And why that doesn’t mean you’re thinking too small.
I was at a networking event recently, having one of those quiet but meaningful chats over coffee, when someone said something that really stayed with me.
She runs a successful cleaning business.
It’s been going for years.
She knows her clients, she knows her team, and she genuinely loves what she’s built.
Then she said:
“Everyone keeps telling me I should want to grow bigger. That I should be aiming for a million-pound business by now. But I don’t. If I did, I wouldn’t know my staff the way I do. I wouldn’t know their families. And it wouldn’t be the business I want anymore.”
And I just thought "YES!"
There it is.
Permission to want enough.
Why is “more” always the default?
There’s a strange pressure in the small business world.
A sense that success is only real if it’s always growing.
If you’re not scaling, automating, or working toward an exit plan, are you even trying?
But here’s the thing: not everyone wants to lead a team of 20, I know I don't.
Not everyone wants a million-pound revenue target.
And that's absolutely okay.
(It's also okay if you do.)
And for many of us, especially those of us in our third chapter (aged 50 - 75), it’s not because we lack ambition.
It’s because we’ve refined it.
We want businesses that feel good to run.
That allow us to do meaningful work, look after ourselves, and still have time and energy for the rest of our lives.
That grow at a pace we can actually enjoy.
Growth doesn’t have to mean more of everything
Of course, growth can still be part of the picture.
Most of the clients I work with do want to grow.
Whether that means more clients, better systems, increased income, or greater impact.
But that growth is often about deepening, not just expanding.
- Serving existing clients more sustainably
- Making processes smoother so there’s less stress behind the scenes
- Creating space to think, rest, and plan—without dropping the ball
- Making sure the way you do business still fits the life you want to live
That kind of growth isn’t always glamorous.
But it’s real. And it lasts.
You’re allowed to define your own version of success
If you’ve ever felt a bit awkward saying “actually, I don’t want to scale up right now”, you’re not alone.
There’s no one right way to build a business and just because your version of success doesn’t include a big team or seven figures doesn’t make it less valid.
It makes it yours.
A gentle nudge
If the pressure to do more, grow faster, or “play bigger” has been weighing on you, here’s your reminder:
You’re allowed to build a business that’s profitable and personal.
You’re allowed to prioritise consistency over scale.
You’re allowed to want a business that fits your energy, your season of life, and your values.
And that’s not thinking small.
That’s thinking wisely.