What if the growth you’re chasing is the very thing making your business harder to run?
You’re not alone if that question hits a little too close. Many CEOs hit $800K—or $1M—and expect relief. Instead, they get complexity, stress, and less profit.
This isn’t burnout. It’s a business design issue. And it shows up when growth outpaces structure.
We call it growing broke, i.e., increasing revenue and decreasing profit.
Let’s look at a real-world scenario. A CEO just wrapped up their biggest sales month to date. Revenue is up. The team is busy. The pipeline is strong.
But delivery feels like quicksand. Profit is down. The CEO is knee-deep in day-to-day execution. They’re the escalation point, the safety net, and the one manually checking everything from client handoffs to financial reports.
This isn’t rare. It’s the invisible ceiling that many service businesses hit in the multi-six to low-seven-figure range. The outer success masks internal strain. And pushing harder won’t fix it.
So what’s going on under the surface? For most CEOs, the issue isn’t the ambition—it’s the model.
You don’t need to hire faster. You need to get clear on where profit is leaking:
Are your deliverables gold-plated past the point of return?
Is client scope drifting without a clear way to rein it in?
Are you pricing based on effort—or based on what delivery truly costs?
This is where good businesses quietly start growing broke. Profit gets murky. Team bandwidth is maxed. And strategic decisions get made from a place of reactivity instead of clarity.
Here’s the pivot—growth didn’t break your business. It exposed where systems were missing or broken.
Structure is what makes growth sustainable—but most businesses try to scale before they’re structured.
So they buy a new project management software. They hire too soon or without knowing who they really need. They lean on urgency instead of clarity.
And the cost isn’t just operational—it’s emotional and cultural. Team morale erodes. CEO energy drops. Client experience frays. What used to feel exciting starts to feel overwhelming.
It’s frustrating when you’re doing everything “right”—and still feeling like the wheels are coming off.
The fix isn’t more hustle. It’s stronger operations:
Clear delivery workflows
Data that drives decision-making
Systems that don’t require the CEO to fill in gaps
Service models that protect—not drain—profit
To stop growing broke and start growing profits, you need a new design standard. One that’s built to support scale, not just survive it.
Here are the 5 Rules:
These rules aren’t theory—they’re your redesign manual. Because if your business isn’t built to scale, it’s built to strain.
That earlier CEO? She paused the panic hiring. Reworked her solution set for profit, not just appeal. Rebuilt delivery so her team could run it without her. And implemented a simple decision-making rhythm using real data—not just gut checks.
Revenue held. Profit rose. Her role shifted back to leadership. Her business finally felt like a business again—not just a to-do list with a logo.
That’s what good growth actually looks like.
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