COO vs Director of Operations: Which Role Does Your Business Actually Need

$150K+
median total compensation for a full-time COO at a mid-size company: versus $80–$130K for a Director of Operations in the same organization
2 questions
determine which role you need: Does the person own the company’s entire operational strategy, or do they execute a defined operational scope? COO = strategy owner. Director = execution manager
Fractional
COO engagement is available at $5,000–$15,000/month: the most common path for growing businesses that need COO-level thinking without a full-time commitment
COO vs. Director of Operations: The Core Difference

The Chief Operating Officer and the Director of Operations are frequently confused because both roles are concerned with how a business runs. The distinction is one of scope and authority. A COO owns the company’s entire operational strategy: they decide how different functions work together, how the organization should be structured to execute on strategy, and what the operating model should look like 12–24 months from now. They report directly to the CEO and typically have authority over multiple functional leaders.

A Director of Operations executes within a defined operational scope. They manage a set of processes, often within a specific function or business unit, and are responsible for ensuring those processes run efficiently and consistently. They report to the COO, the CEO, or a business unit head: depending on the organization’s structure. The Director of Operations is an excellent hire for a business that has a clear operational model and needs skilled execution management. It is not the right hire for a business that needs someone to design and own that model.

Common mistake: Hiring a Director of Operations when you need a COOGrowing businesses often hire a Director of Operations because the COO title feels too senior or too expensive, but then discover that the Director-level hire does not have the authority or scope to solve the problems that prompted the hire. If the core need is strategic operational leadership, deciding how the organization should be structured, which functions need to be built, and what the operating model should look like, a Director of Operations title will not attract or empower the person who can do that work. Title the role to match the authority you are willing to give.
COO vs. Director of Operations: Side-by-Side Comparison
Dimension Chief Operating Officer (COO) Director of Operations
Reporting line Reports to CEO. Peer of CFO, CMO Reports to COO, CEO, or business unit head
Scope Company-wide operational strategy and execution Defined functional or business unit scope
Strategic authority Sets operational strategy. Decides org structure. Owns operating model Executes within defined strategy. Implements direction from above
Team ownership Typically manages multiple functional leaders (VP Operations, HR, Finance Operations) Manages an operations team or function. May have one layer of management below
Typical company stage $5M+ revenue. Multiple departments. CEO needs operational relief $1M–$10M. Defined operational function that needs dedicated management
Full-time cost $150,000–$300,000+ total compensation $80,000–$130,000 total compensation
Fractional option Yes: widely available at $5,000–$15,000/month Less common fractionally. Usually hired full-time or promoted from within
“The question is not which title sounds more appropriate: it is what authority and scope you are willing to actually give the person. A COO without genuine operational authority is just an expensive operations manager. Define the authority first. The title follows.”
Deciding Which Role Your Business Needs: 5 Questions
  1. Does the CEO need strategic relief or execution management? If the CEO is spending significant time on operational decisions that should not require CEO involvement, the business needs someone who can own the operational strategy and make those decisions independently. That is a COO. If the CEO has a clear operational model but needs someone to ensure it is executed consistently and efficiently, that is a Director of Operations.
  2. How many functional areas does the role need to coordinate across? A COO typically coordinates across multiple functional areas, sales, operations, HR, finance operations, customer success, because operational effectiveness depends on how those functions interact. A Director of Operations typically manages a single function or a defined set of processes. If the role needs cross-functional authority, it needs a COO-level mandate.
  3. What is the expected tenure of the strategic operating model? If the business is in a phase where the operating model itself needs to be designed or significantly redesigned, new markets, new scale, new product mix, the business needs a COO who can own that design work. If the operating model is stable and the need is continuous improvement of existing processes, a Director of Operations is the right scope.
  4. What is your budget and your timeline to full-time? For businesses that need COO-level leadership but cannot yet justify the full-time cost, a fractional COO is the right path. Fractional COOs typically engage 1–3 days per week at $5,000–$15,000 per month, providing strategic operational leadership without the full-time salary commitment. As the business scales, the engagement can transition to full-time when the volume of work justifies it.
  5. Do you have the internal team that a COO can lead, or are you still building it? A COO is most effective when there is a team to lead and coordinate. If the business has 2–3 people total, a COO title is premature: the work is operational execution, not operational leadership. Build the team first. Add the COO-level leadership layer when there is a team for that leader to align and develop.
Tip: For businesses between $2M and $10M, a fractional COO often outperforms a full-time Director of OperationsAt the $2M–$10M revenue stage, most businesses need more operational leadership than a Director of Operations can provide but cannot yet justify the full-time COO cost. A fractional COO, 2 days per week at $8,000–$12,000 per month, provides strategic operational leadership, cross-functional coordination, and the organizational design work that drives growth. When the business reaches the scale where 2 days per week is insufficient, the transition to a full-time hire is straightforward because the operating model has already been built.

Exploring whether a fractional COO is right for your business stage?

Read: Small Business Management Playbook →

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SBM Editorial Team
An independent small business publication by the team at World Consulting Group.
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