Every founder asks this question somewhere between 40 and 150 employees: Do I hire a full-time HR person, or does something like fractional HR make more sense?

The honest answer is: it depends on what stage of HR maturity your business is at, what problem you're actually trying to solve, and what you can afford to get wrong. Let me walk you through a proper framework — not the version that exists to sell you fractional services.

"Most founders hire their first HR person too late — and then hire the wrong one. A ₹6L HR executive when you need a ₹25L strategist, or a ₹25L strategist when you actually just need someone to run payroll correctly."

First, Understand What Your HR Problem Actually Is

Before you decide who to hire or engage, you need to be honest about what stage of HR chaos you're in. There are broadly three stages:

Stage 1: Pure Operational Chaos (30–80 employees)

At this stage, HR is being done informally. Offers go out on WhatsApp. Payroll is managed in Excel. PF filings might be happening — you're not entirely sure. Leave is approved informally. Nobody knows what the policy is because there isn't one written down.

What you need here is operational execution, not strategy. You need someone (or a service) that will take over the admin, build the processes, and create the foundation. A senior fractional CHRO at this stage is overkill — and often counterproductive, because they're focused on strategy when you have no infrastructure to strategise on top of.

Stage 2: Building Structure (80–200 employees)

You have some HR processes but they're inconsistent. You may have hired an HR executive — but they're stretched thin and don't have the seniority to push back on business leaders or design proper systems. Attrition is becoming a problem. Performance reviews are happening but nobody trusts them. Compliance is being managed reactively.

This is where fractional CHRO with execution support makes the most sense — or alternatively, your first senior HR hire. The decision depends on whether you want to build capability internally or leverage external expertise.

Stage 3: Scaling People Infrastructure (200+ employees)

At this stage, HR is a genuine business function. You likely need a full-time HR head — someone with equity in the outcomes, available every day, deeply embedded in the culture. Fractional arrangements start to feel insufficient as the operational volume and complexity increases.

The Real Cost Comparison

Let's put actual numbers on this, because the "fractional is always cheaper" claim deserves scrutiny.

OptionAnnual Cost (₹)What You GetWhat You Don't Get
Junior HR Executive (2–4 yrs exp)₹4–8LAdministrative execution — offer letters, leave, basic complianceStrategy, system-building, senior decision-making
Mid-Level HR Manager (5–8 yrs exp)₹8–15LProcess management, some policy design, partial complianceBoard-level HR, org design, culture architecture
Senior HR Head / VP HR (10+ yrs exp)₹18–35LStrategy, org design, culture, full compliance ownershipOften: full execution bandwidth at this cost
Fractional CHRO (10–20 hrs/month)₹6–18LCHRO-level strategy + system-building for defined scopeDaily availability, full execution bandwidth
HR Ops Outsourcing (full lifecycle)₹3–8LComplete HR operations — payroll inputs, lifecycle, compliance adminStrategy, culture, leadership

The key insight from this table: fractional CHRO + HR ops outsourcing together often costs less than one senior full-time HR hire — and gives you better coverage across both strategy and execution.

When Fractional HR Makes Sense

Choose Fractional HR If:

When a Full-Time HR Head Makes More Sense

Choose Full-Time If:

The Hybrid That Most SMEs End Up Using

Here's the model that actually works for most Indian businesses in the 50–300 employee range:

  1. Fractional CHRO (8–16 hours/month): Owns HR strategy, org design, policy, board-level people conversations, and senior hiring decisions
  2. HR Ops Partner or Outsourced HR Ops: Handles day-to-day operations — payroll inputs, offer letters, leave management, employee queries, compliance filings
  3. Junior internal HR coordinator (hired after 12–18 months): Takes over admin from the outsourced model once processes are stable and documented

This gives you coverage across the full HR spectrum at a fraction of the cost of building an internal team from scratch — and with better quality at each layer, because you're using specialists rather than generalists.

The Question Nobody Asks: What's the Cost of Getting It Wrong?

Most founders evaluate this decision by looking at salary costs. Very few consider the cost of getting it wrong.

Hiring a ₹6L HR executive when you needed a ₹20L strategist means 18 months of no real system-building, continuing founder involvement in every people decision, and potentially serious compliance gaps accumulating. By the time you realise the mistake, you've lost 2 years of infrastructure development.

Hiring a ₹30L HR head before you have the foundation built (processes documented, HRIS implemented, basic compliance sorted) means you're paying strategy-level money for someone who spends most of their time doing admin — and who will likely leave within 18 months from frustration.

The most expensive HR mistake isn't hiring the wrong person. It's hiring at the wrong time for the wrong thing.

"The founder I work with most often is someone who hired a ₹6L HR person at 80 employees, watched them drown for two years, and is now at 180 employees with still no system. They didn't need a person — they needed a process."

A Simple Decision Framework

Answer these four questions:

  1. Is your HR problem primarily operational (admin, compliance, process) or strategic (culture, org design, talent strategy)?
  2. How many daily HR interactions are happening? Under 20/day: outsourcing works. Above 50/day: you probably need someone in-house.
  3. Do you have ₹20L+/year budgeted for HR leadership — and is this the best use of that money right now?
  4. Do you need daily availability — someone who can walk into a meeting at 2pm — or structured engagement with defined deliverables?

If your problems are mostly operational and you don't have daily strategic decisions requiring an HR leader, fractional + outsourced ops is almost always the better choice for the 30–200 employee range.

If your problems are strategic and you need daily availability, it's time to recruit a full-time HR head. But do yourself a favour: build the operational foundation first, or they'll spend their first six months on admin they didn't sign up for.

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Ritika Modi

Founder, Kensho HR Solutions. Former HR leader at Amazon India (98.93% SLA closure on HR operations) and Stallion Asset Management. Built HR infrastructure for businesses from 50 to 10,000 employees. MBA from NMIMS Mumbai. Now works with Indian SMEs to build the same systems.