Fractional data leader vs. your first data hire: a decision guide for GCs doing $20M–$200M
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:
- Hire your first dedicated data person, full-time
- Bring on a fractional data leader who runs the function 1–2 days a week
- 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:
| Role | Base salary | Fully 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.
| Engagement | Typical monthly retainer | Annualized |
|---|---|---|
| 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 builds | Retainer + scoped build fees | Varies |
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 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 volume | Recommended structure | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Under $20M | Neither yet | Use a few scoped fixed-price builds to retire the worst manual workflows |
| $20M–$50M | Fractional, 1 day/week | Strategic clarity + 2–3 fixed-price builds in year one |
| $50M–$150M | Hybrid: fractional + junior FT | Best ratio of judgment, availability, and cost |
| $150M–$300M | Senior FT + retained fractional reviewer | You need full-time ownership; outside review keeps decisions sharp |
| $300M+ | Full FT data team | The 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.
Not sure which tier you're in?
Tell us how many active jobs you're running and which ERP and PM systems you're on. Twenty minutes. We'll tell you which structure fits — and what we'd do first.
team@confluxionpoint.com · (801) 931-7887