How to Scale a Business: A Proven 6-Step Plan | LEND ON CAPITAL

How to Grow Your Business: A 6-Step Plan for Business Owners

Updated May 21, 2026   |   6 min read   |   Lend On Capital Funding Team

Overview
A 6-STEP GROWTH PLANGrow with a plan1Cash flow2Funding3Automate4Team5Marketing6Plan

How to grow your business comes down to one idea: grow revenue faster than costs, so each new sale gets cheaper to produce. You are ready when demand is steady, you are profitable, and you can grow without breaking what already works. These six steps show exactly how to grow your business, with real numbers behind each one.

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The 6 steps at a glance (tap to jump in)

  1. Run a financial check know your real numbers first
  2. Use the right financing to fund growth match the structure to the move
  3. Automate and outsource the busywork buy back your hours
  4. Build the team before the demand hire ahead of growth
  5. Grow your marketing to match capacity needs demand
  6. Put it all in a written plan where most growth fails

Is your business ready to grow?

Before you spend to grow your business, check three things. If all three are a clear yes, look at the stronger signals below.

The three must-haves

  • Demand for your product or service is consistently high, and looks set to continue.
  • You are profitable today, not just busy.
  • You can grow without breaking your current operations.

Stronger signals you are ready

  • You are turning away clients because of limited staff, stock, or capacity.
  • You have beaten your revenue goals by 15% or more for several quarters in a row.
  • Market research points to more demand ahead.
  • You offer something durable, not just a passing trend.
  • You have the energy and grit to push through a bigger build.

Roughly half of US businesses close within five years, per the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. The deciding factor is rarely demand. It is cash and planning.

CASH FLOW13 weeks$248,500+12%RUNWAY27 daysBREAK-EVEN$182K

Tip 01

Run a financial check first

Know your real numbers before you spend a dollar on growth.

Growth multiplies whatever is already true about your finances. Thin margins get thinner. Small cash gaps get wider. Start here, on paper.

See what your business qualifies forTakes about 60 seconds. No documents needed.
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How to apply it to your business

  • Break-even the growth, not just the business. Work out how many extra units or jobs the new spend has to produce to pay for itself.
  • Build a 13-week cash flow forecast. Map money in and money out, week by week, so you see the gap before it arrives.
  • Separate profit from cash. You can be profitable and still miss payroll if clients pay on net-30 while your costs are due now.
  • Set the number, then add 20 to 30%. Most owners come in low on the first pass.
  • Fix the leak first. Late invoices, low margins, and slow-paying clients only get bigger as you grow.
82%

of small businesses that fail cite cash flow problems, not weak sales.

The typical US small business holds only about 27 days of cash in reserve. A growth push can burn that fast.

Sources: U.S. Bank study on small business failure; JPMorgan Chase Institute cash buffer research.

Sample one-page financial check. Illustrative example, your own numbers will differ.

LOAN AAmount$100,000RateFactor 1.18Term9 monthsTotal$121,000LOAN BAmount$100,000Rate21% APRTerm18 monthsTotal$117,432BEST VALUE$3,600 cheaper

Tip 02

Use the right financing to fund growth

Fund the growth move with a structure that fits it, so repayment does not eat the cash flow you are building.

Growth almost always needs cash before the new revenue lands: inventory, hiring, marketing, a second location. The right loan is not the lowest rate on paper. It is the one whose structure matches the move and your cash timing. Compare a line of credit, short-term funding, and long-term funding before you choose.

See what your business qualifies forTakes about 60 seconds. No documents needed.
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How to compare two loan offers

  • Put both in the same unit. A factor rate is not an APR. Convert both, or compare total dollars repaid.
  • Compare total cost of capital, not the rate or the monthly payment. Add every dollar back, plus fees.
  • Match the payment frequency to your cash flow. Weekly payments need steady weekly income.
  • Do not assume shorter is cheaper. Fees and a factor rate can make a short loan cost more than a longer one.
  • Check fees and early payoff before you sign. They move the real number.
CompareLoan ALoan BHow to read it
Amount$100,000$100,000Same cash in hand. Compare the cost, not the headline.
PricingFactor 1.1821% APRA looks lower, but a factor rate is not an APR.
Term9 months18 monthsA is shorter, which feels cheaper. It is not here.
Payment$3,026 / wk$6,524 / moWeekly vs monthly hits cash flow differently.
Fees$3,000NoneFixed fees bite hardest on short terms.
Total payback$121,000$117,432Add it all up. A repays about $3,600 more.

