Most firms don't need a full-time CIO — but they do need someone who can sit with leadership four times a year, look at where the business is going, and translate it into an IT plan that doesn't read like a vendor pitch. That's the role we play.
Every quarter starts with last quarter's crisis, never with a strategy.
Numbers feel arbitrary, projects feel optional, ROI is fuzzy.
Each acquisition adds tools, vendors, and security debt. Nobody's mapping it.
Microsoft, Adobe, the ERP — they're 6-figure decisions made by whoever happened to be in the room.
One person — typically a senior engineer or partner — assigned to your account. Same person every quarter.
Half-day on-site or remote with leadership. Review the prior quarter, plan the next, surface risk and opportunity.
12-month plan with named initiatives, dependencies, costs, and ownership. Updated quarterly.
Three-year IT spend model. Capital, operational, headcount equivalent. Tied to business growth scenarios.
Annual cleanup. What's redundant, what's underused, what's worth replacing.
Executive summary in plain English. We do the math; you get the narrative.
Interviews with leadership, current state assessment, inventory of every tool, every contract, every cost.
Where you are today vs. industry benchmarks. Cost per user, risk concentration, vendor sprawl.
Two-hour session with leadership. Where's the business going? What does IT need to do to enable that?
12-month plan with quarterly milestones. Costed. Resourced. Approved by leadership.
Same advisor, same rhythm. Review, adjust, plan.
Average savings in year 1 from vendor consolidation and license optimization.
Named advisor in your office. Or via Teams if you prefer.
Refreshed every quarter so the plan is always current, never stale.
Same senior advisor every quarter. They learn your business.
“Our vCIO sat through three of our quarterly board meetings before he proposed anything. By the time he did, the board already trusted him because he understood the business — not just the tech.”
Similar function, fractional scope. You get a senior advisor 4–8 days a quarter instead of a $250k full-time hire. Right size for most 25–150 person firms.
Both, as a bundle, is most common. Some clients only want strategy and run their own ops. Either works.
About 4 hours per quarter — one strategy session. Plus the named advisor is reachable between sessions for major decisions.
Yes — this is co-managed. We become an extension of the team, not a replacement. Many of our vCIO clients have internal IT staff.
We come to you, walk through your current state, and give you a written one-page assessment of where IT is helping and where it's holding the business back. No commitment.