If your business is growing but your day-to-day is feeling increasingly chaotic — missed deadlines, unclear processes, too many things falling through the cracks — you’ve probably started wondering if you need some dedicated operational support.
Maybe you’ve come across the term “fractional operations manager” and thought, “That sounds like exactly what I need.” Or maybe you’re not quite sure what it means, what it costs, or whether it’s the right fit for a small business like yours.
Let’s break it all down — and I’ll be upfront with you along the way about where a fractional ops manager makes sense, and where a PMP-certified virtual assistant might actually be the smarter, more affordable solution.
Small business owners spend an average of 36% of their work week on administrative tasks — roughly 16 hours every week.
— Time etc. Entrepreneur Productivity Survey
What Is a Fractional Operations Manager?
A fractional operations manager is an experienced operations professional who works with your business on a part-time or contract basis — typically a set number of hours per week or month — rather than as a full-time employee.
Think of it like hiring a senior operations executive, but only paying for the slice of their time you actually need. They bring strategic oversight, process expertise, and leadership without the six-figure salary that comes with a full-time Director of Operations or COO.
Depending on the person and the engagement, a fractional ops manager might help with:
- Designing or overhauling your core business processes
- Creating SOPs (standard operating procedures) so your team can work consistently
- Managing projects and ensuring deadlines are met
- Identifying inefficiencies and implementing systems to fix them
- Overseeing day-to-day operations so you can focus on growth
- Building automation to reduce manual, repetitive work
What Does a Fractional Operations Manager Cost?
This is where a lot of small business owners get a reality check — and it’s important to understand before you go down this path.
Fractional operations managers and fractional COOs typically charge in one of two ways:
Hourly: Rates generally range from $150 to $200+ per hour for experienced practitioners, with some top-tier fractional COOs charging even more.
Monthly retainer: More common for ongoing engagements. Fractional COO retainers typically run from $5,000 to $15,000 per month, depending on scope and experience.
A full-time COO commands an average base salary of $250,000–$450,000 per year.
— Slight Edge, LLC
The fractional model clearly offers savings over a full-time hire at that level. But for a small business or nonprofit operating with a lean team and a tight budget, even $5,000–$8,000 a month for fractional executive support is a significant investment — and often more than what’s actually needed.
When Does a Fractional Operations Manager Make Sense?
A fractional ops manager is a great fit when:
- You’re scaling fast, and your current processes simply can’t keep up with growth
- You have a team of 5–20+ employees and need someone to manage them operationally
- You’re planning a major business transformation — a new product line, a merger, a significant pivot
- You need C-suite-level strategic thinking but can’t justify a full-time executive salary
- Your problems are complex and systemic — not just a matter of needing more hands on deck
But What If You’re a Smaller Business or Nonprofit?
Here’s where I want to be really honest with you, because I think a lot of small businesses and nonprofits get sold on high-cost operational solutions before they actually need them.
68% of small business owners spend most of their time working “in” their business on day-to-day tasks, rather than “on” their business doing strategic planning.
— The Alternative Board Business Pulse Survey
That stat hits close to home for most small business owners I talk to. You didn’t start your business to spend all day managing email, chasing invoices, or rebuilding a spreadsheet for the fourth time. And yet, here we are.
If you’re a solo entrepreneur, a small team of two to five people, or a nonprofit with a lean staff, what you probably need isn’t a fractional executive. What you need is someone who can:
- Get your projects organized and moving
- Build out the processes and SOPs your team doesn’t have time to document
- Set up automation so you stop doing the same tasks manually every week
- Keep your finances organized and your books clean
- Handle the admin and communications that eat your day
That’s not a $5,000/month fractional COO. That’s a skilled, certified virtual assistant — and it’s a fraction of the cost.
Over 40% of workers spend at least a quarter of their workweek on manual, repetitive tasks — including email, data collection, and data entry.
— Smartsheet Automation Survey
What a PMP-Certified Virtual Assistant Brings to the Table
I’ve been supporting small businesses and nonprofits for over 21 years as a virtual assistant. I’m also a Project Management Professional (PMP)® — one of the most respected credentials in the project management field — and a QuickBooks ProAdvisor.
That combination means I’m not just handling tasks. I’m bringing a structured, strategic approach to how your business operates — the same kind of thinking a fractional operations manager would bring, at a VA price point.
Here’s what that looks like in practice:
Process improvement: I audit your current workflows, identify the bottlenecks, and help you build better systems. I create SOPs your team can actually follow — so things get done consistently, even when you’re not in the room.
Project management: I set up and manage your projects in tools like Asana, Trello, or Monday.com — with timelines, task ownership, and accountability built in from day one.
Automation: Using tools like Zapier and Make.com, I help you automate the repetitive stuff — follow-up emails, reporting reminders, data entry — so your team can focus on higher-value work.
Bookkeeping: As a QuickBooks ProAdvisor, I keep your finances organized, reconciled, and ready for tax time — without you needing a separate bookkeeper.
Admin and communications: I manage inboxes, calendars, research, data entry, and the dozen other things that quietly eat your week.
Small business owners lose an average of 96 minutes of productivity daily — the equivalent of over 8 full work weeks per year.
— Slack Small Business Productivity Survey, 2024
Fractional Operations Manager vs. Virtual Assistant: A Quick Comparison
Here’s a simple way to think about which solution fits where you are right now:
Choose a fractional operations manager if…
- You have a team of 10+ and need executive-level operational leadership
- You’re navigating a major business transition or rapid scale
- You have a monthly budget of $5,000–$15,000+ for operational support
- You need someone to manage other managers or lead cross-functional teams
Choose a PMP-certified virtual assistant if…
- You’re a small business or nonprofit with a lean team
- You need your projects organized, processes documented, and admin handled
- You want strategic, structured support without the executive price tag
- You need someone who can do both the thinking and the doing
- You’re looking for a flexible, no-contract engagement that scales with you
The Bottom Line
A fractional operations manager is a genuinely valuable resource — for the right business, at the right stage of growth. But for most small businesses and nonprofits I talk to, the gap isn’t a missing executive. It’s missing systems, missing processes, and not enough hours in the day to build them.
That’s exactly the gap I fill.
The numbers don’t lie: small business owners are losing hours every week to admin work and operational chaos. The question isn’t whether you need support — it’s whether the support you need is a $10,000/month fractional COO or a skilled, credentialed VA who can build your systems, manage your projects, and keep your books clean.
If you’re tired of running your business reactively — putting out fires instead of building something sustainable — I’d love to talk about what a more organized, efficient operation could look like for you.