Turn technology into a growth engine
Bring in senior IT leadership that aligns your systems, hardens your security and powers digital transformation as you scale, at a fraction of the cost of a full-time hire. A Fractional Chief Information Officer gives you the strategic direction your technology stack needs to keep up with your ambition.
Senior IT leadership, aligned to the business
A Chief Information Officer is the senior executive responsible for the information and computer technologies that run an organisation. The remit covers technology deployment, network and systems management, data and cybersecurity, productivity tooling and the digital transformation programmes that shape how the business operates day to day.
A Fractional Chief Information Officer brings that same calibre of leadership into the business on a flexible basis. They make sure IT supports and accelerates the company's strategic goals, working closely with founders, the leadership team and, where relevant, a CTO focused on customer-facing product technology. The CIO concentrates on the internal IT estate, governance and security that the wider organisation depends on.
For businesses scaling fast but not ready for a full-time appointment, a Fractional CIO is the practical move. You get strategic direction when you need it, hands-on oversight where it matters, and confidence that your technology, data and security are quietly supporting the next stage of growth.
Start the ConversationAccess senior IT leadership at a fraction of the cost of a permanent hire, with enterprise-grade strategic oversight and vendor relationships from day one.
IT leadership that compounds over time
Make sure the organisation's IT strategy and infrastructure are aligned with where the business is going. Every system, vendor and investment supports a clear commercial outcome, not the other way around.
Guide the company through digital shifts, modernising the systems that staff use every day and bringing in efficient, seamless technology integrations that lift productivity across the organisation.
Protect the organisation's data and IT assets, embed cybersecurity best practice into how the business operates, and keep the company compliant with frameworks such as GDPR, NIS2 and ISO 27001.
Evaluate and improve internal IT processes, systems and service providers so the function runs efficiently and cost-effectively. Reliable infrastructure, predictable spend and faster decisions for the leadership team.
Engage with and manage technology vendors, MSPs and SaaS partners. Negotiate stronger contracts, consolidate sprawl and make sure the organisation gets the right solutions on the right commercial terms.
Proactively explore emerging technologies, from cloud and automation to AI-enabled tooling, and integrate the ones that fit. Position the organisation to stay ahead in a fast-moving technology landscape.
A day-to-day view of Fractional CIO work
The role flexes to the business, and a Fractional CIO focuses on the internal technology that the whole organisation relies on. That is a different remit to a CTO, who concentrates on the customer-facing product, platform and engineering team. Most engagements cover four broad areas of work.
- Multi-year IT roadmap linked to commercial priorities
- Technology budget planning and investment prioritisation
- IT governance, policies and decision-making frameworks
- Board-level reporting on IT performance, risk and spend
- Security posture review, policies and incident response planning
- GDPR, NIS2 and ISO 27001 readiness and ongoing alignment
- Identity, access and endpoint management oversight
- Vendor risk assessment and third-party security reviews
- Cloud strategy across Microsoft 365, Azure, AWS and Google Workspace
- Network, connectivity, backup and business continuity planning
- System integrations, data flows and the wider application estate
- Managed service provider selection and performance oversight
- ERP, CRM and finance system selection and implementation oversight
- Workflow automation and AI-enabled productivity tooling
- Data strategy, internal reporting and analytics for the leadership team
- Change management and user adoption across the business
Experience across Irish industry
Our CIO network has built and modernised internal IT functions in many of the sectors that define the Irish economy. Each brings deep understanding of the regulatory context, the systems landscape and the practical realities of running technology inside an SME or scaling business.
Internal systems, security and data governance for software businesses scaling from seed through Series A and beyond, working alongside CTOs and engineering leaders focused on the product itself.
ERP, MES, shop-floor connectivity, OT cybersecurity and integration between production systems and back-office finance for Irish manufacturers scaling at home and into export markets.
EPOS, ecommerce platforms, omnichannel integrations, PCI compliance and data protection for retail, hospitality and consumer brands across Ireland and the UK.
Practice management, secure document handling, client data protection and productivity tooling for consultancies, legal firms, accounting practices and advisory businesses.
