The bravery that built your business is rarely the same energy that runs it once you scale up. In the early days, decisions are fast, sharp and driven by a singular vision. But when you start to hit that £5m to £10m plateau, the very architecture of the business changes.
You hire a board. You build out departments. And while founders often blame operations or cash flow for stalled growth, this ignores a big part of the problem. Because somewhere along the line, the drive to be disruptive and agile has been quietly replaced by the desire to be safe.
Introducing the ‘Consensus Paradox’
We call this the Consensus Paradox. This is what happens when too many internal stakeholders dilute decision-making, resulting in safe marketing that fails to stand out or drive growth.
It’s the completely understandable, yet ultimately restrictive, belief that tweaking an idea until everyone agrees automatically makes it a better idea. But when it comes to brand positioning and marketing, consensus is the enemy of distinctiveness and commercial impact.
Why marketing stops working as you scale
When a brand campaign, website redesign or strategic pivot requires the sign-off of the CEO, Marketing Director, Head of Sales and the HR department, a brilliant concept often gets trapped in a loop of well-intentioned feedback.
Sales asks for a heavier focus on a specific product. HR wants the tone tweaked to feel more approachable or corporate. The CEO wants to make sure a legacy product or service isn’t forgotten in the messaging.
