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// Guide 01 · Definition

What is a fractional
paid media operator?

A fractional paid media operator is a senior advertising specialist who runs your paid ad accounts directly, on a part-time or retainer basis, instead of being hired full-time or routed through an agency team. For DTC e-commerce brands, that usually means one experienced buyer managing Meta and other paid channels day to day, and answering for the results.

The short version

"Fractional" means you get a fraction of a senior operator's time, not a fraction of their seniority. You are buying the judgment of someone who has run large accounts, applied to yours, without the cost or commitment of a full-time hire and without the layers of an agency.

What the role actually includes

A fractional paid media operator owns the parts of paid advertising that move profit, not just the parts that fill a status report. In a DTC context that typically covers:

  • Strategy built from your numbers. Unit economics, contribution margin, and customer-acquisition-cost payback come first, ahead of any generic playbook.
  • Hands-on account management. The operator is in the ad account daily, making the actual buying decisions rather than briefing someone junior to make them.
  • Measurement and tracking. Conversions API setup, pixel and event hygiene, GA4 configuration, and attribution sanity checks, the work that keeps reporting honest.
  • Profit-tied reporting. Decisions and reports are framed around blended MER and contribution margin, with platform ROAS as one input rather than the verdict.

Why brands hire fractional instead of an agency or a full-time lead

There is a stage in a DTC brand's growth where the two obvious options both fit badly. A full-time senior buyer in a major US market runs roughly $130,000 to $180,000 all-in, plus benefits and a three-to-six-month ramp, which is a heavy commitment for a role you may not need full-time yet. A full agency, meanwhile, often puts a salesperson on your calls and a junior in your account.

Fractional fills that gap: a senior operator immediately, at a fraction of a full-time cost, with no ramp period and no junior layer. For a deeper side-by-side, see fractional vs agency vs in-house.

When it makes sense for a DTC brand

The honest spend range is roughly $25,000 to $150,000 per month on Meta. Below about $25,000, the math does not work for either side. Above the top of that range, the question usually shifts to whether it is time to build the function in-house, which a good operator should help you plan rather than resist.

What "good" looks like

A strong fractional operator should make your reporting more honest before they make it prettier, treat tracking and attribution as ongoing work rather than a one-time setup, and have an explicit plan for the day you outgrow them. If you want to see how that translates into a concrete engagement, the Work With Me page lays out exactly what is included, and the case studies show the kind of results it produces.

// Common questions

Quick answers.

What does a fractional paid media operator do?

They run a company's paid advertising accounts directly on a part-time or retainer basis: strategy, daily campaign management, creative testing, conversion tracking and attribution setup, and reporting tied to profit metrics like contribution margin and blended MER. The defining trait is that a senior specialist does the hands-on work, rather than supervising juniors.

How is a fractional operator different from an agency?

At an agency you usually buy a team: a senior lead sells and reviews while junior buyers do the day-to-day. A fractional operator is one senior person doing the actual buying, with no account-manager layer and no handoff to juniors. Fractional engagements are typically month-to-month and capped to a small roster.

What is the minimum ad spend to hire one?

For DTC e-commerce on Meta, roughly $25,000 per month in ad spend is a practical floor. The model fits best between about $25,000 and $150,000 per month, where a full-time senior hire is still expensive and a full agency is too detached.

Is a fractional operator the same as a freelancer?

Not quite. Both are independent, but a freelancer is usually defined by being cheaper and task-based, while a fractional operator is defined by seniority and accountability for outcomes, taking ownership of strategy and measurement rather than just executing a brief.

// Apply

Think this is
the right fit?

If you are a DTC brand spending $25K+/month on Meta, tell me about the account and I'll give you a straight read on whether a fractional operator is what you need.

See If We're a Fit