If you run a $10M–$70M construction company, you've probably outgrown what your bookkeeper, CPA, and controller can do for you, and you're starting to feel it.
The signs show up the same way for everyone. Cash surprises. Surety conversations you can't fully answer. Major decisions (equipment, hires, debt) that feel like coin flips. WIP reports you don't fully trust. A gap between bid margin and banked margin you can't quite explain.
That gap is what a Fractional CFO is for.
This guide covers what a Fractional CFO actually does for a construction company, why generic Fractional CFOs don't work out well for contractors, what it costs, how to evaluate one, what to watch out for, and how Civil CFO specifically runs the work.
Written by the firm that built its entire practice on this exact problem.
Let's dive in.
A Fractional CFO is forward-looking. That's the single most important distinction.
Your bookkeeper records the past. Your controller cleans up the present. Your CPA closes out the year. A Fractional CFO is the only seat at the table whose entire job is what happens next. (We have full breakdown of the differences HERE.)
Specifically, a construction-focused Fractional CFO owns:
Forward-looking cash management. The 13-week rolling cash flow forecast covered in our dedicated post. Updated weekly. Decisions driven by what's coming, not what just happened.
WIP-to-strategy translation. Reading the WIP schedule monthly as the operating gauge it actually is. Not as an accounting artifact. Sitting in the monthly WIP review meeting with operations and estimating. Catching profit fade in month two instead of finding it at year-end. The full mechanics live HERE.
Bonding strategy. Modeling working capital builds, preparing the year-end story for the surety, sitting in the bonding agent meeting with the owner instead of dropping him in front of the agent alone. Our full guide on this is HERE.
Capital allocation. Equipment, debt, distributions, retained earnings, line of credit usage. Tax-optimal is one lens. Strategically right is the broader one.
Owner financial coaching. Being the financial brain in the owner's corner on every meaningful business decision. Bids, hires, customer concentration, equipment, M&A activity, generational planning. Stuff a CPA isn't built to advise on and a controller isn't paid to.
Leadership development of finance. Coaching the bookkeeper or controller, raising the floor on the whole finance function so the team gets sharper over time.
The "between your books closing and your business growing" work. This is the line we use a lot internally. It captures what a CFO actually does. It's not bookkeeping. It's not tax. It's not the accounting close. It's everything strategic, operational, and forward-looking that happens between those things and where the business is trying to go.
If you boil it down: a great construction-focused Fractional CFO is the partner in your business who makes sure the financial decisions are getting made with the same rigor as the operational ones. Most contractors at $10M+ have rigorous operations and informal finance. The CFO seat closes that gap.
We say this constantly. It's not marketing. It's the operational reality of the industry.
Construction is one of the most financially complex industries at any revenue size. As an example, construction cash flow is structrually brutal! Here's why generic Fractional CFOs almost always struggle:
Percentage-of-completion accounting. Construction uses POC for revenue recognition under GAAP. It's a method most other industries don't deal with at the same scale or complexity. A generalist CFO will (usually) know what it is but won't have run a monthly POC reconciliation, won't know how to read profit fade signals in the WIP, and won't catch underbilling patterns intuitively.
Retainage. Most other industries have nothing analogous. A SaaS or ecommerce Fractional CFO has never had to model retainage release dates by job, push for releases, or factor retainage into working capital projections.
Bonding and surety. A non-construction CFO has likely never sat in front of a surety. The financial statement positioning required to optimize bonding capacity is construction-specific and learned through repetition.
WIP at a strategic level. Generalists treat the WIP as an accounting document. Construction-specific CFOs treat it as the operating dashboard. Massive difference in how it gets read and what gets surfaced.
Job costing methodology. Construction job costing has nuances (equipment allocation, labor burden, indirect overhead absorption, change order capture) that don't exist in other industries. Get the methodology wrong and your entire financial picture is wrong.
Pay-when-paid dynamics. The cash flow waterfall in construction is structurally unique. A non-construction CFO will routinely forecast cash optimistically because they don't understand how the timing actually works.
Change order management. The construction-specific discipline around capturing, pricing, and billing change orders (covered HERE) is foreign to almost every other industry.
Backlog and revenue visibility. A construction CFO reads backlog as a forward indicator of revenue, margin, and cash. A SaaS CFO reads ARR (annual recurring revenue). They're not the same skill.
This isn't about elitism. It's about pattern recognition. A CFO who's run finance at an 8- or 9-figure contractor has internalized hundreds of construction-specific patterns. A CFO who hasn't is reading from a book or learning from YouTube.
For a $50M civil contractor, that pattern recognition is worth multiples of the retainer fee. For a generalist CFO, the construction learning curve usually means the first year of the engagement is the contractor paying tuition.
We covered the full breakdown in our signs you need a Fractional CFO post. The eight signs in summary:
Three or more of those, you're not imagining it. You've outgrown the setup.
Most $10M–$80M construction companies don't need a full-time CFO. They need the same caliber of strategic thinking applied to the right decisions — at a fraction of the cost, without the 12-month hiring search, and with bench depth a single hire can't match.
