Why Some Businesses Scale — and Others Stall
A recent conversation over coffee with a fellow business advisor prompted a simple question: Why do some businesses scale smoothly while others stall—despite similar markets, people, and opportunity? We kept coming back to one word: Trust.
When the Business Is Sound — But Progress Slows
This has been reinforced by a client I am currently coaching. The business is fundamentally sound. Good team. Strong demand. Clear growth potential.
Yet progress is slower than it should be. Not because of strategy. Because of experience. The owner had been badly let down in the past. As a result, trust has become guarded. Decisions remain centralised. Delegation is limited. Control has increased. Understandable—but constraining.
The Operational Impact of Low Trust
The result is predictable: Slower decision-making. Reduced accountability in the team. Bottlenecks around the owner. Growth that feels harder than it should
What High-Performing Teams Do Differently
Around the same time, I read an email from Vikram Kamerkar reflecting on Formula One. His observation was simple: high-performing teams operate on trust. Drivers trust engineers. Engineers trust data. Pit crews trust each other—under extreme pressure.
At that level, trust is not cultural rhetoric. It is operational necessity. Without it, performance fails.
Trust Reduces Friction in Growing Businesses
The same applies in business. Trust reduces friction.
When trust is present:
- Decisions accelerate
- Communication improves
- Responsibility is owned
- Problems surface early
When trust is absent:
- Decisions bottleneck
- Information is filtered
- Responsibility is avoided
- Issues surface late—and expensively
The business continues to move—but inefficiently.
Why Trust Is a Commercial Issue, Not a Soft One
This is why trust is not a “soft” concept. It is a core driver of scalable growth. Trust underpins the system.
How Trust Is Rebuilt in Practice
For the client I mentioned, the priority is not more planning or process. It is rebuilding trust—deliberately and pragmatically. That does not mean blind trust.
It means:
- Clear expectations
- Defined outcomes
- Measured delegation
- Visible accountability
Trust is rebuilt through evidence, not intention.
A Practical Reflection for SME Leaders
If you are leading a growing business, consider:
- Where is lack of trust slowing decisions?
- What are you still holding that others could own?
- To what extent is past experience shaping current behaviour?
Growth rarely stalls for the reasons we first assume. More often, it slows quietly where trust is missing.
Next Steps
If this resonates, I am currently developing these ideas further in my upcoming book “The Trust Advantage”. If you would like to explore this thinking in more depth, I will be looking for a small number of readers to review the manuscript ahead of publication.

