Can One Person Run a CRO Program?
The most common entry point into CRO is hiring a single person—a "CRO manager" or "growth marketer"—who is expected to handle research, hypothesis generation, experiment design, development, analysis, and stakeholder reporting. This is roughly equivalent to hiring one person to be your entire marketing department.
The skills required for effective CRO span at least five disciplines: UX research, data analysis, visual design, front-end development, and behavioral psychology. Finding one person who is proficient across all five is exceptionally rare. More commonly, you hire someone strong in one or two areas who spends the first 12 to 18 months filling gaps in the others.
Beyond skills, there is the experiment database problem. Effective CRO is not about running random tests. It is about deploying hypotheses informed by thousands of prior experiments across similar brands. A solo practitioner starts from near-zero institutional knowledge. An agency with a mature program starts with a database of patterns: what works in activewear, what fails in supplements, what performs differently above versus below EUR 50 AOV.
This does not mean solo practitioners cannot succeed. It means the timeline to meaningful revenue impact is significantly longer, and the opportunity cost of that delay is substantial.
What Does a Full In-House CRO Team Actually Cost?
Let us do the math honestly. A functional in-house CRO team requires, at minimum, four roles. Some can be part-time or shared, but the functions need to be covered.
| Role | Monthly Cost (EUR) | Responsibility |
|---|---|---|
| CRO Manager / Strategist | 5,000–7,000 | Research, hypothesis, analysis, reporting |
| UX / UI Designer | 4,500–6,500 | Experiment design, wireframes, visual assets |
| Front-End Developer | 5,000–7,000 | Experiment implementation, QA, deployment |
| Data Analyst (part-time / shared) | 2,500–4,000 | Statistical analysis, tracking setup, reporting |
Total personnel cost: EUR 17,000 to 24,500 per month. Add tooling (A/B testing platform, heatmapping, session recording, analytics) at EUR 2,000 to 5,000 per month. The fully loaded cost ranges from EUR 20,000 to 30,000 per month.
Hidden costs most brands underestimate
- Recruiting: Finding a qualified CRO strategist takes 2 to 4 months. During that time, the program produces nothing while the cost of inaction compounds.
- Onboarding and ramp-up: Even experienced hires need 2 to 3 months to learn your brand, customer base, and tech stack before running effective experiments.
- Management overhead: Someone needs to manage the CRO team, set priorities, resolve cross-functional conflicts, and report to leadership. This draws from existing management capacity.
- Turnover risk: If a key team member leaves, you restart the recruiting and onboarding cycle. The program stalls. An agency provides continuity.
What Advantages Does a CRO Agency Provide?
The fundamental advantage of a specialized agency is not just expertise—it is compounded expertise across many brands. Every experiment run for one client generates a learning that benefits future clients. This creates an asymmetric advantage that no individual in-house team can replicate.
The experiment database advantage
At DRIP, we have a database of over 4,000 tested experiments across ecommerce verticals. When we onboard a new client, we do not start from zero. We start from a library of hypotheses that have been validated (or invalidated) across similar brands, similar price points, and similar audiences. This means higher win rates and faster time to impact.
Cross-brand pattern recognition
When we see a hypothesis win for an activewear brand, we can identify whether that pattern applies to sportswear, athleisure, or wellness brands. When a trust badge test fails on a premium brand, we understand why it would succeed on a newer DTC brand. This cross-pollination of insights is something an in-house team—locked into a single brand—structurally cannot produce.
Skin in the game
DRIP offers a 10% revenue lift guarantee. This is not a marketing gimmick. It is a structural alignment of incentives. If our program does not deliver at least 10% attributed revenue growth, we have failed—and we bear that risk. An in-house team has no comparable accountability mechanism. Salaries are paid whether the program delivers or not.
When Does an In-House CRO Team Make More Sense?
We are a CRO agency, and we will tell you honestly: there are scenarios where building in-house is the better long-term decision. Here is when.
- Massive traffic volume (1M+ monthly sessions). At this scale, you can run 15 to 20 experiments simultaneously with adequate statistical power. A dedicated team can sustain this velocity and the institutional knowledge stays in-house permanently.
- Mature testing culture. If your organization already makes data-driven decisions and CRO insights need to inform product development, merchandising, and brand strategy, an in-house team can embed more deeply than an external partner.
- Complex tech stack. If your store runs on a heavily customized platform with proprietary components, an in-house developer who knows the codebase intimately may implement experiments faster than an external team.
- Long-term strategic asset. If you view CRO as a core competency rather than a service, building the team in-house creates a compounding asset. The knowledge, processes, and culture you build remain with the company.
The transition from agency to in-house does not have to be binary. Several of our clients have used the agency engagement to build their internal capability. The agency runs the program, delivers results, and simultaneously trains the client's team until they are ready to take over.
Is a Hybrid Agency Plus In-House Model the Best Approach?
The binary framing of "agency vs in-house" misses the most effective model for mid-market brands: the hybrid approach. In this model, you work with a specialized CRO agency for experiment execution while maintaining an internal point person who owns priorities, provides brand context, and ensures learnings are retained.
How the hybrid model works
- Agency provides: Hypothesis generation from experiment database, experiment design, development, statistical analysis, cross-brand insights, and velocity (8 to 15 experiments per month).
- Internal stakeholder provides: Brand context, customer insight, business priorities, internal alignment, and knowledge management.
- Shared: Roadmap planning, results review, strategic direction, and the decision on when (if ever) to transition fully in-house.
This model costs less than a full in-house team while delivering agency-level velocity and insights. The internal stakeholder (typically a growth marketing manager or ecommerce lead) dedicates 20 to 30 percent of their time to CRO oversight rather than requiring a dedicated headcount.
| Factor | Solo Practitioner | In-House Team | Agency | Hybrid |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly cost | €5–7K | €20–30K | €8–15K | €10–18K |
| Time to first results | 6–12 months | 4–6 months | 1–2 months | 1–2 months |
| Experiment velocity | 2–4/month | 8–15/month | 8–15/month | 8–15/month |
| Cross-brand insights | None | None | Extensive | Extensive |
| Brand context depth | High | High | Moderate | High |
| Knowledge retention | Single point of failure | Strong | External | Strong |
| Scalability | Limited | Requires hiring | Immediate | Immediate |
How Should You Decide Between Agency and In-House CRO?
The decision framework is straightforward. Ask three questions:
- Do you have the traffic volume? Running 15+ experiments per month requires roughly 500K+ monthly sessions for adequate statistical power across multiple tests. Below this, an agency that pools learnings across clients is more capital-efficient.
- Do you have the management capacity? A CRO team needs a manager who understands experimentation, can resolve cross-functional conflicts, and can advocate for the program at the leadership level. If this capacity does not exist, an agency provides the leadership layer.
- What is your acceptable time to first results? If you need revenue impact within 60 days, an agency is the only realistic option. If you can invest 6 to 12 months before expecting returns, in-house becomes viable.
For brands in the EUR 5M to 50M annual revenue range—which represents the majority of growth-stage ecommerce companies—the agency or hybrid model delivers the highest ROI. The experiment database, cross-brand insights, and immediate velocity outweigh the long-term knowledge retention advantages of in-house.
Above EUR 50M, the calculus shifts. At that scale, you have the traffic for high-velocity testing, the budget for a full team, and the strategic imperative to keep experimentation knowledge in-house. Many brands at this stage use an agency to build the initial program and culture, then transition to a hybrid model, and eventually bring the capability fully in-house.
Whichever model you choose, the worst option is inaction. The cost of not running a structured CRO program compounds every month. Whether you build or buy, the important thing is to start.
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