# Scaling Playbook: What Breaks at Each Growth Stage > Compiled from patterns across 100+ high-growth companies. Not theory — this is what actually breaks and what to do about it. --- ## How to Use This Playbook Each stage section covers: 1. **What breaks** — the specific failure modes that kill companies at this stage 2. **Hiring** — who to bring in and when 3. **Process** — what to formalize vs. keep loose 4. **Tools** — infrastructure that unlocks the next stage 5. **Communication** — how information flow changes 6. **Culture** — what to protect and what to let go **Benchmarks are medians** — your mileage varies by sector, geography, and business model. --- ## Stage 0: Pre-Seed / Seed ($0–$2M ARR, 1–15 people) ### Key Benchmarks | Metric | Benchmark | |--------|-----------| | Revenue per employee | $0–$100K (still finding PMF) | | Manager:IC ratio | N/A (no managers) | | Burn multiple | 2–5x (acceptable) | | Runway | 12–18 months minimum | | Time-to-hire | 2–4 weeks | ### What Breaks **Premature process.** The #1 mistake at seed stage is adding process before you have a repeatable model. Sprint ceremonies, OKR frameworks, and performance reviews are all theater when you haven't found PMF. Every hour spent in process is an hour not spent learning. **Wrong first hires.** Hiring "senior" people who've only worked in structured environments. You need people who can operate in chaos, not people who expect process to already exist. **Founder communication bottleneck.** Founders try to be in every decision. Fine at 5 people, fatal at 12. No written decisions means knowledge lives in founders' heads — unscalable. **Technical debt accepted as strategy.** "We'll fix it later" said about core data models, auth systems, or billing. Later comes at Series A and it costs 3x more to fix. ### Hiring - **Don't hire for scale you don't have.** Hire for the next 12 months. - **First 10 hires set culture permanently.** Get them wrong and you'll spend years correcting. - **Hire athletes, not specialists.** Generalists who can do multiple jobs outperform specialists at this stage. - **Avoid VP titles early.** Inflated titles block future hires and create expectations you can't meet. - **Founder-referral bias is real.** Your network is homogeneous. Force diversity early. **Who to hire first (in rough order):** 1. Engineers who can ship product (2–3 generalists) 2. First sales/GTM if B2B (founder-led sales first, then one closer) 3. Designer/product (often a hybrid) 4. Customer success (often a founder at first) ### Process **Formalize nothing before PMF.** Literally. Run on Slack, shared docs, and founder judgment. **After PMF signals appear, formalize only:** - How you handle customer escalations - How you deploy code (even basic CI/CD) - How you onboard new hires (a 1-page checklist is enough) **Decision rule:** If a founder has to answer the same question three times, write it down. Once. ### Tools | Function | Seed-Stage Tool | |----------|----------------| | Communication | Slack + Google Workspace | | Project tracking | Linear or Notion (pick one, stay consistent) | | CRM | HubSpot free or Notion | | Engineering | GitHub + basic CI (GitHub Actions) | | Finance | Brex/Mercury + QuickBooks | | HR | Rippling or Gusto (basic) | | Analytics | Mixpanel or PostHog (free tier) | **Rule:** One tool per function. No tool sprawl. Every extra tool is a coordination tax. ### Communication - **Weekly all-hands** (30 min max). What shipped, what's stuck, what's next. - **No status meetings.** Anyone can see status in Linear/Notion. - **Founder write-ups.** Every major decision gets a 1-paragraph Slack post explaining *why*. - **Group chat discipline.** One channel per project/customer. Inbox zero mentality. ### Culture **What to build deliberately:** - High ownership: everyone acts like they own the company, because they do - Direct feedback: brutal honesty delivered with care - Bias to ship: done > perfect - Customer obsession: founders talk to customers weekly **What to watch for:** - "Hero culture" where one person saves everything — unsustainable - Over-indexing on culture fit (code for homogeneity) - Avoidance of conflict — mistaking silence for agreement --- ## Stage 1: Series A ($2–$10M ARR, 15–50 people) ### Key Benchmarks | Metric | Benchmark | |--------|-----------| | Revenue per employee | $100–$200K | | Manager:IC ratio | 1:6–1:8 | | Burn multiple | 1.5–2.5x | | Sales efficiency (CAC payback) | <18 months | | Churn (B2B SaaS) | <10% net annual | | Engineering velocity | Feature shipped every 1–2 weeks | | Time-to-hire | 4–6 weeks | | Offer acceptance rate | >80% | ### What Breaks **Founder-as-manager bottleneck.