Most fractional executives I talk to have a version of the same target in mind:
“I’d like two or three good clients, steady retainers, and a bit of room in my week for life.”
Where people get less clear is:
What happens when you actually reach that point?
How do you manage capacity without killing your pipeline?
How do you make ethical, sustainable decisions about who you work with and how?
This is where your portfolio design matters just as much as your business development.
In my case, I didn’t pick “two or three clients” out of thin air.
I have:
Some personal healthcare and caregiving responsibilities
Nonprofit work I care about
A desire to not work 5–6 days a week
A simple rule that I’d like to keep weekends available for things like fishing
Given all of that, my version of “full” is:
Roughly 2–3 days of client work per week, spread across:
2–3 retainer clients
Maybe a bit of coaching or a small project here and there
Your constraints will look different. You might want:
One big client at 2–3 days/week
Or four smaller ones at a half‑day each
Or a mix of retainers and project work
The point is: design around your life and energy, not a default you picked up from LinkedIn.
If you use the funnel we talked about in Article 7—100 connection requests/month, 10 conversations, one opportunity conversation per month, one proposal a quarter—eventually, something interesting happens:
You get to the point where landing another client would create a real tension.
That’s where a lot of people I’ve mentored end up after 12–18 months:
“I did what you suggested. Now I have two clients, a third proposal out, and if that comes in I’m not sure how I’m going to handle it.”
That’s not a bad problem to have. But it is a problem you should plan for.
One of the main reasons I’ve invested in “birds of a feather” networking with other marketers is this:
When there’s more work than I can or want to do, I’d rather give it to someone I trust than oversell myself.
Common scenarios:
I’m leading a fractional CMO engagement, and there’s a big content or brand project I don’t love doing.
A client needs help with a channel that isn’t my specialty (say, heavy DTC performance marketing).
I’ve identified a legitimate marketing opportunity at a company, but it doesn’t fit my industrial/B2B sweet spot.
In those cases, I can:
Stay in my lane on the parts I’m great at
Bring in another marketer as a subcontractor
Or simply hand the opportunity to them directly and step out
Subcontracting lets you:
Capture some additional value
Serve the client better
Avoid taking on work that drains you or stretches you too thin
It does require:
Clear scopes and expectations
Good communication with the client
A genuine respect for the person you’re bringing in
Done well, it’s one of the cleanest ways to handle “too much” opportunity.
With one of my early clients, we hit a different kind of inflection point.
After about a year of working together, we had:
Built their marketing strategy
Implemented their website/CRM/email basics
Developed their internal team
Reached a point where the “engine” was running pretty smoothly
They were still paying me my full retainer at the time—around $10,000 per month.
I looked at that and thought:
“They’re not getting $10,000 worth of incremental value from me every month anymore. The team is executing well. They know what to do.”
So I went to them and proposed a change:
Shift from a full fractional role to an advisory relationship
New terms: $2,000/month
Scope:
Be available for urgent issues
Join a quarterly review meeting
Maintain the NDA and strategic relationship
From their side:
It freed up budget
They still had access to me when they needed it
It signaled that I was paying attention to value, not just fees
From my side:
It freed up meaningful capacity
It kept a good relationship alive
It felt aligned with my own ethics
That’s another lever you have as a fractional:
You can right‑size a relationship over time
You don’t have to cling to a maximum retainer forever if the work and value have shifted
Once your portfolio is reasonably full, it’s tempting to do this:
“I’m busy. I’ll just stop prospecting for a while.”
I don’t recommend that.
Business development, for a fractional, is a muscle. If you stop using it for a year, it atrophies. You lose:
Momentum
Confidence
Fresh relationships
What you can do, though, is turn the dial, not flip the switch.
For example:
Instead of 100 new connection requests/month, maybe you drop to 50
Instead of 10 networking conversations/month, maybe you aim for 4–5
You might shift your intent:
Less “hunting for immediate work”
More “staying in touch, adding value, and keeping the network warm”
That way, when:
A current client graduates or winds down
Your life circumstances change
You choose to expand again
…you still have a functioning network and pipeline. You’re not starting from zero.
This one is simple, but not easy.
Once you’re at or near capacity, you will see:
Opportunities that are legitimate, but not for you
Clients who could pay, but would be a poor fit culturally
Projects that are fine, but don’t give you energy
Every time you choose to:
Refer those out
Decline politely
Explain that you’re full but can recommend someone…
…you’re doing three things:
Protecting your existing clients and your own well‑being
Preserving your reputation as someone who doesn’t over‑promise
Investing in your network, because referrals do come back
I probably send one decent opportunity a month (or every couple of months) to someone else. Most of them I could have muscled my way into. I just don’t.
Over time, that’s paid off many times over in trust and inbound introductions.
The last point I’ll make is this:
You’re not trying to run a factory at 100% utilization.
You’re building a practice that:
Supports your life
Serves your clients well
Leaves room for unexpected events (good and bad)
For me, that’s meant:
Two or three core clients on retainers
A bit of advisory and coaching work
Some open space in the week for:
Family and caregiving
Nonprofit work
A day on the water when the weather’s good
For you, it might be:
More clients and more hours
Fewer clients and deeper engagements
Seasonality that aligns with your industry
The important thing is that you decide what “full” means, on purpose.
Then you build:
Your funnel math (how many conversations, how often)
Your portfolio structure (diagnostics, SOWs, retainers, advisory)
Your network (other fractionals, CEOs in your ICP)
…to support that, not the other way around.
When you do that, “hitting capacity” stops being a scary surprise and turns into a design question:
“Given what I have and what’s coming in, what’s the next right adjustment—for me and for my clients?”
That’s a much better place to operate from.