The best business for investment isn't the single world-class location, but the one with a systematized, repeatable model. True reinvestment potential lies in the ability to replicate excellence at scale, not just achieve it once.

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Some companies execute a 3-5 year plan and then revert to average returns. Others 'win by winning'—their success creates new opportunities and network effects, turning them into decade-long compounders that investors often sell too early.

The margins of a single restaurant are too thin to justify the operational complexity and stress. Profitability and a sustainable business model emerge only when you scale to multiple locations, allowing you to amortize fixed costs and achieve operational efficiencies.

Instead of seeking new, unproven strategies, businesses should focus on massively scaling activities that already work. This approach leverages a known variable, minimizing the risk of failure associated with change and offering the most predictable path to growth.

Earning a high return on invested capital is only half the battle. True compounding requires the ability to redeploy large amounts of capital at similarly high rates. Amphenol achieves this through its disciplined M&A playbook in a fragmented market, answering the crucial question of reinvestment.

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.

Franchising is a different business model focused on systems, training, and brand protection. Before considering it, a founder must first prove their concept is replicable by successfully opening and operating a second company-owned location. This provides the necessary data and validates the model's scalability.

Instead of focusing solely on new promotions, Tim Hortons achieved 17 quarters of growth by fundamentally improving its core offerings, like adding more apples to its apple fritter and ensuring coffee consistency. This builds a solid foundation for future expansion into new categories.

Investors should seek "boring" companies that are well-oiled machines with repeatable processes and disciplined execution. The goal is consistency in outcomes, not operational excitement. Predictable, relentless execution is what generates outsized, "exciting" returns.

Companies like Amazon (from books to cloud) and Intuitive Surgical (from one specific surgery to many) became massive winners by creating new markets, not just conquering existing ones. Investors should prioritize businesses with the innovative capacity to expand their TAM, as initial market sizes are often misleadingly small.

Seeing an existing successful business is validation, not a deterrent. By copying their current model, you start where they are today, bypassing their years of risky experimentation and learning. The market is large enough for multiple winners.