For many SME business owners, growth brings a familiar challenge.
What began as a tight, founder-led operation becomes more complex. Decisions take longer. Standards become inconsistent. The owner becomes a bottleneck.
At that point, the question is no longer “how hard can I work?” but “how effective is my team?”
Developing your team is not a “nice to have”. It is one of the primary drivers of performance, scalability and ultimately business value.
Developing your team improves decision-making, increases accountability, reduces reliance on the owner and drives stronger financial performance. In SMEs, the capability of the team is often the single biggest factor determining whether a business can scale successfully.
Most business owners recognise that people matter. Fewer fully appreciate the extent to which team capability determines commercial outcomes.
From our work with hundreds of SME businesses, a consistent pattern emerges:
In practical terms, this means businesses do not struggle because of effort. They struggle because capability is uneven and unclear.
Well-developed teams address this directly. They deliver stronger execution, better decision-making, increased ownership and improved customer outcomes. Over time, that translates into higher profitability and a more resilient and valuable business.
Many SMEs delay investing in their people because there is always something more immediate to deal with.
However, what we consistently see is that this creates structural issues:
The impact builds gradually. The owner remains involved in day-to-day activity longer than necessary. Managers lack the confidence to lead effectively. Performance varies across teams. Growth slows because the business cannot operate independently.
In many cases, this becomes the limiting factor on growth.
Developing your team is not about generic training programmes or occasional team-building days. In well-run SMEs, it is practical, targeted and closely linked to how the business operates.
One of the most common issues we encounter is a lack of clarity around roles.
People perform better when they understand what they are responsible for, what success looks like and how their role contributes to the wider business.
When this is in place, accountability improves quickly and performance becomes more consistent.
A recurring theme in SME businesses is the gap between the owner and the wider team.
We frequently see managers who are technically strong but underdeveloped as leaders, with little structured support for management development.
Strengthening this layer has a disproportionate impact. Communication improves, decisions become more consistent and reliance on the owner reduces. This is often where the most immediate gains can be made.
Another common issue is that teams operate without a clear understanding of the financial drivers of the business.
Sales teams may not fully understand margin. Operational teams may not see the cost impact of inefficiencies. Managers may not have access to meaningful financial information.
When this changes, behaviour changes. Teams begin to make better day-to-day decisions.
This is where a commercially focused Fractional CFO or Finance Director can add significant value, not just through reporting but by helping the wider team understand and use financial information effectively.
In many SMEs, decision-making is overly centralised.
We regularly observe teams waiting for approval, unclear authority levels and hesitancy to act without owner input.
Developing a culture of ownership requires clear decision boundaries, trust from leadership and support when decisions do not go to plan. Without this, even capable teams remain dependent.
One-off initiatives rarely create lasting change.
The most effective businesses take a consistent approach, including regular one-to-one reviews, structured feedback, on-the-job coaching and targeted development based on real business needs.
The key is consistency and relevance.
In one SME we worked with, the business had grown to around £3 million in turnover but was heavily reliant on the owner for most decisions.
Managers were capable but unclear on expectations, and there was limited visibility of performance across the business.
By introducing clearer roles, improving management accountability and increasing financial awareness across the team, the business transformed its performance over a relatively short period.
Turnover grew to approximately £9 million, gross margin improved from around 25 per cent to over 35 per cent, and net profit increased to around £2 million.
Just as importantly, the business became less dependent on the owner, with a stronger management team capable of making informed decisions.
This is a pattern we see repeatedly. When team capability improves, business performance follows.
Team development starts with the business owner and leadership team.
One of the clearest patterns we see is that the behaviour of leadership sets the ceiling for the rest of the business.
The most effective leaders set clear expectations, model the behaviours they expect, invest time in developing others and are willing to step back to allow others to step up.
That final point is often the most difficult, but also the most important.
For many owners, the long-term goal is to build a business that is scalable, resilient and potentially saleable.
A well-developed team is central to that.
From a buyer’s perspective, one of the most important questions is whether the business can perform without the owner.
A strong team demonstrates stability, reduces risk and supports consistent performance. All of these factors contribute directly to business value.
At Secantor, we work with SME owners to strengthen the leadership, structure and performance of their teams.
We do this by embedding experienced part-time executives within the business, including Fractional CFOs, Finance Directors, Non-Executive Directors and Operations Directors.
Our approach is hands-on. We become part of the management team, helping to clarify roles, improve accountability, strengthen financial planning and understanding, and develop managers into effective leaders.
The focus is always on practical improvements that make a measurable difference.
If you are considering how to develop your team, start with three questions:
Where am I still too involved in day-to-day decisions?
Which roles or individuals would benefit most from development?
What would improve if my team operated one level stronger than today?
The answers will usually highlight your biggest opportunities.
Developing your team is not a one-off initiative. It is an ongoing investment in how your business operates.
Done well, it creates a business that performs more consistently, grows more sustainably and is less dependent on any one individual.
Including you.
If you would like a clearer picture of how your business is performing, our free business review acts as a practical “Business MOT”.
It provides a structured health check across your leadership, team capability and financial performance, highlighting where your business is strong and where improvements can be made.
You will leave with clear, actionable insight into how to strengthen your team, improve performance and support future growth.
If that would be useful, we would be pleased to start the conversation.