You know the sound.
If you have the Amazon Seller app on your phone, you know exactly what I’m talking about. That little cha-ching notification. In the beginning, it is the best sound in the world. You’re at dinner, cha-ching. You’re walking the dog, cha-ching. It feels like you cracked the code. You put a dollar in, you get two dollars out.
It feels like magic.
But then, something shifts.
I was talking to a brand owner recently at an event. He looked tired. Not the “I just worked out” kind of tired. The “I haven’t slept properly in three months” kind of tired.
He told me his revenue had doubled in the last year. But his profit? It had actually gone down.
He was confused. I wasn’t.
Here is the trap that nobody tells you about in the “Get Rich on Amazon” YouTube videos. Complexity does not scale linearly. It scales exponentially.
When you are doing $100k a year, you can run the business on a spreadsheet and hustle. You are a trader. You buy low, you sell high. Simple.
When you hit $1M, $5M, or $10M, you aren’t a trader anymore. You are a logistics company. You are a data storage company. You are a customer service center.
Suddenly, that “easy” scaling hits a wall.
The machine that used to print money starts chewing it up.
I often compare it to building a house with LEGOs. It’s easy to build a small tower. It’s stable. But if you try to build a skyscraper using the exact same technique, the whole thing wobbles. Eventually, it collapses under its own weight.
At Ergode, we have seen this cycle play out dozens of times. A brand hits what I call the Operational Ceiling.
They try to push through it by working harder. They hire more VAs. They send more emails. They lower their prices to keep the velocity up.
But that doesn’t work. You can’t out-hustle a broken process.
If you are feeling that drag (where every new sale feels like it creates two new problems) it means your infrastructure has expired. You are trying to run a Ferrari engine on a bicycle frame.
I’m checking my watch now because I have a hard stop in ten minutes, but I want to leave you with this.
Stop looking at your top-line revenue for a second. It is a vanity metric. It lies to you.
You need to look at your “Scale Readiness.”
Because if you try to double your business before you answer those questions, you won’t double your profit. You will just double your problems.
To help with this (and because I hate seeing good brands hit that wall) we put together a simple tool. It’s a Scale Readiness Scorecard.
It’s not magic. It’s just a checklist of the boring, structural things that actually matter when you cross that 7-figure mark.
It takes about three minutes to fill out. It might save you three months of headaches.
Give it a look. Or don’t. But don’t say I didn’t warn you when the cha-ching stops sounding so sweet.
[Download the Scale Readiness Scorecard]
Cheers,
Rupesh