True cost: Loan A's 1.18 factor plus a $3,000 fee costs $21,000 over 9 months. Loan B at 21% APR costs $17,432 over 18 months with no fee. Loan A has the lower rate and the shorter term, yet it is the more expensive money. A factor rate is not an APR, and fixed fees bite hardest on short terms.

Illustrative example. For context, 44% of US small businesses hit a cash flow crunch that delayed paying expenses in the past year (Federal Reserve Small Business Credit Survey).

AUTOMATIONONNew invoiceSend reminderReconcileTRIGGERHOURS SAVED / WK12hreinvested into growth

Tip 03

Automate and outsource the busywork

Buy back your hours before you add headcount.

You cannot grow what only you can do. The owner stuck in the weeds is the most common reason a business stops growing. Free your time first.

See what your business qualifies forTakes about 60 seconds. No documents needed.
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How to apply it to your business

  • Track one week. Write down every task and how long it takes. The time sinks will be obvious.
  • Automate the repeatable. Invoicing, payment reminders, scheduling, and reporting are the easy first wins.
  • Outsource the rest. Bookkeeping, admin, and design fit freelancers and specialists well.
  • Keep revenue work close. Anything that wins or keeps customers stays with you for now.
  • Reinvest the hours into the growth moves only you can lead.
16 hrs

a week is what the average owner spends on admin, about 36% of the workweek.

Your week36% on admin
That is two full days a week not spent on growth. Automating invoicing alone gets many firms paid 5 days faster.

Sources: Time etc entrepreneur time-use survey; business.com automation research.

TEAM8 to 11MRMaria R.Operations leadActiveJTJames T.SalesActive+Open roleSales repHIRINGHEADCOUNT11+3 this qtr

Tip 04

Build the team before the demand

Hire ahead of the growth, not after it breaks.

Demand that arrives before the team is ready turns into slow service and lost customers. Build a step ahead so quality holds as volume rises.

See what your business qualifies forTakes about 60 seconds. No documents needed.
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How to apply it to your business

  • Find the first bottleneck. The role that breaks first as volume rises is your first hire.
  • Hire one step ahead of need. A new hire takes weeks to get productive, so do not wait for the breaking point.
  • Promote from inside for key seats. People who know your business lead growth better than strangers.
  • Write the role before you post it. Clear expectations cut bad hires and wasted months.
  • Protect the culture. Keep the team invested, because engaged teams carry growth and quiet ones stall it.
23%

more profitable. That is the gap between highly engaged teams and disengaged ones.

A rushed hire is costly too: the average cost to hire runs about $4,700 before training time. Hire ahead, but hire right.

Sources: Gallup, State of the Global Workplace; SHRM cost-per-hire data.

Sample: what one new hire really costs in year one. Illustrative example.

GROWTHlast 6 mo$1.8MgrowthREPEAT RATE38%ROAS4.2x

Tip 05

Grow your marketing to match

New capacity does little without new demand to fill it.

Growing is not only about winning new customers. The cheapest growth is keeping the ones you already have and getting more from them.

See what your business qualifies forTakes about 60 seconds. No documents needed.
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How to apply it to your business

  • Keep current customers first. Repeat buyers cost far less than new ones and spend more over time.
  • Write down your offer and audience. Know who you serve and the one reason they choose you.
  • Double down on what works. Find your best channel and put more behind it before testing new ones.
  • Build a referral loop. Ask happy customers for introductions and make it easy to give one.
  • Bring in specialists for paid and social if it is not your strength.
+25-95%

profit lift from raising customer retention by just 5%.

Winning a new customer costs 5 to 25 times more than keeping one. Retention is marketing that compounds.

Sources: Bain & Company (Fred Reichheld); Harvard Business Review.

12-MONTH PLANQ1Q2Q3Q4Hire and automate2nd locationReferral programNew product

Tip 06

Put it all in a written plan

This is where most growth efforts fail. Write the plan and work it.

A written plan is how to grow your business without losing the thread. It turns five good ideas into one sequence you can run, and it tells you in advance where the money and the risks are. Use the sample on the right as a starting template.

See what your business qualifies forTakes about 60 seconds. No documents needed.
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How to apply it to your business

  • Set one 12-month goal with a number. Revenue, units, or locations. Pick the one that matters most.
  • Break it into quarterly milestones. Each one should move that number.
  • Give every step an owner and a date. A task with neither does not happen.
  • Plan the failure points. Name what could break and how you recover.
  • Review monthly and adjust. The plan is a living tool, not a file you save and forget.
Sample 12-month growth plan
GoalGrow revenue from $1.2M to $1.8M
  • Q1Hire 2 reps, automate invoicingYou
  • Q2Open second locationOps lead
  • Q3Launch referral programMarketing
  • Q4Add a product lineYou
Cash needed$150K line of credit
Top riskSlow Q2 ramp, hold 2-month buffer

Owners who write a formal plan are 16% more likely to reach viability. Source: Harvard Business Review, 2017.

