How to Scale a $300K Company to Multi-Million Dollar Revenue (Ask Jeb)
Update: 2025-10-21
Description
Here's a question that'll keep you up at night: How do you take a company from $300K in annual revenue to $1.5 million in 18 months, then scale to $3-$5 million within five years?
That's the challenge facing Greg Hirschi from Colorado. He's the new executive leader of an 18-year-old company selling ethics assessment services to professional licensing boards. They've expanded from an entrepreneurial model to a small team with one salesperson and one customer service representative. The goal is aggressive growth, and Greg needs to know where to focus his limited resources to get the biggest bang for his buck.
If you're nodding your head right now because you're in a similar situation, pay attention. Because the mistakes you make at $300K will haunt you at $3 million.
The Resource Reality Check
Let's be brutally honest about what a $300K revenue company means: You have no money. You have a razor-thin budget. You have one salesperson and one leader trying to do everything.
At this stage, you have exactly one priority: REVENUE.
You don't have the luxury of fixing operations, perfecting your tech stack, or building elaborate systems. You need to sell. Period.
Here's where most small companies screw this up. They think selling means taking anything with a pulse. If it can fog a mirror, they'll do business with it. That's a death spiral disguised as growth.
The Operator's Dilemma
Greg comes from an operations background. He's analytical, process-driven, and systematic. Those traits are incredible assets for building a business, especially when the goal is to scale fast. But they can also be a liability when managing salespeople.
Here's what happens: Operators think in systems and logic. Salespeople think in relationships and emotion. Operators want everything organized and predictable. Salespeople throw deals on the table that are messy and unpredictable.
If you're an operator trying to lead sales, you need to understand this fundamental tension. Your salesperson is out there getting hammered with objections every single day, building narratives in their head about why people won't buy. You're thinking, "Just brush it off and do it again. What's wrong with you?" They're thinking, "You have no idea what it's like out here."
This is why reading New Sales Simplified by Mike Weinberg is non-negotiable if you're an operator managing sales. You need to learn how salespeople think, how they operate, and how to lead them effectively without losing your mind.
Start With Your ICP or Die Trying
The single most important thing Greg needs to do right now to scale is get laser-focused on his Ideal Customer Profile.
Not kind of focused. Not "we have a general idea." I mean obsessively, precisely, ridiculously dialed in on exactly who they should be targeting.
Why does this matters so much at $300K? Greg's salesperson has a $600K pipeline and will close 50% of it. Sounds great, right? But if half those customers churn because they're the wrong fit, requiring constant re-education and hand-holding, Greg's salesperson will get stuck in account management mode. They'll stop prospecting for new business because they're too busy re-selling existing accounts.
That's how you stay stuck at $300K forever.
Your ICP drives everything. It determines your messaging, your marketing, your presentation materials, and which stakeholders you need to reach inside target organizations. It helps you build relevant social proof stories. It allows you to coach your salesperson on handling specific objections instead of generic brush-offs.
Most importantly, it gives you guardrails. You can ask your salesperson in pipeline reviews: "Tell me the strategic reason why we should chase this account. How does it fit our ICP? Why is this worth our limited resources when our singular goal right now is growth?"
When you're running a $300K company with one salesperson and one leader, you cannot afford to chase every deal. You need to focus on the right deals that will close and stick around.
The Resell Problem
Greg's company doesn't have contracts. They discovered that larger organizations with stable staff become sticky customers once they see the value. Smaller organizations with high turnover require constant re-education and reselling.
This is not how you scale.
If you don't segment your market correctly and build processes around retention, you'll hit a wall fast. Your salesperson will close deals, then get pulled back into account management, abandoning the pipeline. Salespeople will always choose talking to people they already know over talking to strangers.
You don't have this problem yet at $300K. But you will as you begin to scale. Start thinking strategically now about your retention process and which customer segments are worth the ongoing investment.
The Foundation That Changes Everything
Getting your ICP right isn't just about qualifying accounts. It's about building a foundation that allows you to scale without constantly backtracking to fix problems you created by going after the wrong customers.
Every time you chase the wrong deal, you're creating downstream problems. You're wasting limited resources. You're building frustration in your team. You're teaching your salesperson bad habits about what constitutes a qualified opportunity.
The leap from $300K to $600K in annual revenue is hard. The leap to $1.2 million is harder. The leap to $3.5 million is brutal. But if you get the foundation right now while you have backing and support, those leaps become exponentially easier.
Your Playbook for Growth
Start with objection handling fundamentals that are specific to your ICP. When you know exactly who you're targeting, you can anticipate their concerns and craft precise responses that resonate.
Build your messaging around the multi-threaded stakeholders in your target organizations. Who needs to be involved in the buying decision? What does each person care about?
Create a systematic, process-based approach to pipeline management. As an operator, this is your superpower. You can bring discipline and structure to a highly emotional profession.
The Bottom Line
At $300K, you're essentially starting from scratch. You have aggressive growth targets, limited resources, and one shot to get this right.
Stop being reactive. Start being strategic. Get obsessed with your ICP. Build processes around the right customers. Coach your salesperson with precision instead of frustration.
That's how you scale from $300K to millions. That's how you avoid the mistakes that kill small companies. And that's how you build a business that doesn't just grow, but grows sustainably.
The good news? You have the backing to do this right. Don't waste it chasing the wrong customers just because you need revenue today. Build the foundation that generates revenue for years to come.
