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Struggling to scale your company? Here are five things that could be holding you back

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There is an “unprecedented degree of change in the business environment,” as one CEO in the latest Fortune/Deloitte CEO survey put it. If you’re struggling to scale your company, you’re not alone. Growth is harder and fatigue is everywhere. This volatile environment makes focus all the more important.

I have worked with over a hundred VC or Private Equity backed startups through scaleups, and there are consistent barriers that every CEO and C-Suite, no matter your industry or business model, must overcome in order to grow successfully. As my old boss at Cisco, John Chambers, used to say “Concentrate on what you can control, not on what you can’t.” As a leader, here are five common factors that you can control that could be holding you back:

1. Confusion brings you down

As an organization grows and scales, teams often lose sight of their core objectives. This leads to confusion, misalignment, and diluted motivation. When people are unclear why they are doing what they’re doing, their engagement and performance drop.

Many leaders fall into the trap of chasing too many opportunities or reacting to the latest market noise, rather than sticking to a clear, differentiated strategy. Without radical focus, energy and resources are watered down.

Scaling requires a disciplined plan—knowing exactly what you want, why it matters, and how you’ll get there, and then saying “no” to distractions. Regularly revisit your strategy and ruthlessly prioritize your core purpose and values.

2. Measure what matters

Many companies mistake activity for progress, but it’s not just about having a plan for growth—it’s about working that plan with discipline. In scaling organizations, it’s common for teams to operate without clear, shared metrics for success. But without visible progress markers and regular, disciplined check-ins, accountability wanes. This makes it easy for priorities to drift and for mediocrity to creep in.

Ask yourself, are you tracking the right metrics, measuring outcomes, and iterating based on what you learn? If you’re not measuring execution at a granular level, you risk drifting or burning out while making little real progress. Track everything and celebrate small wins to fuel momentum.

3. What got you here will not get you there

What worked when your organization was smaller often breaks when you try to scale. As complexity increases, teams often lack robust ways of processing information, making decisions, and solving problems.

If these old, informal methods persist, teams get bogged down in confusion, judgment, and finger-pointing rather than curiosity and shared learning. Processes that were once efficient become bottlenecks.

In order to overcome this, technology, workflow, and decision-making structures must evolve. If your infrastructure, from sales processes to financial controls, can’t handle growth, execution will falter. Don’t be afraid to rebuild core systems to support the next stage of scale.

4. People don’t scale, teams do

No amount of ambition or capital can compensate for the wrong team or a lack of alignment. Scaling exposes weaknesses in team leadership, skills, and coordination.

Ask yourself: do you have the right people in the right seats? Are your team leaders and teams aligned, and does everyone understand the goals and the urgency? Invest in hiring and developing talent density in teams. Ensure the team’s incentives (care why) and goals are in sync with the business’s direction (know why).

5. Have clear values, structure, and role definition

Scaling brings new people, changing structures, and evolving roles. When new employees are added to an organization, it can create friction with existing employees if their values don’t align. A study by Columbia Business School found that the tipping point for shaping existing employees’ values is when 20-40% of new employees have different values—this can be positive, but can also lead to a negative impact on company culture.

It’s also true that without clear definition and communication about who is responsible for what, teams become inefficient, drop balls, and experience internal friction. This lack of structure undermines performance and accountability.

With rapid change, new joiners, shifting priorities, and changing values, team cohesion and psychological safety can break down. When people don’t feel safe to speak up, take risks, or admit mistakes, trust erodes and collaboration suffers. This leads to siloed behavior and stunted learning.

All this needs to be taken into account in order to ensure your employees are contributing to growth, not hindering it, and have opportunities to reach their full potential.

The key to successful scaling

Successful scaling isn’t just about increasing revenue—it’s about building the durable systems, culture, and relationships that make growth sustainable.

If you’re stuck in your scaling plans, step back and diagnose your organization across these five areas. Often, the real obstacle is not just one thing, but a combination that needs clarity and focused action.

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