When fractional is the right fit:
When full-time CFO becomes worth it:
The math gets interesting in the middle. A $40M civil contractor with relatively clean operations is often better off with a strong Fractional CFO at $12K-$15K/month than with a full-time CFO at $300K-$500k/year all-in. The fractional firm has bench depth, peer reviews, and pattern recognition across a portfolio of similar contractors. The full-time CFO is one person doing one business, and replacing one if it doesn't work out takes 6-12 months.
We've watched contractors at $60M-$80M debate this back and forth. Most end up with fractional through the growth, then transition to full-time somewhere between $80M and $100M as the business hits the complexity bar that justifies the seat.
Full breakdown in our Fractional CFO cost guide. Quick summary:
The ROI math is straightforward. A $30M civil contractor moving from 3% to 6% net adds $900K to the bottom line. At a $12K/month retainer plus a typical onboarding, that's roughly $190K all-in year one. About a 4.7x return, before counting the trapped cash that typically gets unlocked in the first 90 days.
Most contractors find $200K-$800K of trapped cash in the first 90 days of an engagement. That cash isn't new. It's working capital that was stuck in unbilled change orders, slow AR, or stalled retainage. The first quarter often pays for the first year of the engagement before the margin work even starts.
If you're shopping for a Fractional CFO, here's what separates the operators from the marketers.
The single most important question: Has every Fractional CFO on the team actually sat in the CFO seat of an 8- or 9-figure contractor?
The right answer is yes. If the answer is "we have construction-experienced Fractional CFOs," dig deeper. What does experienced mean? CPAs who served construction clients aren't the same as CFOs who ran the seat. Controllers who worked for contractors aren't either. The seat itself is the differentiator.
A firm that does SaaS, ecommerce, manufacturing, professional services, and construction is not specialized in any of them. Construction is too complex to treat as a vertical inside a generalist practice.
Look for firms that work exclusively with construction. Their hiring filters for it. Their internal training reinforces it. Their pattern library compounds across their client base. Your business benefits from that depth.
If a firm can't tell you exactly what their onboarding looks like, what their monthly cadence is, and what deliverables you'll receive then they're likely making it up as they go. The best Fractional CFO firms have published their process because they're not afraid of competitors seeing it. The process is the moat.
You're going to be talking to this person every month for years. The chemistry matters. Some owners want direct, blunt, challenging. Some want collaborative and gentle. Neither is right or wrong, but they need to match. A great CFO with the wrong communication style is the wrong CFO for that owner.
Talk to two or three current clients of the firm. Specifically clients in roughly your revenue range and segment. Ask:
Pay attention to the third question. The honest answer reveals a lot.
If a firm won't give you a fixed monthly retainer and instead bills hourly, walk away. Hourly billing kills the relationship. You stop emailing questions because the meter starts. The whole value of a Fractional CFO is the on-demand access between scheduled calls. Hourly destroys it.
Three patterns that should slow you down or stop you entirely:
1. The bait-and-switch staffing model. Senior partner or CFO sells the engagement. "Junior CFO" runs the actual work. The CFO/partner shows up at quarterly reviews (if you're lucky). We've replaced more of these than we can count. Ask in the sales process: Who specifically will run my account day-to-day? How often will I talk to an actual CFO?
2. "We ffdo every industry." Construction is not just another industry. The structural complexity is significant. Generalists will spend the first year of the engagement learning your business on your dime. You can't afford to pay their tuition. Pick a specialist.
3. No published process. If the firm can't tell you what onboarding looks like, what the monthly cadence is, and what deliverables you'll receive. They're improvising. Improvisation doesn't compound into pattern recognition. You want a firm with a system, not a firm that's making it up.
This is the part most Fractional CFO firms won't publish. We're going to. Because the process is the moat, and we're confident enough in it to put it on the page.
From first call to signed contract usually takes about 14 days. Here's how:
Here's what happens every month, every quarter, and in between:
Monthly CFO strategy call. Financial statements get 10 minutes. The rest of the hour is forward-looking: forecasts, projections, goals, and the highest-leverage moves you need to make in the next 30-90 days.
Monthly sales & operations call. The tactical pulse between strategy calls. WIP, backlog, open jobs, and the operational questions that come up between formal calls. Keeps strategy connected to what's actually happening on the ground.
Quarterly business review. Once a quarter, your CFO presents your business to the entire Civil CFO team — where you were 90 days ago, where you are today, and the plan for the next 90. The whole firm pressure-tests the strategy. You're not in this meeting. That's the point. You're paying for the whole firm's brain on your business, not just your CFO's.
Quarterly principals check-in. The owners of Civil CFO personally call in once a quarter to make sure you're getting what you paid for. Direct accountability from the top.
Between-call access. Direct email to your CFO. No call limits. No hour caps. The system self-regulates — clients are busy execs who don't waste time, and we don't ration access.
That's the system. Repeatable. Documented. Compounding. Every Fractional CFO on the team operates inside it, which means the engagement isn't dependent on the genius of one individual. It's an installed operating system.