I run a firm with 2.5 people. Two full time. One part time. We do great work. We make great money. I sleep at night.
But a question kept poking me. Was I not successful because I did not have a team of 25? Because I did not lease a big office with glass walls and a ping pong table? Was bigger better? Was I an impostor?
I had to stop and measure my success, not someone else’s. My firm fit my life. It served my clients well. It paid me well. Small was mighty for me.
Let’s talk about why bigger is not always better. Can you build a small, strong firm that makes profit and protects your peace?
If you do not set your target, the world will hand you one. Then you chase size for the sake of size. Try this:
Put this on a card taped to your desk. Look at it as you make choices. If a choice moves you toward the card, say yes. If not, say no.
A larger team adds weight. More people? More meetings. More handoffs. More tools. More cash burn. Your days are spent managing seats instead of serving clients. Growth can be good. Fast growth can also hide weak pricing, messy scope and poor fit clients.
I learned this the hard way. I once had a team of six. Instead of doing the accounting I love, I spent my time managing people. I am a self-starter. I do not love telling people the same thing twice. I built checklists. I set check-ins. I wrote SOPs. Still, work slipped. The joy was gone. The bags under my eyes were real. Concealer did not help.
I had what the gurus said I should have. Lots of people. An office. A top-notch coffee station. It was not for me. I paused and took a breath. I asked a simple question. Could I run a profitable firm that felt like my life? Yes. But I had to change things.
I changed pricing. I defined value. I trimmed the service list. I picked a tech stack that fit how I work. The team got smaller. The office got simpler. I kept the coffee machine.
Small gives you speed. I can change a process in a day. I can test a new app this week. I can decide without a committee. Speed is a real edge.
Small does not mean small profit. It means focused profit. Switch from hours to outcomes. Clients buy results. Clean records. Clear cash flow. Fewer tax shocks.
Use three choices for each offer. Good, better, best. Most clients pick the middle. This raises your average price. Raise prices for new work each year. Take small steps. Drop low value services before you add people. Fire work, not people. Keep your best clients and protect your best team member, you.
With strong pricing, a small firm can earn well with fewer clients. That is small and mighty at work.
This is not about gifts. It is about care. Make clients feel seen.
Try these simple moves:
Care builds trust. Trust brings referrals. Referrals bring ideal clients. This moves your practice in the direction you determined.
Disruption is a choice. Pick a niche you enjoy. Learn its language. Build checklists that match how they work. Name your packages. Give each a clear promise and a clear price. Document your top ten tasks. Use the checklists every time. My 2.5 person team punches above its weight. Yours will, too.
Small firms lead. We lead with focus, clarity and follow through.
AI will not replace your judgment. It removes friction. Let it draft emails. Let it analyze reports. Let it write a first pass checklist. You still review. You still decide. Use the saved time for a client touch or rest. You'll have to take a walk every day! No more “I don’t have time” excuses.
The voice in your head says, “You are behind.” Behind who? You see headcount and highlight reels. You do not see debt, churn or burnout.
Protect your mind:
Compare only to your past self. Are systems better than last year? Is scope clearer? Are prices cleaner? That is growth. That is success on your terms.
My firm with 2.5 people is a win for me. It pays well. It serves well. I am present for my life. Small is mighty. Go define your own success. Price for value. Serve with heart. Use smart tools. Grow at your pace. I cannot wait to hear your Small and Mighty story.