Most founders think about finance in broad strokes: "we need someone to handle the money stuff." The problem is that the money stuff involves three distinct types of work that require genuinely different skills and experience levels. Hiring a CFO when you need a bookkeeper costs you six figures for work that a $1,000/month engagement could have handled. Hiring a bookkeeper when you need a CFO leaves the strategic financial work -- the model, the fundraising prep, the board reporting -- entirely undone.
Understanding what each role actually does, and the signals that tell you which one you need, is one of the more useful pieces of operational knowledge for early-stage founders.
The Bookkeeper
A bookkeeper works with historical financial data. Their job is to record what has already happened: categorizing transactions in your accounting software, reconciling bank and credit card statements, managing accounts payable (what you owe to vendors) and accounts receivable (what customers owe you), processing invoices, and running payroll. A good bookkeeper keeps your books current, accurate, and organized so that when tax season arrives or someone needs to look at the financials, the underlying data is clean.
What a bookkeeper does not do: they do not produce financial strategy, they do not build financial models, they do not analyze your unit economics, and they do not advise you on how to structure a fundraise or what your margin trends mean. They work with the past, not the future.
Cost range: $20 to $60 per hour for an independent bookkeeper; $300 to $1,500 per month for a fractional or outsourced bookkeeping service, depending on transaction volume and complexity.
When you need one: From the day your business has real revenue. This is not a role you add when you get to Series A. It is the first financial function you should put in place, because every other financial function -- the controller, the CFO, the tax advisor -- depends on having accurate books to work from. Founders who try to manage their own books typically produce a mess that costs significantly more to clean up than it would have cost to hire a bookkeeper from the beginning.
The Controller
A controller manages the bookkeeper and takes responsibility for the accuracy and quality of your company's financial reporting. Their core function is producing monthly financial statements (P&L, balance sheet, cash flow statement) that are timely, accurate, and, as the company grows, GAAP-compliant. Controllers own the accounting function: they establish the chart of accounts, set up internal controls to prevent errors and fraud, ensure that revenue is recognized correctly under the applicable accounting standards, handle more complex transactions like deferred revenue, multi-entity consolidations, or stock-based compensation accounting, and oversee audit preparation.
A controller is not producing financial strategy. They are ensuring that the financial data is reliable enough to support strategic decisions. The distinction matters because founders sometimes hire a controller hoping to get strategic financial guidance, and then find themselves paying $4,000 a month for excellent reporting with no strategic output.
Cost range: $80 to $150 per hour; $2,000 to $6,000 per month for a fractional controller engagement, depending on the complexity of your accounting and the hours required.
When you need one: Typically when your business reaches $1 million to $3 million in annual revenue, when you are preparing for an institutional audit (due diligence for a Series A or Series B, for example), or when your accounting has become complex enough that a bookkeeper alone cannot produce reliable monthly financial statements. Signs you need a controller before you think you do: your books are frequently late, your monthly P&L has persistent unexplained variances, you are booking revenue recognition manually and inconsistently, or your accountant is flagging errors in your trial balance.
The CFO
A CFO sets financial strategy. They are not doing accounting -- they are using the accounting to make and advise on decisions. A CFO builds the financial model that you take into a fundraise, presents to your board, and uses to manage the business. They oversee investor relations and board financial reporting. They lead the fundraising process: identifying the right structure, timing the raise relative to milestones, managing the data room, and coordinating due diligence. They make capital allocation decisions: should you hire five engineers or three engineers and double the marketing budget? They set the financial strategy for the next 12 to 24 months.
A CFO manages the controller and is accountable for the overall financial function, but they should not be doing the controller's work. If your CFO is spending their time reconciling bank accounts or fixing bookkeeping errors, you either have a misaligned expectation of the role or an underlying operational problem that is pulling them down from strategic work.
Cost range: $150 to $350 per hour; $5,000 to $15,000 per month for a fractional CFO engagement; $200,000 to $400,000 per year plus equity for a full-time CFO at a venture-backed company.
When you need one: When you are actively planning a fundraise and need an investor-grade financial model and the support to run the process. When you have reached $2 million or more in ARR and the financial complexity requires executive-level oversight. When your board is asking questions about financial strategy that you are not equipped to answer directly. When capital allocation decisions have become complex enough that getting them wrong has material consequences for the business.
The Most Common Hiring Mistake
The mistake founders make most often is misidentifying which role they need because they conflate all financial work into a single category.
Founders who need a controller hire a CFO: they are paying $8,000 to $12,000 per month for strategic financial oversight when what they actually need is clean monthly financials and proper accounting controls. The CFO spends half their time doing controller-level work because the infrastructure is not there, and the founder gets neither reliable accounting nor genuine financial strategy.
Founders who need a CFO hire a bookkeeper: they are underprepared for fundraising, their board reporting is inadequate, and no one is building or maintaining the financial model. The bookkeeper is perfectly competent at their job, but the strategic financial function is completely absent.
Both mistakes are expensive. The first costs you the difference between a CFO retainer and a controller retainer, every month. The second costs you the quality of your fundraise, the quality of your financial decisions, and sometimes the company.
Fractional Options for Each Role
All three roles have fractional practitioners, and for most startups, fractional is the right answer until you reach the scale that justifies full-time. A full-time bookkeeper is rarely necessary until your transaction volume is so high that it requires constant attention. A fractional controller can produce excellent monthly financial statements for a company with $3 million to $10 million in revenue. A fractional CFO can run a Series A process and produce board-ready financials at a fraction of the cost of a full-time hire.
The fractional model works best when expectations are clearly defined: what deliverables, on what schedule, at what level of quality. The fractional model breaks down when the engagement scope is vague ("help with finance stuff") or when the company's financial complexity grows beyond what the fractional arrangement can support in the hours allocated.
How to Diagnose Which Gap You Actually Have
The diagnostic question is simple: what is the specific problem your business is experiencing with its finances?
- Your books are always behind, your bank reconciliation is months late, and you do not know what you owe vendors: You need a bookkeeper.
- Your books are current but your monthly reports are inconsistent, your revenue recognition is unclear, and you are worried about what an auditor would find: You need a controller.
- Your books and reports are fine, but you do not have a financial model, your board wants a CFO on the team before your next raise, or you are making capital allocation decisions without a financial framework: You need a CFO.
The answer to that diagnostic question tells you where to start. Many companies need to address earlier-stage gaps before later-stage functions will be effective: a CFO cannot build a reliable financial model if the bookkeeping is wrong, and a controller cannot produce accurate financials if the underlying books are in disarray.
For a comprehensive overview of working with finance professionals at every stage, see the founder's complete guide to financial expertise. If you are specifically evaluating whether to hire a fractional CFO, our guide on what a fractional CFO actually does covers the role in detail.
