Grow Companion

Push for Growth

Growth should increase capability, not merely increase the number of things that can go wrong before lunch.

G_S1_PUSH_FOR_GROWTH — Push for Growth

Quick Insight

Growth should increase capability, not merely increase the number of things that can go wrong before lunch.

Why This Decision Matters

Growth choices decide whether the business increases capability or just increases noise. They affect cash flow, fulfilment, staffing, management rhythm and whether the founder is still needed in every important corner. The reader decides whether growth is supported by cash, systems and staffing capacity.

What Changes If You Get This Wrong

The business may grow into fragility, where every new customer adds revenue and also adds a small mechanical scream behind the wall.

Decision Archetype

Local Optimisation Failure: pushing one growth lever while cash, delivery or people capacity absorbs the pain.

Core Options

  • Grow demand carefully.
  • Build capacity before demand overwhelms delivery.
  • Change strategy if growth is exposing a weaker model.

Key Trade-offs

  • Demand growth versus delivery capacity.
  • Fixed costs versus flexibility.
  • Momentum versus control.

Real-World Patterns

Growth problems often sound like success when described quickly. More demand, more stock and more staff can all be good news, but only when the system underneath can carry them.

Deeper Considerations

Growth should be designed as a system of demand, fulfilment, people and cash. If one part moves faster than the others, the business may grow revenue while shrinking resilience.

Practical Decision Lens

Start with the section exercise:

Write the growth bet, the budget, the expected return, the operational strain and the stop condition.

Then ask:

  • Which part of the system is already tight?
  • What capacity must exist before more demand?
  • What would make you slow down?

UK-Specific Considerations

Growth finance can come from cash, debt, grants or equity, but each creates different control and repayment consequences.

Further Reading