Is Your Business Ready to Scale?

The SMB Operational Health Checklist

Many growing businesses do not struggle because of a lack of customers, effort, or expertise. They struggle because operational complexity grows faster than the systems and processes needed to support it.
What works for a team of five often starts breaking down at twenty-five. Owners become bottlenecks, critical knowledge becomes concentrated in a few individuals, spreadsheets multiply, and more time is spent coordinating work than actually doing it.
This checklist is designed to help business owners and operations leaders identify common operational risks before they become growth constraints.

Instructions: Review each section and answer honestly. Any item marked “No” represents an opportunity to strengthen your operating model.

1. Owner Dependency

Main Question

Check Yourself

☐ The majority of customer, pricing, vendor, and staffing decisions do not require owner approval.
☐ Managers understand what decisions they are authorized to make.
☐ Approval thresholds are documented and consistently followed.
☐ The owner spends most of their time on strategy and growth rather than operational firefighting.
☐ The same questions are not repeatedly escalated to the owner.

Warning Signs

  • Staff frequently say, “We’ll have to ask the owner.”
  • Decisions wait in someone’s inbox.
  • The owner is involved in routine exceptions.
  • Growth slows whenever the owner is unavailable.

Recommended Action

List the ten decisions that still require owner involvement. Create approval thresholds, standard rules, and delegation guidelines that allow at least half of those decisions to be delegated safely within the next 30 days.

2. Key Person Risk

Main Question

Check Yourself

☐ Every critical process has at least one trained backup.
☐ Key workflows are documented.
☐ Important knowledge exists outside of employee memory.
☐ Vacation requests do not create operational anxiety.
☐ New employees can learn processes without relying exclusively on shadowing.

Warning Signs

  • “Only Sarah knows how to do that.”
  • Nobody understands how a report is generated.
  • Processes stop when one person is absent.
  • Training depends entirely on tribal knowledge.

Recommended Action

Create a Single Point of Failure Register. For every critical process, identify:
– Primary Owner
– Backup Owner
– Systems Involved
– Key Documents
– Known Risks
Prioritize cross-training and documentation for the highest-risk areas.

3. Systems of Record

Main Question

Check Yourself

☐ Customer information exists in one primary location.
☐ Order information exists in one primary location.
☐ Inventory information exists in one primary location.
☐ Financial information exists in one primary location.
☐ Staff are not maintaining duplicate records across multiple spreadsheets.

Warning Signs

  • Different departments report different numbers.
  • Information must be reconciled manually.
  • Multiple spreadsheets contain similar data.
  • Teams argue about which report is correct.

Recommended Action

Designate one official system of record for each critical business domain:
– Customers
– Orders
– Inventory
– Cash and Finance
Any secondary reporting source should have a clearly defined owner and reconciliation process.

4. Core Business Processes

Main Question

Check Yourself

☐ Major workflows are documented.
☐ Employees follow consistent procedures.
☐ Process ownership is assigned.
☐ Exceptions are tracked and reviewed.
☐ New staff can learn workflows quickly.

Critical processed to Document First

  • Quote-to-Order
  • Order-to-Cash
  • Procure-to-Pay
  • Customer Issue Resolution
  • Month-End Close

Recommended Action

Do not document everything.
Start with the processes that directly affect revenue, customer satisfaction, and cash flow.

5. Operational Controls

Main Question

Check Yourself

☐ Approval authority is defined.
☐ Sensitive transactions receive independent review.
☐ Financial controls exist for payments and purchasing.
☐ Exceptions are reviewed regularly.
☐ Audit trails exist for critical activities.

Warning Signs

  • One person can approve, execute, and record transactions.
  • Nobody reviews unusual exceptions.
  • Errors are discovered accidentally.

Recommended Action

Implement simple controls first:
– Separate approval from execution where practical.
– Review exceptions weekly.
– Maintain basic auditability for important decisions.

6. Automation Opportunities

Main Question

Check Yourself

☐ Data is entered once whenever possible.
☐ High-volume repetitive tasks are automated.
☐ Employees spend minimal time chasing status updates.
☐ Workflows route automatically when practical.
☐ Staff can focus on higher-value activities.

Warning Signs

  • Manual copy-and-paste between systems.
  • Frequent spreadsheet exports.
  • Email used as a workflow engine.
  • Significant time spent following up on routine tasks.

Recommended Action

Automate one high-volume handoff first.
Focus on the process causing the most delay, rework, or manual effort rather than attempting broad automation initiatives.

7. Operational Visibility

Main Question

Check Yourself

☐ Key metrics are reviewed regularly.
☐ Backlogs are visible.
☐ Rework is measured.
☐ Escalations are tracked.
☐ Operational issues are identified before customers notice them.

Recommended Metrics

  • Queue Time
  • Backlog
  • Rework
  • Missed Follow-Ups
  • Reconciliation Breaks
  • Owner Escalations

Recommended Action

Build a simple operational dashboard.
If you cannot measure it, you cannot improve it consistently.

8. The Ultimate Test

Main Question

Assessment

Take a hypothetical one-week absence.
Ask:

  • What decisions would stop?
  • Which customers would be affected?
  • What reports could no longer be produced?
  • Which approvals would be delayed?
  • Which employees would become overwhelmed?

The Rule

Every failure point discovered during this exercise represents your next operational improvement opportunity.

Final Score

24–40 Checks: Strong operational foundation.
16–23 Checks: Growth is likely creating manageable strain. Prioritize improvements now.
0–15 Checks: Significant operational risk exists. Growth may be masking underlying fragility.

The Bottom Line

The goal is not to eliminate flexibility.
The goal is to ensure the business can grow without becoming dependent on a handful of people, spreadsheets, or heroic effort.
The most scalable businesses are not necessarily the busiest businesses. They are the businesses that can deliver consistent results even when complexity increases.
That’s what operational maturity looks like.


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