Many practitioners are wary of growth, and for a good reason: they've seen practices get bigger and get worse — care feels rushed, the personal touch disappears, staff are stretched, and the very thing that made the place special quietly erodes. So they stay small to protect quality. That's an understandable choice, but it's not the only one.
Growing a practice without losing its soul is possible — it's just harder than growing a business that sells widgets, because what you're scaling is care, and care doesn't standardise as neatly. The practices that manage it do so by being deliberate: documenting not just the tasks but the standard, hiring for values as much as skill, and growing at a pace the culture can absorb rather than chasing numbers.
The mistake is growing faster than your systems and your people can hold. Quality erodes in the gap between how big you've become and how well you've built the foundation underneath.
Grow on purpose, at a pace your standards can keep up with — and growth and quality stop being a trade-off.
Scaling a practice while protecting the care that defines it is a key theme of the [Practice Management course].
Explore the Practice Management course
Free first step: the practice systems starter.
Annie
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