1. MRR/ARR is the operating currency, not pipeline
In B2B services, marketing reports pipeline volume and pipeline-influenced revenue. In SaaS, the operating currency is ARR, and the metrics that matter are:
- New logo ARR — net new revenue from new customers acquired this quarter
- Expansion ARR — additional revenue from existing customers (upsells, cross-sells, seat expansion)
- Contraction ARR — revenue lost from existing customers downgrading
- Churn ARR — revenue lost from customers leaving entirely
- Net new ARR = New logo + Expansion − Contraction − Churn
A fractional CMO in Brazilian B2B SaaS should be able to report all five numbers monthly, not just pipeline volume. Marketing typically owns New Logo + a partial share of Expansion (usually content/lifecycle marketing's contribution to upsell).
2. NRR is the most important number nobody asks about
Net Revenue Retention is the single most predictive SaaS metric. Healthy Brazilian B2B SaaS in mid-market shows NRR of 105-120% (annual). Below 95%, the company is actually shrinking from existing customers and has to acquire faster than it should. Above 125%, the company is in elite territory and probably under-investing in new logo.
A fractional CMO who isn't reporting NRR by cohort, by segment, by tenure is missing the metric that determines whether the business compounds or doesn't.
3. Product-led, sales-led, or hybrid — and the marketing function shifts
The fractional CMO must know which model the company is operating in:
- Product-led growth (PLG): marketing's job is to drive sign-ups (free trial or freemium), and the product converts. Marketing optimizes for activation rate, time-to-value, viral coefficient. Sales is consultative on enterprise expansion, not on initial close.
- Sales-led growth (SLG): marketing's job is to generate qualified pipeline, and sales closes. The standard B2B mid-market playbook applies.
- Hybrid (most common in Brazilian B2B SaaS at R$30M+ scale): marketing drives both PLG sign-ups and SLG pipeline. The CMO has to allocate budget between the two motions and measure them separately.
The wrong allocation kills the operation. A fractional CMO who treats a hybrid SaaS like a pure SLG B2B company will overspend on outbound and under-invest in product onboarding. A CMO who treats it like pure PLG will starve the enterprise sales team.
4. Board reporting is a separate discipline
Brazilian B2B SaaS at R$30M+ ARR typically has at least one external board member from a VC or growth equity firm. The board reads SaaS metrics through a specific lens:
- ARR growth rate (annualized) — looking for 80-150%+ at this scale
- Magic number — net new ARR divided by sales+marketing spend; healthy SaaS shows 0.7-1.5
- Burn multiple — net burn divided by net new ARR; healthy is below 1.5, elite is below 1.0
- CAC payback by segment — usually expected to be under 18 months even in conservative scenarios
The fractional CMO has to be in the room when board materials are prepared — or at minimum, the marketing section of the board deck must be authored by them. CEOs who absorb this layer alone are at risk of misalignment between board expectations and operational reality.
5. Cohort math is sharper, with longer LTV horizons
SaaS companies have better cohort data than services businesses because revenue is recurring and trackable monthly. A fractional CMO at a SaaS company can compute:
- Month 1, 3, 6, 12, 18 retention curves by cohort
- LTV by acquisition channel, with 36-60 month horizons (where services businesses usually max out at 12-24 months)
- Expansion velocity by cohort (how much existing customers grow over time)
The implication: fractional CMOs in SaaS need to be more comfortable with cohort math than their services-business peers. A CMO who can't read a retention curve is operationally blind in a SaaS context.
6. Community and developer dynamics for some categories
For developer-focused SaaS (devtools, infra, API products), marketing has an additional layer: community and developer relations. This isn't optional — the most successful developer-focused SaaS companies in Brazil have community-led acquisition driving 30-50% of new logos.
A fractional CMO at a devtools company has to think about:
- Documentation as a primary marketing surface
- Open-source strategy and adjacent OSS contributions
- Developer events (Brazilian developer conferences are still under-saturated)
- Community managers, devrel hires, technical content
This is a different skillset from traditional B2B marketing. Fractional CMOs without devtools experience should be honest about it and either decline these engagements or pair with a community-savvy contractor for the devrel layer.
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