Scaling a business is often sold as the reward for early success. More revenue, more staff, bigger ambition. But according to entrepreneur and investor Matt Haycox, growth is where many companies quietly come undone. Not because the idea stops working, but because the cost of scaling is routinely underestimated.
Haycox has watched it happen repeatedly, both in businesses he has built himself and in companies he has backed or advised. From the outside, growth looks like momentum. Inside the organisation, it often feels like strain.
‘People think scaling is just doing more of what already works,’ Haycox says. ‘In reality, it’s a completely different job.’
When growth exposes the cracks
In the early stages, founders can get away with instinct. Decisions are quick, communication is informal and problems are solved in real time. That flexibility is often mistaken for strength.
According to Haycox, scaling is the moment when that approach starts to fail. ‘The business grows faster than the skill set,’ he explains. ‘What worked at ten staff breaks at fifty. What worked at fifty breaks at two hundred.’
Global data backs this up. A CB Insights analysis of startup failures found that running out of cash and operational inefficiency remain among the top reasons companies collapse, even after achieving early traction. Growth does not remove those risks, it amplifies them.
Haycox has seen founders chase revenue without noticing what is happening underneath. Margins thin, decision-making slows and the founder becomes the bottleneck for everything.
‘From the outside it looks like success,’ he says. ‘From the inside it’s chaos.’
The hidden costs founders don’t price in
One of the biggest mistakes Haycox sees is founders underestimating the true cost of scaling. Not just financially, but emotionally and operationally.
Hiring ahead of process is a common example. Teams expand before roles are clear, accountability is defined or systems are in place. What follows is confusion, duplicated work and rising overheads.
‘Headcount feels like progress,’ Haycox says. ‘But if you don’t know what people are responsible for, you’re just buying complexity.’
There is also a psychological cost. As businesses grow, founders lose the sense of control they had in the early days. Decisions carry more weight, mistakes are more expensive and the margin for error shrinks.
A 2024 McKinsey report on SME growth highlighted that leadership strain and decision fatigue increase significantly during scale-up phases, often leading to slower responses and poorer judgement at senior level.
‘Nobody talks about that bit,’ Haycox says. ‘The pressure changes.’
Cashflow, not growth, becomes the priority
Another misconception Haycox challenges is the idea that growth automatically improves financial health. In reality, scaling often puts businesses under greater cashflow pressure.
More staff means higher fixed costs. Larger orders mean more working capital tied up. Longer sales cycles stretch cash even further.
This is often the point where founders realise that access to funding is only useful if it’s structured correctly, something Haycox has frequently discussed when breaking down real-world finance decisions and through his lending platform Funding Guru.
‘You can be growing and going backwards at the same time,’ Haycox says. ‘I’ve lived it.’
According to Deloitte research, fast-growing SMEs are more likely to experience cashflow shocks than stable businesses, precisely because their cost base expands faster than their financial controls.
Haycox argues that founders often confuse turnover with progress. ‘Revenue is vanity,’ he says. ‘Cash keeps you alive.’
Experience learned the hard way
Haycox speaks from experience rather than theory. Over more than two decades, he has built and scaled companies across finance, hospitality and media, raised substantial funding and also gone through very public failures, including multiple bankruptcies.
Those experiences reshaped how he views growth. ‘Early on, I thought scaling was about ambition,’ he says. ‘Later I realised it’s about discipline.’
He is open about mistakes made along the way, particularly around expanding too quickly without the right structures in place. ‘You don’t feel the damage straight away,’ he explains. ‘By the time you see it, it’s already baked in.’
That perspective is why founders often respond to his commentary. Rather than celebrating scale for its own sake, he focuses on what growth actually demands.
Why scaling changes the founder’s role
One of the hardest adjustments for founders is accepting that their role must change. The skills that got the business off the ground are rarely the ones needed to run a larger operation.
‘Founders love building,’ Haycox says. ‘Scaling is about maintaining.’
This shift requires moving from doing to deciding, from reacting to planning and from intuition to systems. Many founders resist that transition, seeing structure as bureaucracy rather than protection.
According to a 2025 Deloitte survey, SMEs that invest early in operational systems and decision frameworks are significantly more likely to sustain growth beyond the five-year mark.
Haycox frames this as a mindset issue. ‘You either build the machine, or the machine breaks you,’ he says.
Learning before the cost becomes fatal
Much of Haycox’s recent work has focused on helping founders recognise these realities earlier. He regularly speaks about scaling challenges across his long-form content and business commentary, drawing on lessons learned under pressure.
In one recent breakdown, he outlined a candid playbook for founders struggling with growth, focusing on operational discipline, financial awareness and decision-making under stress. The analysis, published by TechBullion, explored how many scaling problems are predictable and therefore avoidable if addressed in time.
‘Most failures aren’t sudden,’ Haycox says. ‘They’re slow and obvious if you know what to look for.’
That perspective runs through Haycox’s wider work, where he continues to speak candidly about growth, failure and decision-making under pressure. More of his writing, interviews and long-form commentary can be found on his official website.
Scaling as a test, not a trophy
For Haycox, the biggest mistake founders make is treating scale as an endpoint rather than a test. Growth does not validate a business, it interrogates it.
Processes are tested. Leadership is tested. The founder’s tolerance for pressure is tested.
‘Scaling doesn’t make you better,’ he says. ‘It shows you who you already are.’
As markets tighten and competition increases, Haycox believes the cost of getting scaling wrong is rising. Investors are less forgiving, margins are thinner and operational mistakes travel faster.
The message he returns to is blunt but practical. ‘If you want to scale, you have to pay the real price,’ he says. ‘That price is discipline, not ego.’
For entrepreneurs willing to confront that reality, growth can be sustainable. For those chasing scale without understanding its cost, it often becomes the point where everything unravels.






