Many small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) across Sub-Saharan Africa face a high risk of operational failure and structural breakdown during expansion due to a failure to establish resilient internal workflows. Speaking on the operational vulnerabilities of high-growth companies, Nsikan Ubi, the Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Nubi Consulting, warned that many African founders systematically miscalculate the structural requirements of scaling, often prioritizing aggressive market customer acquisition over foundational organizational discipline.
This structural gap typically manifests when an enterprise transitions from an agile, founder-dependent startup into a complex, multi-tiered corporate entity. At this stage, informal management styles and undocumented verbal agreements fail to handle increased transaction volumes, leading to high employee turnover, broken supply chains, and a rapid decline in service delivery quality.
1. The Execution Paradox: Why Growth Magnifies Internal Inefficiencies
A primary misconception among scaling founders is the belief that achieving a larger market share or securing higher revenue will naturally fix internal back-office friction. In reality, scaling an unaligned or poorly structured organization simply accelerates its underlying issues, placing severe strain on its working capital and core teams.
Ubi pointed out that while informal communication networks work well when a company consists of fewer than ten employees, they quickly break down when managing multi-city operations or broader regional retail lines. Without structured workflows, departments often duplicate tasks, miss critical delivery deadlines, and experience internal friction, turning what should be profitable growth into systemic operational disorder.
2. Shifting Investor Priorities from Raw Revenue to Operational Readiness
This structural vulnerability has significantly altered how venture capital firms and development finance institutions evaluate early-stage businesses across Africa. As the regional tech and retail sectors move away from the high-burn growth models of previous years, investment committees are placing a much higher premium on operational stability.
The table below contrasts the vulnerabilities of unstructured growth with the long-term enterprise value created by building strong operational systems first:
| Corporate Scaling Axis | Unstructured Growth Vulnerabilities | System-Driven Infrastructure Solutions |
| Task Ownership & Roles | Overlapping responsibilities, verbal instructions, and blind spots in execution. | Documented accountability matrices defining clear roles and measurable performance indicators (KPIs). |
| Communication Workflows | Fragmented data silos, leading to friction between sales, logistics, and finance teams. | Integrated Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) tools that automate cross-departmental data updates. |
| Workflow Standardization | Reliance on memory and ad-hoc problem solving, causing highly inconsistent output quality. | Codified Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) ensuring repeatable service delivery across branches. |
| Investor Due Diligence | Red flags during audits due to poor internal controls, lowering the company’s valuation. | Audit-ready corporate governance structures that de-risk follow-on equity and debt investments. |
3. Protecting Economic Resilience in the Real Sector
In major hubs like Nigeria, where SMEs drive over 80% of national employment and contribute significantly to gross domestic product (GDP), fixing these internal execution gaps is vital for broader economic stability. When expanding businesses collapse due to poor internal management, it triggers a chain reaction that affects commercial banks, local suppliers, and employment rates across the wider market.
To prevent these breakdowns, founders must view operational design as a core component of their growth strategy, rather than a bureaucratic afterthought. By setting up transparent accounting systems, clear delegation parameters, and reliable reporting lines before entering new markets, African entrepreneurs can transform vulnerable small businesses into enduring, institutional enterprises capable of attracting long-term global capital.
