Crisis. Contained.

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Growth Is Not the Problem: What Sits Underneath It Is

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One of the biggest misconceptions in business is that growth solves problems.

In reality, growth tends to expose them.

I’ve seen businesses:

  • Increase revenue 
  • Expand teams 
  • Take on new opportunities

…and assume that means the business is working.

But what’s actually happening underneath is something very different. The structure that got them to that point is often being stretched far beyond what it was designed to handle.

And like most structural issues, it doesn’t fail gradually. It fails when pressure is applied.

The Illusion of Progress

Growth creates momentum, momentum creates confidence, confidence creates speed and speed is where structure gets ignored.

With leadership teams are focused on:

  • Delivery 
  • Sales 
  • Hiring 
  • Keeping up with demand

Very few step back and ask:

“Is this business actually built to scale, or are we just pushing it harder?”

That distinction is critical because a business that is growing is not necessarily a business that is scalable.

Where It Starts to Break

The issues don’t show up as obvious structural problems. They show up as friction.

At first, it’s manageable:

  • Decisions take longer 
  • Responsibilities overlap 
  • Conversations get repeated 
  • Accountability becomes unclear

Then it escalates:

  • Disagreements between founders 
  • Confusion around ownership and control 
  • Investors are asking questions that the business can’t clearly answer 
  • Key people are becoming frustrated or disengaged

None of this feel like “structural” problems in isolation; however, collectively, they point to one thing: The business has outgrown its framework. 

The Shareholding Problem No One Fixes Early Enough

One of the most common issues I see is misalignment between shareholders.

Not because people fall out but because expectations change.

At the start everyone is aligned, roles are clear and contribution is high 

Over time roles evolve, contribution shifts and priorities change 

But the structure doesn’t.

That’s when tension builds without clear agreements in place:

  • decisions become political 
  • progress slows 
  • and in some cases, the business stalls entirely

This isn’t a personality issue. It’s a structural one.

Funding Pressure Without Structural Readiness

At growth stage, funding conversations start to become more serious.

This is where the cracks become visible. Investors don’t just look at the product or revenue.

They look at:

  • Ownership clarity 
  • Governance 
  • Decision-making 
  • Risk management

If those things aren’t clear, confidence drops quickly. I’ve seen businesses with strong commercial performance struggle to secure investment, not because of what they do, but because of how they are structured.

Governance: The Thing Everyone Avoids Until It Matters

In early-stage businesses, governance is often seen as unnecessary. Too formal. Too slow. Too corporate.

But what governance actually provides is clarity:

  • Who decides 
  • Who is accountable 
  • What happens when people disagree

Without it, everything relies on personalities and that works until it doesn’t.

As pressure increases, the lack of structure becomes more visible:

  • Decisions get challenged 
  • Authority becomes unclear 
  • Progress slows at exactly the point the business needs to move faster

The Asset Problem: Value Without Protection

As businesses grow, value starts to build however very few stop to check where that value actually sits.

I’ve seen situations where:

  • Intellectual property sits with individuals, not the business 
  • Key contracts are not properly structured 
  • Value is created, but not protected

This becomes a major issue when:

  • Investment is introduced 
  • The business is sold 
  • Something goes wrong

At that point, what looked like a valuable business becomes far more complicated.

The Real Issue: No One Stops to Redesign

The consistent theme across all of this is simple: The business evolves. The structure doesn’t.

And that gap continues to widen until something forces it to be addressed.

Usually:

  • Funding 
  • Dispute 
  • Crisis

Very rarely is it addressed proactively.

Arx Nova Perspective

By the time we are brought into a business, the issue is rarely “we need to grow.”

It’s usually:

“we’ve grown, and now things don’t quite work the way they used to”. At that point, the objective isn’t to rebuild everything.

It’s to:

  • Identify where structure is breaking down 
  • Isolate the critical issues 
  • Implement changes that restore clarity and control

Not everything needs fixing, but the right things need fixing quickly. Growth doesn’t create strength; structure does.

Growth simply tests whether that structure is strong enough. 

If you or your business is facing into a period of significant growth, then please reach out to us as our product Fortify for Growth may be a perfect fit for you

Who’s behind this post?

Chris Johnson

Director & Co-Founder

Chris Johnson is a Chartered Legal Executive and Co-Founder of Arx Nova. He specialises in legal risk, governance, and business restructuring during periods of instability. With over 17 years of experience across the legal and professional services sectors, Chris supports leadership teams to regain control, navigate complexity, and stabilise quickly.

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Crisis. Contained.