** At 20+ people, founders can't manage everyone. The first layer of management needs to appear — and it's usually picked wrong (best IC ≠ best manager). **Tribal knowledge explosion.** "Ask Sarah" stops working when Sarah has 15 things open. Documentation becomes critical — not for bureaucracy, but because institutional knowledge is now a flight risk. **Sales process fragmentation.** Without a defined sales process, every rep closes differently. You can't train, debug, or scale what you can't see. **Scope creep in product.** With Series A money comes investor pressure to expand scope. Teams try to build three things at once and ship nothing well. **Compensation chaos.** Early employees got equity-heavy deals. New hires get market cash. Someone compares, someone gets upset. No comp philosophy = constant re-negotiation. **Recruiting becomes a job in itself.** Founders can't hire 30 people themselves. First dedicated recruiter needed by 25 people. ### Hiring **Who to hire at Series A:** - **Head of Engineering** (if founder is CTO): needs to be an operator, not just an architect - **First Sales Manager** (when you have 3+ reps): don't promote the best seller - **HR/People Ops** (generalist, by 30 people): comp, compliance, recruiting coordination - **Finance** (fractional CFO or strong controller): Series A board needs real numbers - **Customer Success Lead**: retention is everything at this stage **Hiring mistakes to avoid:** - Hiring "big company" execs who need large teams and established process - Assuming your Series A lead can recruit (they can intro, not close) - Taking too long — top candidates have 2–3 offers. Move in <2 weeks from first call to offer. **Leveling:** Build a simple career ladder *before* the compensation complaints start. 3–4 levels per function is enough. ### Process **What to formalize at Series A:** 1. **Sprint planning** (2-week sprints, public roadmap) 2. **Sales process** (defined stages with entry/exit criteria) 3. **Onboarding** (30/60/90 day plan for each function) 4. **1:1 cadence** (weekly for direct reports, bi-weekly for skip-levels) 5. **Incident response** (P0/P1/P2 definition, on-call rotation) 6. **Quarterly planning** (OKRs or goals framework — keep it lightweight) **What to keep loose:** - Internal project process (let teams self-organize) - Meeting formats (let teams evolve their own rituals) - Tool selection within approved stack **Documentation standard:** Write decisions down in a shared wiki. "Decision log" with date, decision, context, owner, and outcome. Takes 5 minutes, saves hours. ### Tools | Function | Series A Tool | |----------|--------------| | Project/Product | Linear + Notion | | CRM | HubSpot or Salesforce (Starter) | | Engineering | GitHub + CI/CD pipeline + Sentry | | HR/People | Rippling or Lattice (performance) | | Finance | NetSuite or QBO + Brex | | Analytics | Mixpanel/Amplitude + Looker (or Metabase) | | Customer Success | Intercom + HubSpot or Zendesk | | Docs | Notion or Confluence | ### Communication **Introduce structured communication layers:** 1. **Company all-hands** (monthly, 60 min): CEO share, metrics review, team spotlights, Q&A 2. **Leadership sync** (weekly, 60 min): cross-functional issues, blockers, priorities 3. **Team standups** (async or 15 min daily): what's in progress, what's blocked 4. **1:1s** (weekly): direct report health, career, performance 5. **Written updates** (weekly to investors + board): CEO memo format **Information hierarchy:** Everyone in the company should know: (1) company goals this quarter, (2) their team's goals, (3) what they personally own. If they don't, your communication structure is broken. ### Culture **Deliberate culture work starts here.** You're too big for culture to be accidental. - **Write down values.** Real values with examples of what they look like in action. Not "integrity" — "we tell investors bad news before we tell them good news." - **Performance management.** First PIPs (Performance Improvement Plans) happen at this stage. Handle them well — the team is watching. - **Equity culture.** Make sure people understand what their equity is worth in different outcomes. Lack of transparency breeds resentment. - **First layoff plan.** Even if you never use it, know the criteria. Reactive layoffs destroy trust; plan-based ones (even painful) preserve it. --- ## Stage 2: Series B ($10–$30M ARR, 50–150 people) ### Key Benchmarks | Metric | Benchmark | |--------|-----------| | Revenue per employee | $150–$300K | | Manager:IC ratio | 1:5–1:7 | | Burn multiple | 1.0–1.5x | | CAC payback | <12 months | | NRR (net revenue retention) | >110% | | Engineering: Product ratio | ~3:1 | | Sales: CS ratio | ~3:1 | | Time-to-hire (senior) | 6–10 weeks | | Annual attrition | <15% voluntary | ### What Breaks **Middle management void.