GxP-aware IT, validated systems, patient data protection and integration of clinical, research and commercial platforms for life sciences, medtech and healthcare organisations.
DORA, Central Bank guidance, third-party risk and operational resilience for financial services, fintech and other regulated businesses with high expectations on IT control.
Common reasons leaders bring in a Fractional CIO
Most leadership teams do not set out to hire a CIO. The need builds quietly, usually showing up as a few familiar signals. If two or three of these feel close to home, it is probably the right moment to have a conversation.
The business is scaling and IT is becoming strategic. You need senior pattern recognition on systems, security and infrastructure before the next stage, without yet committing to a full-time CIO.
You are planning to overhaul or upgrade core IT systems, move to the cloud, replace an ERP or modernise the workplace, and you want senior ownership over the design and delivery of that programme.
Customers, insurers or regulators are asking sharper questions on security and compliance. You want a clear posture, the right policies in place and credible answers to NIS2, GDPR and ISO 27001 questions.
SaaS, licences and managed services have grown organically and the leadership team wants a strategic view of where IT investment is going and what value it is returning.
A system integration, data migration, office move, M&A integration or major rollout needs experienced CIO-level governance for a defined period, rather than a permanent appointment.
Your CTO is rightly focused on customer-facing technology and the engineering team. You want a counterpart on the internal IT, productivity and security side so neither agenda is starved of attention.
Three steps to senior IT leadership
From the first conversation to a CIO inside the business, typically inside a single week.
A focused conversation. You tell us about your current IT environment, where the business is heading, and the capability gap that is holding the next stage back.
We hand-pick two or three vetted CIOs from our network with direct experience in your sector, your systems landscape and your growth stage.
Your CIO embeds with the team on a flexible schedule, typically one to three days a week, with a clear mandate, agreed deliverables and tangible outcomes from week one.
Questions leaders ask before they start
What is a Fractional Chief Information Officer?
A Fractional Chief Information Officer is a senior IT executive who works with your business on a flexible basis, typically one to three days per week. They take ownership of IT strategy, governance, cybersecurity, infrastructure and digital transformation across the organisation, sitting at the leadership table on the days they are with you. You access the same calibre of leader as a full-time hire, at a fraction of the cost of a permanent appointment.
What is the difference between a Fractional CIO and a Fractional CTO?
A CIO is focused on the internal technology that the whole organisation relies on, the IT systems, productivity tooling, cybersecurity, infrastructure and digital transformation programmes that support staff and operations. A CTO is focused on customer-facing product technology, engineering leadership and the platforms you build for the market. Many of our clients work with both, with the CIO owning the internal IT estate and the CTO owning the product and engineering side.
When should a company bring in a Fractional CIO?
Common moments include scaling beyond around twenty staff, planning a significant systems upgrade or cloud migration, responding to rising cybersecurity expectations from customers and regulators, integrating an acquisition, or wanting strategic oversight of growing IT spend. Businesses with 20 to 200 employees often find the fractional model the most effective way to access senior IT leadership.
Can a Fractional CIO own cybersecurity for the business?
Yes, cybersecurity governance is a core part of the CIO remit. They assess your current security posture, set policies, oversee incident response planning, and align the business with frameworks such as GDPR, NIS2 and ISO 27001. They will not typically perform hands-on penetration testing themselves, but they coordinate specialist providers, MSSPs and internal teams so the overall security programme is coherent and well-managed.
Will the CIO work alongside our existing IT team or managed service provider?
Always. Our CIOs are explicitly engaged to strengthen the people and partners already in place. They work in close partnership with internal IT managers, system administrators and external managed service providers, bringing senior strategic direction, governance and accountability that complements the day-to-day delivery work that the existing team already does well.
How quickly can a Fractional CIO be in place?
Most clients are introduced to two or three matched CIOs within a week of the discovery call. Once you choose the right person, the engagement typically begins within days. The first month is usually focused on an IT and security baseline, a stakeholder map and a 90-day plan that the leadership team can sign off on.
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Tell us about your IT challenges and growth plans. We will be back in touch within 48 hours to set up a discovery call.