There’s a stage in a company’s life where “mostly accurate” feels acceptable.
The books are close enough. The close takes a little longer than it should. Reporting requires a few manual adjustments. Forecasts need “context” to explain the gaps. Nothing appears catastrophic, so the operational drag gets normalized. And after all, the real focus is on growth. A few tiny errors don’t amount to much.
And that would probably be okay, if those errors stayed small while the rest of the business grows. But they don’t. They grow along with it.
Small errors that compound over time often escape the notice of leadership. It’s like that library book you forgot to return when you were in 5th grade. By the time you catch the error, you could be in for a much bigger reckoning than you think. But where do the errors come from?
A recent 2026 finance operations report found that 55% of businesses identify manual financial processes as one of their biggest operational bottlenecks. The issue isn’t just inefficiency anymore—it’s that outdated processes can’t keep pace with growing operational complexity.
That’s the shift companies are running into today.
“Mostly accurate” works differently at $2M in revenue than it does at $20M.
When companies are smaller, operational mistakes tend to stay contained.
A reconciliation delay might create confusion for a week. An expense classification issue might slightly distort reporting. A forecasting gap may simply lead to conservative decision-making.
But growth multiplies operational exposure. As a company adds customers, vendors, and equipment, and expands into new states, the same small operational gaps begin to affect dozens of downstream decisions simultaneously.
That’s why finance operations often feel stable right up until the moment leadership realizes they’ve lost visibility into the business—stagnating models and operational schemes can tell believable, if incorrect, stories that fall apart when someone finally looks closer.
The obvious accounting disaster is something every finance professional strives to avoid. But it’s always the quiet ones—the operational peccadilloes—that gang up to make the work a quiet hell.
It’s pretty common for companies to think they have an accounting problem when they really have an operational architecture problem.
Recent finance leadership reporting has increasingly focused on this exact issue: businesses are scaling faster than their financial infrastructure. Without establishing scalable systems and processes that are regularly maintained, reviewed, and updated, companies often hit a wall right when growth is exploding, diverting leadership’s attention right when the business needs it most.
One of the most overlooked realities in scaling businesses is that small operational finance issues rarely remain small.
As transaction volume increases, for example, complexity increases faster than visibility. If the systems in place don’t account for the realities of new states, product/service offerings, exploding headcount…
Suddenly:
Small process inconsistencies begin affecting strategic decisions.
Hiring plans get built on distorted cash assumptions. Expansion decisions rely on incomplete margin visibility. Leadership teams begin operating from partially trusted reporting.
At that point, finance stops functioning as a decision-making system and starts functioning as a reconstruction exercise.
That’s usually pretty expensive.
The current environment is making this problem worse for growing companies.
Finance teams are dealing with:
At the same time, businesses are trying to move faster operationally than ever before.
That combination creates a dangerous gap between business velocity and financial infrastructure.
According to recent accounting industry reporting, finance teams are increasingly expected to provide real-time strategic visibility—not just historical reporting. But many organizations are still relying on workflows built for much smaller businesses.
That mismatch is where operational instability starts. Especially when leadership assumes the finance function is healthier than it actually is.
This is where companies get trapped. Just because payroll runs, vendors get paid, taxes are filed… doesn’t mean any of it was done correctly or without error.
The illusion that operations are functioning properly simply because things are getting done belies whether leadership can trust the system under pressure. Finance operations should support growth, not merely survive it.
And investors are increasingly looking for that distinction.
Weak financial controls and inconsistent reporting create plenty of accounting headaches. But even worse, they can slow diligence, reduce confidence in the numbers, and make investors or lenders question how operationally mature the business really is.
If your financial operations are starting to feel stretched, you don’t need a full rebuild overnight. But there are a few pressure points that tell you whether your systems will hold up as the business grows:
You don’t need perfection across all of these, but if multiple areas feel shaky, it’s usually a sign that your financial operations aren’t built to scale with your growth.
If you’re considering your options for developing financial ops that scale cleanly and don’t leave anyone holding the bag for “adjustments,” one of the first things that might come to mind is building out a more comprehensive finance department. Here are some things to consider:
The cost of an employee search, onboarding, and compensation packages is, in itself, often one of the biggest sources of long-term cash burn. At the same time, cheaping out here is ultimately self-defeating. Once a company hires the wrong people, the losses start mounting immediately and continue ruthlessly. The right combination of education and experience will be vital, and almost certainly won’t be inexpensive.
There’s software for basically every problem a growing business might face and every task it needs to handle. Not all of it is good. