Not All Roles Need to Be Full-Time


Not All Roles Need to Be Full-Time

Is Fractional Leadership the Future?

Dear Reader,

I’ve been thinking a lot about the rise of fractional leadership. Traditionally, this model has thrived in startups, scale-ups, and private equity - where part-time CFOs, CTOs, or Operating Partners step in during key moments.

But as this recent HBR podcast explores, fractional leadership is now showing up in other spaces including mission-driven organisations. And I believe the social impact sector needs to pay attention.

Because when funding is tight but the stakes remain high, we can’t afford not to invest in talent. Fractional roles offer a powerful middle ground: senior expertise without permanent overhead.

The questions for our sector are real:

  • Do enough experienced leaders actually want fractional roles?
  • Where would you even find them? (We don’t yet have a true marketplace.)
  • What’s the right structure - by time, deliverables, or outcomes?
  • How do you manage boundaries in high-pressure environments?

In some countries, part-time or shared leadership is already the norm - Europe especially. Perhaps it’s time we explored how that might work more widely.

And here’s where it becomes more personal.
I’ve started asking myself if this might also be a path for ex-CEOs like me. Not just as interims to hold the fort, but as fractional partners - Chief Strategy Officers, Chief Clarity Officers, Operating Partners - supporting other leaders in deeper way than mentoring or advising for a few weeks or months.

The idea excites me: being embedded enough to share the camaraderie and drive of a team, while still having the freedom to work across multiple organisations. At the same time, I wonder if it’s simply a passing curiosity or something I should intentionally create.

I’ve joined a board recently, which I hope will meet some of that need to belong more deeply. But I’m still wrestling with the balance between depth and freedom, between independence and being “in it” with others.

I don’t have the answers. But I suspect I’m not alone.

So I’d love to hear from you:
Would you consider bringing in a fractional leader or becoming one?
And what might it take for this model to take a greater hold in our sector in more areas?

Warmly,
Liz

Strategic Advisor | Former CEO | Founder, Volante

Based in Kenya, available globally

Volante Consulting Kenya

Read more from Volante Consulting Kenya
Why we don't talk more about non profit mergers

Why don’t we talk more about nonprofit mergers? When Egos, Logos and Structures Get in the Way Dear Reader In the private sector, we expect mergers.Tight margins, overlapping missions? Combine forces. But in the nonprofit world?Mergers, consolidation - even thoughtful closures are still the exception, not the norm. Yes, there’s truth in the phrase “egos and logos.” Especially when founders have poured years of energy, sacrifice, and identity into what they’ve built. Letting go can feel like...

How a Colour-Coded Calendar Changed the Way I Lead and Live Dear Reader Years ago, as a new CEO, I stumbled into a habit that ended up being one of my most valuable leadership tools. It wasn't a new strategy framework or a piece of software. It was my calendar. More specifically a colour-coded calendar. When I first became CEO - like many internal appointments - I spent too much time in my comfort zone of operational oversight. I knew I needed to change the balance, so I started mapping my...

Are we getting the most out of nonprofit boards? Rethinking how we structure, support, and challenge boards in the nonprofit sector I’m about to step into a new board role. Like most in the nonprofit sector, it’s unpaid. I’m genuinely excited about the opportunity and grateful for a strong start: a comprehensive onboarding pack, clear calls, and thoughtful preparation. But I also know this is not the norm. Across the nonprofit sector, boards hold enormous responsibility. They approve...