A quick break from the article · Lend On Capital

Three funding programs to fund your growth

If you want capital behind the plan, here is what we offer, from $20K to $3M.

Line of Credit

Amount$50K-$250K
RateFrom 8.99%
Term12-30 months

Short-Term

Amount$20K-$1M
RateFrom 11.99%
Term6-24 months

Long-Term US only

Amount$50K-$3M
RateFrom 6.99%
Term36-120 months
Apply Online About 60 seconds. A funding manager matches the right program to your plan.

Wrap up

How to grow your business: the 6 steps in short

Six moves, in order. This is how to grow your business without running out of cash. Tap any step to revisit it.

The plan, recapped

  1. Run a financial check know your numbers, fix any cash leak
  2. Use the right financing compare total cost, not the headline rate
  3. Automate and outsource buy back your hours before hiring
  4. Build the team early hire one step ahead of demand
  5. Grow your marketing keep customers, then win new ones
  6. Write the plan one goal, quarterly milestones, monthly reviews

Common questions

How do I know my business is ready to grow?
You are ready when demand is consistently high, you are profitable, and you can grow without breaking current operations. A common signal is turning away work, or beating revenue goals by 15% or more for several quarters. If cash flow is tight, fix that first. The rest of this guide shows how to grow your business from there, one step at a time.
How much funding do I need to grow a business?
Start with a break-even analysis, then add a buffer. Most owners under-estimate, so plan for more than your first number. Lend On Capital funds from $20K to $3M depending on the program and your revenue, and a funding manager can size the amount against your bank statements.
Line of credit or term loan for growth, which is better?
A line of credit fits ongoing or unpredictable costs because you draw only what you need. A term loan fits a single large project with a clear payback over time. Short-term funding fits fast moves when speed matters most. Many owners use a mix.
Will checking my funding options affect my credit score?
No. The initial pre-qualification is based on the details you provide, not a credit check. If you move forward with a full funding application, a soft credit pull may be used, which does not affect your FICO score. A hard pull only happens later if you accept an offer and proceed.
How fast can I get funded?
Short-term funding can be in your account in as little as 24 hours after approval. The application takes about 60 seconds, and an assigned funding manager reviews your file personally. Most decisions come back within 1 to 2 business days. Approval is subject to credit review.
Do I need collateral to get funded?
Most Lend On Capital programs require no collateral. Approval is based on your business revenue and bank statements, not on pledged assets. Approval is subject to credit review.
What is the most common reason growth fails?
Growth stalls most often from poor planning and cash flow gaps, not weak demand. A business can be profitable on paper and still run out of cash while waiting on payments. A written, stage-by-stage plan and a funding cushion prevent most of this.

Ready to fund your next stage?

You have the plan for how to grow your business. If you want capital behind it, check your options in about 60 seconds. Just a few quick questions, no documents needed.

Or call 844-902-3080, Mon to Fri, 9:30 AM to 6:00 PM EST
Lend On Capital Funding Team

Our funding managers have placed working capital with thousands of businesses across the US and Canada since 2020. We review real bank statements, not just credit scores.

Sources U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Business Employment Dynamics. Federal Reserve Small Business Credit Survey. JPMorgan Chase Institute. Gallup, State of the Global Workplace. Bain & Company. Harvard Business Review (2017). U.S. Bank study on cash flow and small business failure. SHRM cost-per-hire benchmark. Time etc entrepreneur time-use survey.

Advertorial Disclosure. This article is an advertisement produced by Lend On Capital. The sample plan and loan comparison are illustrative examples. Statistics shown are directional industry figures, with sources noted above. Individual results vary, and funding is not guaranteed. Lend On Capital is a financial technology company, not a bank. Rates start from 6.99% APR or an equivalent factor rate, varying by program, term, time in business, revenue, and credit profile. Approval subject to credit review. Long-term funding is available in the US only. The pre-qualification check on this page is based on the answers you provide and is not a credit check. If you submit a full funding application, a soft credit pull may be used and does not affect your score. A hard credit check, if required, is disclosed before it is run. "$500M+ delivered" and "10,000+ businesses funded" are approximate cumulative figures since inception. Lend On Capital LLC, 20807 Biscayne Blvd, Aventura, FL 33180.