Bookkeeper vs. Controller vs. Fractional CFO: What EOS Companies Need at Each Stage
Finance roles are layers, not interchangeable titles. A bookkeeper records what happened. A controller makes it accurate, controlled, and on time. A CFO tells you what it means and what to do next. The art is matching the top of your finance stack to your stage — adding the next layer when complexity demands it, and not before.
Bookkeeper records what happened. · Controller makes sure it's accurate and on time. · CFO tells you what it means and what to do next.
The Finance Seat Maturity Model
Your seat level should match your complexity level. Most stalled EOS companies are running one level below where their complexity sits.
Bookkeeper
Controller
Controller + FP&A
Fractional CFO
Full-time CFO
Outsource vs. In-house vs. Fractional vs. Full-time
There's no universally right structure — only the right structure for a company's stage, complexity, and trajectory. Start with the dominant pressure, layer rather than replace, and use interim only for a gap or event.
| Factor | Outsourced bkkp | Fractional CFO | Interim CFO | In-house controller | Full-time CFO |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue stage | <$3M | $1–50M (best $5M+) | Any (event-driven) | $2–15M+ | $10–20M+ |
| Complexity | Low | Med–high | High / transitional | Medium | High |
| Cash pressure | Low | Med–high | Acute | Medium | Varies |
| Debt / investors | Minimal | Active | Event-driven | Some | Significant |
| Cost | Lowest | $3–12K/mo | Premium, timed | ~$120–180K | $150–200K+ all-in |
| Speed to value | Days | 48hrs–90 days | Immediate | Weeks (hire) | Months (hire) |
| Strategic value | Low | High | High (narrow) | Medium | Highest |
Bookkeeper when you need a controller — clean entries, but no controls and no reliable close.
Controller when you need a CFO — accurate numbers nobody turns into decisions.
Full-time CFO too early — a $180K executive doing controller work the business hasn't outgrown.
CFO with no clean books beneath — strategy built on data you can't trust is guesswork.
Do you need a bookkeeper, controller, or CFO?
| If your honest answer is… | You need… |
|---|---|
| “My books are a mess / behind.” | Bookkeeper (likely outsourced) |
| “My books are clean but I have no controls or reliable close.” | Controller (in-house or outsourced) |
| “I'm growing but cash is always tight and I don't know why.” | Fractional CFO |
| “My finance lead just left, or I'm mid-transaction.” | Interim CFO |
| “Strategic finance decisions are daily and we're scaling fast / raising.” | Full-time CFO |
When to upgrade: the 10-sign checklist
Finance rarely breaks loudly. It becomes too small quietly. Three or more of these together is a structural signal — upgrade the seat a level.
- Financials are routinely late or get restated
- No rolling cash forecast exists
- You've been surprised by cash more than once this year
- You can't state margin by line or customer
- The founder still makes every financial decision
- No one owns hitting the budget
- Numbers get produced but never turned into decisions
- A capital event, acquisition, or loan is on the horizon
- Sales, ops, and finance each have a different version of the truth
- You can explain the past but not what's coming
Frequently asked
When does an EOS company need a controller?
When the books are clean but there are no reliable controls or a disciplined monthly close — typically as employees, payroll complexity, multiple revenue streams, or lender/investor statements enter the picture (often around $2–5M and up).
When does an EOS company need a fractional CFO?
When the books are clean enough to trust but the founder still lacks forward-looking visibility into cash, margin, pricing, and capital decisions. The clearest signs are recurring cash surprises, no 13-week forecast, and margin confusion despite accurate books.
What's the difference between bookkeeping and strategic finance?
Bookkeeping records and reconciles the past. Strategic finance models the future and turns numbers into decisions — pricing, capital allocation, working-capital strategy, and readiness for a sale or raise.
Not sure which seat fits your stage?
Run the readiness diagnostic, then talk to a fractional finance partner about closing the gap.
