Insights

Founder Advice13 April 2026 · 5 min read

When does a growing company actually need CHRO-level advice?

Most SMEs do not need a full-time CHRO. Many do need senior HR judgment earlier than they realise. The hard part is knowing the difference.

By Dr.CHRO Editorial

A lot of growing companies wait too long before bringing in serious HR judgment. They assume HR is mostly administration until a difficult termination, compensation issue, compliance gap, or manager problem forces the question.

The mistake is not failing to hire a full-time CHRO earlier. The mistake is assuming the only options are full-time executive hire or doing it yourself.

Most companies between roughly 20 and 200 employees hit a stage where people decisions start carrying real business risk. Contracts matter more. Manager capability matters more. The quality of exits matters more. Informal practices that felt efficient at 12 people start creating drag and exposure at 60.

That is often the moment when CHRO-level advice becomes useful. Not because the company needs a full HR function built overnight, but because it needs better judgment on the decisions in front of it now.

Good CHRO-level advisory is valuable when the problem is real, consequential, and not well served by templates. A founder deciding whether to terminate a senior employee, formalise compensation bands, redesign reporting lines, or stabilise a high-attrition team is not really buying HR admin. They are buying judgment.

The practical test is simple. If the people decision could create legal exposure, leadership distraction, execution drag, or cultural damage if mishandled, senior HR advice is usually warranted. If it is routine administration, it usually is not.

That is the gap Dr.CHRO is designed to fill. Senior advisory when the stakes justify it, without pretending every growing company needs a permanent CHRO on payroll.

Where to go next

If this sounds like your situation, don't force-fit it alone.

Some situations fit a Starter Pack cleanly. Others need broader managed advisory. If you are not sure which applies, the right first move is a short enquiry.

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