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The 5 Structural Shifts Required to Scale From $1 Million to $10 Mllion (That Most Founders Avoid)
By Dr. Sterling L. Carter | Edited by Maria Bailey | Entrepreneur | Jun 17, 2026
Extractive Summary of the Article | Read | Listen
3 key takeaways from the article
- According to the author he remembers a point in their growth when he was still treating patients most of the day, reviewing notes at night and telling himself he was “leading” the business. On paper, they had crossed the million-dollar mark. But in reality, he was still operating like a high-performing clinician who happened to own a company.
- That tension shows up for a lot of founders in the $1 million to $2 million range. You have proven the model works. But growth stalls because you are still the engine. If you step away, things slow down. If you push harder, you burn out. The move from $1 million to $10 million is not about working more but changing your structure. Most founders avoid this because it forces them to let go of what made them successful in the first place.
- Five structural shifts that make the difference: see how you actually spend your time; define the three roles only the CEO should own; start with small, intentional delegation; Shift 10% to 20% of your time toward strategy; and build systems that reduce dependency on you.
(Copyright lies with the publisher)
Topics: Entrepreneurship, Scaling, Growth
Read the extractive summary of the articleAccording to the author he remembers a point in their growth when he was still treating patients most of the day, reviewing notes at night and telling himself he was “leading” the business. On paper, they had crossed the million-dollar mark. But in reality, he was still operating like a high-performing clinician who happened to own a company.
That tension shows up for a lot of founders in the $1 million to $2 million range. You have proven the model works. But growth stalls because you are still the engine. If you step away, things slow down. If you push harder, you burn out. The move from $1 million to $10 million is not about working more but changing your structure. Most founders avoid this because it forces them to let go of what made them successful in the first place. Here are five structural shifts that make the difference.
See how you actually spend your time. How you spend your time as a CEO has more power than you think. Before you change anything, you need a clear picture of reality. This is not what you think you do all week, but what you actually do. As this can be harder than it seems. Track your time in one-hour blocks. At the end of each day, label each block in one of three categories: technical work, administrative work or strategic leadership. At the end of the week, add it up. Most founders are surprised. They believe they are spending meaningful time on growth, but the numbers usually show something different. It is common to see 70% to 90% of time spent in operational tasks. This is essential data you are gathering during the audit. If your time is tied up in delivery, your business cannot scale beyond your personal capacity.
Define the three roles only the CEO should own. One of the biggest mistakes the author made early on was trying to stay involved in everything because he felt responsible for everything. That mindset slows growth. There are only three responsibilities that truly belong to the CEO: decide what the company is building and what it is not; build leaders who can think and operate without you, not just hire people to execute tasks; and know your numbers well enough to ensure the business can grow without running out of cash.
Start with small, intentional delegation. Delegation is where many founders struggle because they struggle trusting that others will do it as well as they can. That may be true in the beginning, but doing everything yourself is a guaranteed way to stay stuck and keep your business small. Still, you do not have to delegate everything at once. Start by identifying three tasks you do every week that do not require your level of expertise. Write down the steps. Walk a team member through it. Stay involved until the outcome is consistent, then step back.
Shift 10% to 20% of your time toward strategy. One of the simplest strategic shifts the author made was identifying referral gaps. Instead of waiting for patients to come in, they spent CEO time building relationships with key partners. That alone drove growth without increasing clinical hours. Two mornings a week, no patient visits and no internal meetings. This rule ensured he was truly shifting focus toward strategy. During that time, the focus was simple: Identify three to five potential referral partners. Reach out to or meet with at least one. And strengthen one existing relationship.
Build systems that reduce dependency on you. If your business relies on a few key individuals holding everything together, it will struggle to scale. People leave, get tired and make mistakes. But processes create consistency. Start by documenting your core workflows. You do not need a perfect manual on day one. Start with what you know works. Write it down. Improve it over time. When processes are clear, you can train faster, delegate more confidently and maintain quality as you grow.
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