“Growth for the sake of growth is the ideology of a cancer cell.” — Edward Abbey.
In modern business culture, growth is inherently seen as virtuous.
Revenue growth.
Program expansion.
Market reach.
Innovation at speed.
But growth without readiness is not strength.
It is instability disguised as ambition.
The Grant Illusion
In my consulting work, I offer a diagnostic tool called Are You Grant Ready?
Many nonprofit leaders approach me with urgency.
“We just need a grant.”
But foundations do not fund needs alone. They fund sustainability.
Behind every grant decision is a quiet question:
Will this organization still be standing — and delivering — two years from now?
Foundations are wary of “here today, gone tomorrow” organizations. They have seen grants awarded to passionate leaders who lacked the staffing, systems, and operational capacity to fulfill their promises.
A grant is secured.
Funds are distributed.
Deliverables are outlined.
But without:
- Adequate staff
- Clear leadership structure
- Financial controls
- Outcome measurement systems
The initiative falters.
The organization strains.
The foundation’s investment produces little measurable impact.
Funding does not create readiness.
Readiness creates sustainable funding.
Growth before structure multiplies weakness.
For that reason, I have declined potential clients when they were not ready. Growth pursued prematurely helps no one — not the nonprofit, not the foundation, and not the community they serve.
Innovation Without Infrastructure
Earlier in my career, I worked within a large national corporation that prized innovation and expansion.
New initiatives are launched frequently.
Strategic directions shifted rapidly.
Ambition was constant.
But operational alignment lagged.
Leaders juggled too many priorities.
Execution diluted.
Focus blurred.
In everyday language, it felt scattered.
In business language, it reflected a lack of strategic coherence.
Innovation moved faster than infrastructure.
Growth outpaced readiness.
The Leadership Discipline of Restraint
Healthy growth strengthens the core before it stretches the perimeter.
It asks:
- Do we have the staff to execute?
- Are our systems mature?
- Is leadership stable?
- Can we sustain this expansion?
Without those foundations, expansion amplifies fragility.
The discipline to pause — to refine before scaling — is often harder than the excitement of saying yes.
But it is wiser.
The Better Question
Instead of asking:
How quickly can we grow?
Ask:
Are we prepared to grow well?
Sustainable leadership is not anti-growth.
It is pro-structure.
Pro-capacity.
Pro-alignment.
Because when growth outpaces readiness, the consequences are rarely immediate — but they are eventually unavoidable.
Closing
Not all expansion is progress.
Sometimes the strongest leadership decision is consolidation.
Sometimes, sustainability is the highest form of ambition.
Growth that strengthens the organism is healthy.
Growth that multiplies weakness is not.
And wisdom lies in knowing the difference.











































