** You now have managers managing managers. The "player-coach" model breaks — people can't be ICs and managers simultaneously at this scale. Force the choice. **Planning misalignment.** Sales promises what product hasn't built. Product builds what customers didn't ask for. Engineering ships what QA didn't test. Fixing this requires cross-functional planning ceremonies. **Data fragmentation.** Five different versions of "how are we doing." Sales sees Salesforce. Product sees Amplitude. Finance sees spreadsheets. Nobody agrees. You need a single source of truth. **Process debt.** The Series A processes are starting to creak. Onboarding that worked for 5 hires/quarter doesn't work for 20. Customer escalation paths built for 50 customers fail at 500. **Cultural fragmentation.** Engineering culture ≠ Sales culture ≠ Support culture. Sub-cultures form. The shared identity you had at 30 people requires active work to maintain at 100. **The "brilliant jerk" problem.** High performers with bad behavior were tolerated early. Now they're managers with bad behavior, and it's systemic. Act decisively or lose your best people. ### Hiring **Who to hire at Series B:** - **COO or VP Operations**: founder is overwhelmed, someone needs to run the machine - **VP Sales**: first Sales Manager won't scale to 20-rep org - **VP Marketing**: demand gen and brand need dedicated ownership - **Dedicated Recruiting**: 2–3 recruiters minimum; you're hiring 30–50 people/year - **Data/Analytics**: dedicated analyst or data engineer to consolidate reporting - **Legal counsel**: fractional or in-house; contracts and compliance are getting complex **The "big company exec" trap.** Series B is when companies hire their first VP from FAANG or a large SaaS company. 60% of these fail within 18 months. They're used to: large teams, established brand, existing process, political navigation. They struggle with: scrappy execution, no support staff, ambiguous direction. Vet explicitly for startup experience. **Span of control.** At this stage, hold managers to 5–8 direct reports. More than 8 = no time for actual management. Less than 3 = management overhead isn't justified. ### Process **What to formalize at Series B:** 1. **Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)** — every function presents metrics, wins, gaps 2. **Annual planning** — budget, headcount plan, strategic priorities 3. **Cross-functional roadmap alignment** — product/sales/marketing in sync quarterly 4. **Promotion criteria** — written, public, applied consistently 5. **Interview scorecards** — structured interviews with defined rubrics 6. **Change management** — how major process changes get communicated and adopted 7. **Vendor management** — evaluation criteria, approval process, contract management **SOPs for critical processes:** - Customer onboarding (if >50 customers) - Sales handoff from SDR to AE to CS - Engineering release process - Incident response playbook - Contractor/vendor procurement ### Tools | Function | Series B Tool | |----------|--------------| | Project/Product | Jira or Linear (with roadmapping) | | CRM | Salesforce (full) | | ERP/Finance | NetSuite | | HR | Workday or BambooHR + Lattice | | Analytics | Looker or Tableau + data warehouse | | Customer Success | Gainsight or ChurnZero | | Engineering | GitHub Enterprise + full CI/CD + observability | | Security | 1Password Teams + SSO (Okta) + endpoint management | ### Communication **At 50+ people, informal communication breaks down.** Information no longer flows naturally — it has to be architected. **Communication stack:** - **Monthly all-hands** (90 min): metrics deep-dive, strategy update, team Q&A - **Weekly leadership team** (90 min): cross-functional priorities, decisions, escalations - **Bi-weekly skip-levels** (30 min): every manager holds these with their manager's reports - **Quarterly town halls** (2 hrs): broader context, financial update, roadmap preview - **Written company update** (bi-weekly): CEO to all-hands via Slack/email **The information gradient problem.** People at the top know too much. People at the bottom know too little. Fix this with a deliberate "broadcast" culture — any decision affecting more than 5 people gets written up and shared. ### Culture **Retention becomes an existential issue.** At Series B, you have 50–150 people who've been with you through something hard. They're valuable. And they have options. - **Career ladders** are non-negotiable by this stage. People leave when they can't see a future. - **Manager quality** determines retention. Invest in manager training. Run manager effectiveness surveys. - **Compensation benchmarking** quarterly. If you're more than 10% below market, you're losing people silently. - **Culture carriers.