After scaling a single location to its revenue limit (e.g., $9M in a dental practice), the primary growth strategy shifts from optimizing internal processes to duplicating the successful model in a new location. The constraint moves from marketing to talent acquisition for the new site.

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Instead of random growth, businesses have five clear expansion paths: serve wealthier clients (upmarket), serve a mass market (downmarket), enter a new vertical (adjacent), generalize your solution (broader), or hyper-specialize (narrower). This provides a strategic map for growth.

John Morgan’s crime museum struggled in Washington D.C. due to competition from free attractions and building restrictions. Instead of quitting, he doubled down on the concept and moved the entire operation to a tourist-heavy location, Pigeon Forge. It quickly became highly profitable, proving a great idea might just be in the wrong place.

The path to a multi-million dollar local business involves three steps. First, maximize your current location's capacity and marketing channels. Once that's capped, the real scale comes from duplicating the successful model in new locations, turning a small opportunity into a large one.

When scaling a local service business like a chiropractic office, acquiring existing practices is a more efficient growth path than building new ones from scratch. It's often possible to find owners willing to sell for very little, making it easier to retrofit them into your model.

Growth isn't random; it can be planned along five vectors. From your current market, you can target higher-paying clients (upmarket), a larger volume of smaller clients (downmarket), different industries (adjacent), a wider category (broader), or a more focused sub-niche (narrower).

Investors and acquirers pay premiums for predictable revenue, which comes from retaining and upselling existing customers. This "expansion revenue" is a far greater value multiplier than simply acquiring new customers, a metric most founders wrongly prioritize.

Instead of creating a market expansion strategy from scratch, ServiceUp explicitly copied the playbook of DoorDash, a successful three-sided marketplace in an adjacent vertical. This involved entering a new city and simultaneously acquiring customers, suppliers (shops), and drivers, accelerating growth.

When expanding his law firm, John Morgan uses a 'bullets before bombs' strategy. He first enters a new city with a small, low-cost team and ad budget (the 'bullets') to test viability. Only after seeing positive traction does he commit significant capital and resources (the 'bombs'), de-risking growth.

The strategy for scaling a business evolves. The first phase is typically dominated by maximizing acquisition volume—doing more of what works. Once you hit a ceiling (e.g., market saturation or physical capacity), the next level of growth comes from compounding. The primary mission must shift to retention and ensuring customers never leave.

Business growth isn't linear. Scaling up introduces novel challenges in complexity, cost, and logistics that were non-existent at a smaller size. For example, doubling manufacturing capacity creates new shipping and specialized hiring problems that leadership must anticipate and solve.