your first dedicated data person, full-time
  2. Bring on a fractional data leader who runs the function 1–2 days a week
  3. The hybrid: a fractional leader plus a junior in-house

All three can work. The cost difference between them is enormous, and so is the time-to-value.

The real loaded cost of a first data hire

The Glassdoor base salary for a construction-industry data analyst is misleading because it ignores what the role actually costs to staff. In the Mountain West market we see:

RoleBase salaryFully loaded cost
Junior data analyst$70k–$90k$95k–$130k
Senior data analyst$95k–$130k$130k–$180k
Senior data engineer$135k–$180k$185k–$250k
Director of data / analytics$170k–$220k$235k–$310k

Loaded cost includes benefits (typically 25–30% on top of base), payroll taxes, tooling licenses ($3k–$8k per seat for BI + warehouse access), laptop, training, and the recruiter fee amortized over an 18-month average tenure.

More importantly: the hiring cycle is 3–6 months for a competent senior in this market. From the day you decide to hire to the day someone ships their first dashboard is typically 5–9 months. That entire window, the spreadsheet-and-Sage workflow keeps bleeding hours.

The real cost of fractional data leadership

A fractional data leader runs the data function 1–2 days a week as a part-time partner. They're billed monthly, on a retainer, with no benefits, no recruiter fee, no payroll tax.

EngagementTypical monthly retainerAnnualized
Fractional, 1 day/week (strategic only)$4,500–$7,500$54k–$90k
Fractional, 2 days/week (strategy + hands-on builds)$9,000–$14,000$108k–$168k
Fractional + bundled fixed-price buildsRetainer + scoped build feesVaries

The catch: fractional time is finite. A 1-day-a-week engagement buys you strategy, decisions, hiring help, and vendor selection — not eight hours of dashboard-building. When you need actual builds, those get scoped as fixed-price engagements on top.

What each is actually good at

The cost comparison is the easy part. The harder question is what each one is structurally good at delivering.

A first FT hire is good at:

  • Being available all day, every day, for the small recurring asks that don't fit a scoped engagement
  • Building deep institutional knowledge of your specific job codes, your specific vendors, and the way your firm actually operates
  • Owning long-running maintenance — the dashboards that someone needs to babysit when the vendor changes an export format
  • Becoming part of the leadership team over years

A first FT hire is structurally bad at:

  • Strategic vendor selection (they've usually only worked with one or two stacks)
  • Telling leadership “don't do this” — junior and mid-level hires don't push back on owners
  • Building anything outside their core skill (analysts can't engineer pipelines, engineers can't make executive dashboards)
  • The first 6 months, when they're still learning the business

A fractional leader is good at:

  • The strategic calls — which BI tool, which warehouse, when to migrate off Sage 300 CRE, whether to keep Procore
  • Shipping the first wave of high-leverage builds inside 4–8 weeks
  • Bringing the pattern library from 10+ other engagements — they've seen the failure modes
  • Hiring your FT data person when the time is right, and onboarding them well so they don't flame out
  • Telling you to NOT do something, because they don't depend on a paycheck from you

A fractional leader is structurally bad at:

  • Being there at 3pm on a Tuesday for the 10-minute ask
  • Owning a workflow forever — that's a maintenance role, not a leadership role
  • Building deep institutional fluency the way a 3-year FT hire will

The hybrid play (what most $50M–$150M GCs end up on)

The most common winning structure we see at this size: a fractional leader for 1 day a week handling strategy, vendor calls, and oversight, plus a junior FT analyst who handles the day-to-day asks, owns the dashboards, and grows into the role over 2–3 years. The fractional leader runs the hire and the onboarding.

Annualized cost: ~$60k fractional + ~$110k loaded junior = $170k. Compare to a single senior hire at $185k–$250k loaded, plus a 5–9 month gap before they ship.

The hybrid gives you senior judgment, hands-on availability, and lower total cost — at the price of one more contract on the books.

When to flip from fractional to FT

The trigger to bring the leadership role in-house is almost never cost. It's scope. You've hit a point where the data function is on the critical path for at least one strategic initiative every quarter — M&A diligence, an ERP migration, an acquisition integration, a multi-state expansion — and a fractional leader can't fit all of it into 1–2 days a week.

For most construction firms this happens somewhere between $150M and $300M in annual volume. Below that, the hybrid structure is usually still the right call.

Our recommendation by firm size

Annual volumeRecommended structureWhy
Under $20MNeither yetUse a few scoped fixed-price builds to retire the worst manual workflows
$20M–$50MFractional, 1 day/weekStrategic clarity + 2–3 fixed-price builds in year one
$50M–$150MHybrid: fractional + junior FTBest ratio of judgment, availability, and cost
$150M–$300MSenior FT + retained fractional reviewerYou need full-time ownership; outside review keeps decisions sharp
$300M+Full FT data teamThe function is now on the critical path quarter after quarter

The 20-minute call

If you're trying to decide whether to post a job req or bring on fractional help first, the answer almost always depends on three things we'll ask on the call: how many active jobs you're running, which ERP and PM systems you're on, and whether your last hire stuck. Book a 20-minute call and we'll tell you which of the five tiers above you're actually in — and what we'd do first.

Next Step

Hire or fractional?We'll tell you straight.

Twenty minutes. We'll ask three questions and tell you which tier you're actually in — even if the answer is “post the job, you don't need us.”

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