Full-Time Website Manager vs. Fractional: A Total Cost Comparison for Mid-Sized Organizations (Part 2 of 3)

Article Series: This is Part 2 of 3. Part 1 covered full-time costs. Part 2 compares fractional management. Part 3 will help you decide.

In Part 1 of this series, we learned that hiring a full-time website manager costs about $87,000 per year. This includes salary, benefits, taxes, equipment, and hidden costs.

But what about fractional website management? How much does it cost? What do you get? Is it really better?

This article will answer all these questions. We will look at the real costs of fractional management. We will compare it side-by-side with full-time hiring. By the end, you will see exactly how much you can save.

The Real Cost of Fractional Website Management

Fractional website management works differently than hiring an employee. You pay a monthly fee. The fractional manager handles all your website needs within that fee.

Let’s look at how much this actually costs.

Monthly Retainer Pricing

Fractional website managers charge a monthly retainer. This retainer depends on how much work you need each month.

Here is typical pricing for fractional website management:

Common Pricing Structure:

Basic Plan: $400-600 per month (8-10 hours)
– Good for simple websites
– Monthly updates and maintenance
– Security monitoring

Standard Plan: $1,200-2,500 per month (15-20 hours)
– Good for most mid-sized organizations
– Regular updates and improvements
– SEO work
– Performance optimization

Premium Plan: $3,000-4,000 per month (25-30 hours)
– Good for complex websites
– Frequent updates
– Advanced features
– Priority support

Most mid-sized organizations need the Standard Plan. Let’s use $2,000 per month as our example. This is a typical price for quality fractional management. For a complete breakdown of what fractional website management costs across every tier and business size, our website management pricing guide covers every model and benchmark in detail.

What’s Included in the Monthly Fee?

When you pay a fractional manager $2,000 per month, what do you get? Everything you need: (If you want a detailed breakdown, this guide explains exactly what is included in professional website management packages.

  • All technical work – Updates, fixes, improvements
  • All software and tools – The manager provides these
  • Professional expertise – Expert-level skills
  • Fast response time – Usually 2-4 hours
  • Regular maintenance – Weekly checks and updates
  • Security monitoring – Constant protection
  • Performance optimization – Speed improvements
  • SEO improvements – Better search rankings

To see exactly how this works in practice, you can explore our fractional website management services and how they support growing organizations.

Important: You pay nothing extra for benefits, taxes, equipment, software, or recruitment. The monthly fee includes everything.

Total Annual Cost

Let’s calculate the total cost for one year:

Monthly cost: $2,000
Annual cost: $2,000 × 12 = $24,000 per year That’s everything. No hidden costs. No surprises.

Side-by-Side Cost Comparison

Now let’s compare full-time hiring with fractional management. The difference is very clear.

Annual Costs Comparison

Full-Time Website Manager:
– Base salary: $60,000
– Benefits: $15,000
– Taxes: $5,000
– Equipment/Software: $6,500
– Recruitment: $567
– Management time: $2,040
TOTAL: $89,107 per yearFractional Website Manager:
– Monthly retainer: $24,000
– Benefits: $0
– Taxes: $0
– Equipment/Software: $0
– Recruitment: $0
– Management time: $0
TOTAL: $24,000 per year

Your Savings

The savings are significant:

Annual savings: $89,107 – $24,000 = $65,107
That’s 73% less than hiring full-time!

Over three years, you save almost $200,000 by choosing fractional management instead of hiring full-time.

But What About Hours Worked?

You might think: “Wait! A full-time person works 160 hours per month. A fractional manager works only 15-20 hours per month. How is this fair to compare?”

This is a good question. Let me explain why this comparison is actually fair.

How Much Time Does Website Management Really Need?

Most mid-sized organizations don’t need 160 hours of website work every month. Let’s look at what typical website management actually requires:

Regular monthly tasks:

  • Security updates and monitoring: 2-3 hours
  • Performance checks: 2-3 hours
  • Content updates (2-4 pages): 3-4 hours
  • SEO work: 2-3 hours
  • Backup verification: 1 hour
  • Analytics review: 1-2 hours
  • Bug fixes: 2-4 hours

Total actual work needed: 13-20 hours per month

This matches what fractional managers provide!

What Do Full-Time Managers Do With 160 Hours?

If a full-time person works 160 hours per month, but the website only needs 20 hours of work, what happens to the other 140 hours?

Usually, full-time employees spend time on:

  • Waiting for approvals
  • Attending meetings (not always about the website)
  • Learning new skills (training time)
  • Working on low-priority projects
  • Coffee breaks and socializing
  • Administrative tasks

Not all 160 hours are productive website work. Often, only 60-80 hours per month are actually spent on the website.

The Efficiency Factor

Fractional managers are more efficient. Here’s why:

1. They Are Experts

An expert can complete tasks much faster than someone still learning. A task that takes a full-time employee 4 hours might take an expert only 1 hour.

Example: Optimizing website speed

  • Full-time employee (learning): 6 hours
  • Expert fractional manager: 1.5 hours

2. They Have Better Tools

Fractional website managers own professional tools and software. They know these tools very well. This makes their work faster and better.

3. They Focus Only on Essential Work

Every hour a fractional manager works is productive. They don’t attend unnecessary meetings. They don’t do busy work. Every hour counts.