** Identify the 10–15 people who embody your culture and make them formally responsible for transmitting it. Give them a platform. --- ## Stage 3: Series C ($30–$75M ARR, 150–500 people) ### Key Benchmarks | Metric | Benchmark | |--------|-----------| | Revenue per employee | $200–$400K | | Manager:IC ratio | 1:5–1:6 | | Burn multiple | 0.75–1.25x | | NRR | >115% | | CAC payback | <9 months | | Sales cycle (Enterprise) | 60–120 days | | Engineering team % | 30–40% of headcount | | Annual attrition target | <12% voluntary | | Time-to-hire (senior) | 8–12 weeks | ### What Breaks **Strategy execution gap.** Leadership agrees on strategy. Middle management interprets it differently. ICs execute on their interpretation. By the time work ships, it barely resembles the original strategy. Fix: strategy must cascade in writing with explicit outcomes. **Process bureaucracy.** The processes you built at Series B start generating bureaucracy. Approval chains lengthen. Simple decisions require three meetings. The antidote is explicit process owners empowered to eliminate friction. **Org design complexity.** Do you have functional teams (all engineers in one org) or product teams (engineers embedded in product squads)? The answer affects everything: career paths, knowledge sharing, delivery speed. Most companies get this wrong twice before getting it right. **Geographic complexity.** First international office or remote-heavy team introduces timezone, communication, and culture challenges that don't exist when everyone is in one room. **Leadership team dysfunction.** Seven VPs who were all individual contributors two years ago are now running $10M+ organizations. Some have grown into it. Some haven't. This is the stage where hard leadership team changes happen. ### Hiring **Series C hiring is about depth, not breadth.** You have functional coverage — now hire people who go deep within functions. - **Functional leaders' deputies**: VP Engineering needs a Director of Platform Engineering, Director of Product Engineering, etc. - **Internal promotions**: 40–60% of leadership roles should be filled internally by now. If you're hiring externally for everything, you've failed at development. - **Specialists**: Security, data science, UX research, RevOps — functions that were "shared" become dedicated. - **General Counsel**: Legal volume justifies full-time counsel. **Headcount planning discipline.** Every hire should have a business case. "The team is busy" is not a business case. "This role will unlock $X in revenue or save Y hours/week" is a business case. ### Process **Process consolidation.** Audit every process. Kill anything that doesn't have a clear owner and clear outcome. The average Series C company has 40% more process than it needs. **Key processes to have locked at Series C:** 1. **Annual planning cycle** (strategy → goals → headcount → budget) 2. **Quarterly operating review** (progress against plan, forecast, adjustments) 3. **Product development lifecycle** (discovery → design → build → launch → measure) 4. **Revenue operations** (forecasting, pipeline management, territory planning) 5. **People operations** (performance cycles, promotion cadence, compensation philosophy) 6. **Risk management** (operational, security, compliance, legal) **Delegation architecture.** At 200+ people, the COO cannot know about every decision. Build explicit decision rights: what decisions require CEO/COO approval vs. VP vs. Director vs. IC. ### Tools **Consolidate the tech stack.** By Series C, you have tool sprawl. The average 200-person company has 100+ SaaS tools. 40% are redundant. Consolidation saves $200–500K/year and reduces security surface. **Must-have by Series C:** - Enterprise SSO (Okta/Google Workspace with MFA everywhere) - Data warehouse (Snowflake/BigQuery) + BI layer - HRIS with performance management (Workday, Rippling, BambooHR) - Revenue intelligence (Gong, Chorus) - Security tooling (endpoint, SIEM basics, SOC 2 compliance) ### Communication **Internal comms becomes a function.** You cannot rely on ad-hoc Slack and email at 200+ people. Someone needs to own internal communications. - **Monthly CEO update** (written, 500 words max): company performance, strategic context, what's next - **Quarterly all-hands** (2 hrs): comprehensive business review, open Q&A - **Leadership alignment sessions** (quarterly): leadership team off-site to calibrate on strategy - **Manager cascade** (after every major announcement): managers brief their teams with tailored context ### Culture **Culture is now a function, not an instinct.