Growth can kill what makes you special. It's the classic startup tragedy: you build something unique, it starts working, you scale rapidly, and suddenly you're just another generic company with a fancy origin story. For research-first companies, this trap is especially dangerous because your edge depends on culture, not just process.
We learned this lesson the hard way. When Golang hit its peak, consulting deals flooded in. The temptation was irresistible: hire fast, take every project, maximize revenue while the market was hot. So we expanded rapidly, bringing in people to handle the volume. Many were wrong hires, people who didn't fit our research-first culture but could code. The result? Quality dropped, team dynamics suffered, and we spent months dealing with the aftermath.
The challenge is real: how do you grow revenue, team size, and market presence without diluting the research mindset that created your advantage? The answer isn't to avoid growth, it's to be intentional about how you grow.
Preserve the core, expand smartly
Your research capability isn't just what you do, it's how you think. As you scale, this thinking needs to spread, not get buried under operational demands. New hires should understand why research comes first, not just what their job description says. Systems should support deep thinking, not just efficient execution.
Scale your research first. Before you double your client-facing team, strengthen your research capabilities. More researchers, better tools, deeper expertise. This ensures that growth amplifies your advantages rather than stretching them thin.
Hire for mindset, train for skills. Look for people who naturally ask "why" and "what if" rather than just "how fast." Technical skills can be taught, but intellectual curiosity and research thinking are harder to instill. Each new hire either strengthens or weakens your research-first culture. When market opportunities surge, resist the urge to hire for volume. Better to turn down projects than compromise your foundation.
Avoid the consulting trap
Many research companies scale by becoming pure consulting shops: taking any project that pays, optimizing for billable hours, losing the time and space for original thinking. It's tempting because it's predictable revenue, but it's also a death spiral for your competitive advantage.
Instead, scale through knowledge leverage. Turn your research insights into frameworks, tools, and methodologies that can be applied across multiple clients. Build systems that capture and distribute institutional knowledge. Create offerings that deliver research-quality thinking at consulting-friendly prices.
When you fall into the trap
If you find yourself in our situation, dealing with wrong hires and cultural drift, act quickly. Leadership needs to acknowledge the problem, not hope it resolves itself. Be honest about misaligned team members and make tough decisions. Protect your core team's energy by addressing cultural misfits before they drain everyone else.
Use the experience as a learning moment: what warning signs did you miss? How can you better assess cultural fit during growth spurts? Document these lessons for next time, because there will be a next time.
The goal isn't just to get bigger, it's to get better at being research-first while serving more people. That's sustainable scale.