Real comparison:
– Full-time manager: 160 hours per month, but only 60 hours is actual website work
– Fractional manager: 20 hours per month, but all 20 hours is focused, expert workThe fractional manager often delivers more value in less time!

What You Get With Each Option

Let’s compare what you actually receive with each choice.

Full-Time Manager Gives You:

Advantages:

  • Dedicated person who works only for you
  • Available during your office hours
  • Can attend team meetings anytime
  • Learns your organization very deeply
  • Can help with other tasks if needed

Disadvantages:

  • Costs 3-4 times more ($89,000 vs $24,000)
  • Limited to one person’s skills
  • No backup when sick or on vacation
  • Needs management and supervision
  • Risk of leaving (turnover)
  • Takes 2-3 months to become productive

Fractional Manager Gives You:

Advantages:

  • Expert-level skills immediately
  • 73% cost savings ($65,000 per year saved)
  • No benefits or tax costs
  • No management needed
  • No recruitment costs
  • Continuous service (no vacation gaps)
  • More efficient work (expert speed)
  • Professional tools included
  • Experience from multiple organizations
  • Fast response time (2-4 hours guarantee)

Disadvantages:

  • Not available for meetings anytime
  • Works with other clients too
  • Set hours per month (but you can increase if needed)

Real Organization Examples

Let’s look at how real organizations made this decision and what happened.

Example 1: Clean Energy Association

The Situation:

  • 16 member companies
  • Website gets 5,000 visits per month
  • Need updates 2-3 times per month
  • Must stay secure and fast
  • Budget: $30,000 per year maximum

The Decision: Fractional Management

Why They Chose Fractional:

  • Didn’t need 160 hours of work monthly
  • Wanted expert SEO and performance help
  • Budget couldn’t support $90,000 per year
  • Didn’t want to manage an employee
Results After 3 Years:
– Paying: $2,200 per month ($26,400 per year)
– Website speed: 72% faster
– SEO rankings: Improved by 120%
– Downtime: Zero problems
– Total saved vs full-time: $190,000 over 3 years

Example 2: Clean Energy Developer

The Situation:

  • Growing company
  • Website important for attracting investors
  • Need regular updates
  • Small internal team (no time for employee management)
  • Budget: $25,000 per year maximum

The Decision: Fractional Management

Why They Chose Fractional:

  • Needed expert work, not entry-level
  • No time to train someone
  • Wanted someone who already knew WordPress well
  • Budget was $2,000-3,000 per month, not $7,000+
Results After 2 Years:
– Paying: $1,800 per month ($21,600 per year)
– Bounce rate: Decreased by 23%
– Website load time: 2 seconds
– Google ranking: First page for key terms
– Total saved vs full-time: $135,000 over 2 years

When Does Full-Time Make Sense?

Fractional website management is better for most organizations. But some situations need a full-time person. Let’s be honest about when full-time makes sense.

Choose Full-Time If:

1. Your Website Changes Constantly

If you update your website every single day with major changes, you might need full-time help.

Example: An e-commerce store that adds 50 new products every week and processes hundreds of orders daily.

2. Your Website Is Your Main Product

If your organization sells through your website as the primary business, full-time might be needed.

Example: A software company where the website is the actual product (like a web application).

3. You Need 80+ Hours of Work Per Month

If you truly need more than 80 hours of website work monthly, full-time becomes cost-effective.

4. You Need Someone in Meetings Daily

If your website person must attend many internal meetings every day, full-time might make sense.

Important: Most nonprofits, associations, professional services firms, small-to-medium businesses, government agencies, and educational institutions do NOT need full-time. Fractional is more cost-effective.

For the complete guide to what a fractional website manager is, what they do every month, and how to get started — read our dedicated fractional website manager article.

When Does Fractional Make Sense?

Fractional website management is perfect for organizations that:

1. Need Reliable Website Management

Your website must work well, but it’s not changing every single day.

2. Want to Control Costs

You need professional help, but you don’t want to spend $90,000 per year.

3. Don’t Have Time to Manage an Employee

Your team is already busy. You don’t want to add employee management tasks.

4. Need Expert-Level Work

You want someone who knows what they’re doing, not someone learning on the job.

5. Want Predictable Monthly Costs

You like knowing exactly what you’ll pay each month. No surprises.

6. Already Have a Built Website

Your website is already designed. Now you need someone to keep it running well.

The Break-Even Point

At what point does full-time become cheaper than fractional? Let’s do the math.

Full-time annual cost: $89,107
Fractional hourly rate: About $100-125 per hour
Break-even calculation: $89,107 ÷ $110 = 810 hours per year
That’s 67.5 hours per month

Conclusion: If you truly need more than 67 hours of website work per month, full-time becomes cost-effective. If you need less than 67 hours per month, fractional is much cheaper.

For most organizations: You need 15-30 hours per month. Fractional is the better choice. Choosing the right provider is equally important — these red flags in website maintenance plans can help you avoid costly mistakes.

What’s Next?

Now you understand both options. You know the real costs. You can see the savings.

Fractional management saves most organizations $65,000 per year compared to hiring full-time. Over three years, that’s almost $200,000 in savings. You can view website management packages and pricing to see how fractional support compares to hiring internally.

But how do you actually decide? What questions should you ask yourself?

Part 3 of this series gives you a simple decision framework to help you choose the right option. You will get a clear checklist to help you choose. You will know exactly which option is right for your organization.