** By Series C, your original culture-carriers are managers or have left. New people joining have never seen how you worked when you were small. - **Culture explicitly documented** — not a values poster, a behavioral handbook - **Onboarding redesigned** for culture transmission at scale - **Manager enablement** — managers are your primary culture delivery mechanism; invest heavily - **Listening infrastructure** — eNPS quarterly, exit interviews, skip-level feedback — all analyzed systematically --- ## Stage 4: Growth Stage ($75M+ ARR, 500+ people) ### Key Benchmarks | Metric | Benchmark | |--------|-----------| | Revenue per employee | $300–$600K | | Manager:IC ratio | 1:4–1:6 | | Burn multiple (path to profitability) | <0.5x | | NRR | >120% | | S&M as % of revenue | 25–35% | | R&D as % of revenue | 15–25% | | G&A as % of revenue | 8–12% | | Rule of 40 | >40 (growth rate + profit margin) | | Annual attrition target | <10% voluntary | ### What Breaks **Execution at scale.** The larger you are, the harder it is to move fast. The average decision at a 500-person company takes 3x longer than at a 50-person company. This is not inevitable — but fixing it requires explicit investment. **Internal politics.** Org boundaries create fiefdoms. VPs protect headcount. Teams optimize for their metrics at the expense of company metrics. This is the #1 culture problem at scale. **Innovation starvation.** The core business is optimized, but new bets are starved of resources. The people working on new initiatives are constrained by processes designed for a mature product. Structural solution required: separate P&L, separate team, different metrics. **Middle management bloat.** Growth-stage companies often have too many managers and not enough ICs. A manager managing one other manager managing three ICs is a 3-level chain where 2 people add no value. Flatten aggressively. ### Hiring **You're now competing for talent with FAANG.** Your advantage is mission, equity, and the ability to have impact. Candidates who want to join a Fortune 500 will not join you. Stop trying to attract them. - **Leadership pipeline**: promote from within at 50%+ for senior roles - **Talent density over headcount**: 30 strong engineers > 50 average engineers - **Diverse hiring**: by this stage, lack of diversity is a business problem, not just an ethical one ### Operational Priorities at Scale 1. **Operational efficiency over growth**: headcount growth should lag revenue growth 2. **Process ownership**: every major process has a named owner accountable for outcomes 3. **Quarterly operating model**: budget vs. actual, full P&L transparency to VP level 4. **Automation**: manual operational processes that cost >40 hrs/week should be automated --- ## Cross-Stage Principles ### The Three Things That Kill Companies at Every Stage 1. **Running out of cash before finding the next unlock** — runway management is sacred 2. **Hiring the wrong person for a critical role** — one bad VP can set you back 18 months 3. **Moving too slowly** — market timing matters; perfect is the enemy of shipped ### The Org Design Progression ``` Seed: Flat | Everyone reports to founder | No structure Series A: Functional pods | First-line managers | Light structure Series B: Functional departments | VPs emerge | Defined structure Series C: Business units or product squads | Directors + VPs | Full structure Growth: Divisional or matrix | EVPs/SVPs | Corporate structure ``` ### Revenue per Employee by Function (B2B SaaS benchmarks) | Function | Series A | Series B | Series C | Growth | |----------|----------|----------|----------|--------| | Engineering | $400K | $500K | $600K | $700K | | Sales | $250K | $350K | $450K | $500K | | Customer Success | $300K | $400K | $500K | $600K | | Marketing | $500K | $700K | $900K | $1M+ | | G&A | $600K | $800K | $1M | $1.2M | *Revenue per employee = ARR / headcount in function* ### The Management Span Rule - **Individual contributors being managed**: 1 manager per 6–8 ICs - **Managers being managed**: 1 director per 4–6 managers - **Directors being managed**: 1 VP per 3–5 directors - **VPs being managed**: 1 C-level per 5–8 VPs Violation of this creates either manager burnout (too wide) or management theater (too narrow). --- ## Red Flags by Stage | Stage | Red Flag | Likely Cause | |-------|----------|-------------| | Seed | Missed 3+ product deadlines | Wrong team or unclear prioritization | | Series A | Churn >20% | PMF not actually found, or CS underfunded | | Series B | >6-month sales cycle on SMB | Pricing/packaging problem | | Series C | NRR <100% | Product-market fit eroding or CS broken | | Growth | Rule of 40 <20 | Efficiency problem; hiring ahead of revenue | --- *Sources: Sequoia, a16z operating frameworks; First Round Capital COO benchmarks; SaaStr metrics databases; OpenView SaaS benchmarks; Bain operational maturity models.*