Lead your salesperson, focus on the right deals, and scale from $300K to millions—start Jeb Blount's Sales Leadership Essentials course on Sales Gravy University today.
That's the challenge facing Greg Hirschi from Colorado. He's the new executive leader of an 18-year-old company selling ethics assessment services to professional licensing boards. They've expanded from an entrepreneurial model to a small team with one salesperson and one customer service representative. The goal is aggressive growth, and Greg needs to know where to focus his limited resources to get the biggest bang for his buck.
If you're nodding your head right now because you're in a similar situation, pay attention. Because the mistakes you make at $300K will haunt you at $3 million.
The Resource Reality Check
Let's be brutally honest about what a $300K revenue company means: You have no money. You have a razor-thin budget. You have one salesperson and one leader trying to do everything.
At this stage, you have exactly one priority: REVENUE.
You don't have the luxury of fixing operations, perfecting your tech stack, or building elaborate systems. You need to sell. Period.
Here's where most small companies screw this up. They think selling means taking anything with a pulse. If it can fog a mirror, they'll do business with it. That's a death spiral disguised as growth.
The Operator's Dilemma
Greg comes from an operations background. He's analytical, process-driven, and systematic. Those traits are incredible assets for building a business, especially when the goal is to scale fast. But they can also be a liability when managing salespeople.
Here's what happens: Operators think in systems and logic. Salespeople think in relationships and emotion. Operators want everything organized and predictable. Salespeople throw deals on the table that are messy and unpredictable.
If you're an operator trying to lead sales, you need to understand this fundamental tension. Your salesperson is out there getting hammered with objections every single day, building narratives in their head about why people won't buy. You're thinking, "Just brush it off and do it again. What's wrong with you?" They're thinking, "You have no idea what it's like out here."
This is why reading New Sales Simplified by Mike Weinberg is non-negotiable if you're an operator managing sales. You need to learn how salespeople think, how they operate, and how to lead them effectively without losing your mind.
Start With Your ICP or Die Trying
The single most important thing Greg needs to do right now to scale is get laser-focused on his Ideal Customer Profile.
Not kind of focused. Not "we have a general idea." I mean obsessively, precisely, ridiculously dialed in on exactly who they should be targeting.
Why does this matters so much at $300K? Greg's salesperson has a $600K pipeline and will close 50% of it. Sounds great, right? But if half those customers churn because they're the wrong fit, requiring constant re-education and hand-holding, Greg's salesperson will get stuck in account management mode. They'll stop prospecting for new business because they're too busy re-selling existing accounts.
That's how you stay stuck at $300K forever.
Your ICP drives everything. It determines your messaging, your marketing, your presentation materials, and which stakeholders you need to reach inside target organizations. It helps you build relevant social proof stories. It allows you to coach your salesperson on handling specific objections instead of generic brush-offs.
Most importantly, it gives you guardrails. You can ask your salesperson in pipeline reviews: "Tell me the strategic reason why we should chase this account. How does it fit our ICP? Why is this worth our limited resources when our singular goal right now is growth?"
When you're running a $300K company with one salesperson and one leader, you cannot afford to chase every deal. You need to focus on the right deals that will close and stick around.
The Resell Problem
Greg's company doesn't have contracts. They discovered that larger organizations with stable staff become sticky customers once they see the value. Smaller organizations with high turnover require constant re-education and reselling.
This is not how you scale.
If you don't segment your market correctly and build processes around retention, you'll hit a wall fast. Your salesperson will close deals, then get pulled back into account management, abandoning the pipeline. Salespeople will always choose talking to people they already know over talking to strangers.
You don't have this problem yet at $300K. But you will as you begin to scale. Start thinking strategically now about your retention process and which customer segments are worth the ongoing investment.
The Foundation That Changes Everything
Getting your ICP right isn't just about qualifying accounts. It's about building a foundation that allows you to scale without constantly backtracking to fix problems you created by going after the wrong customers.
Every time you chase the wrong deal, you're creating downstream problems. You're wasting limited resources. You're building frustration in your team. You're teaching your salesperson bad habits about what constitutes a qualified opportunity.
The leap from $300K to $600K in annual revenue is hard. The leap to $1.2 million is harder. The leap to $3.5 million is brutal. But if you get the foundation right now while you have backing and support, those leaps become exponentially easier.
Your Playbook for Growth
Start with objection handling fundamentals that are specific to your ICP. When you know exactly who you're targeting, you can anticipate their concerns and craft precise responses that resonate.
Build your messaging around the multi-threaded stakeholders in your target organizations. Who needs to be involved in the buying decision? What does each person care about?
Create a systematic, process-based approach to pipeline management. As an operator, this is your superpower. You can bring discipline and structure to a highly emotional profession.
The Bottom Line
At $300K, you're essentially starting from scratch. You have aggressive growth targets, limited resources, and one shot to get this right.
Stop being reactive. Start being strategic. Get obsessed with your ICP. Build processes around the right customers. Coach your salesperson with precision instead of frustration.
That's how you scale from $300K to millions. That's how you avoid the mistakes that kill small companies. And that's how you build a business that doesn't just grow, but grows sustainably.
The good news? You have the backing to do this right. Don't waste it chasing the wrong customers just because you need revenue today. Build the foundation that generates revenue for years to come.
Lead your salesperson, focus on the right deals, and scale from $300K to millions—start Jeb Blount's Sales Leadership Essentials course on Sales Gravy University today.
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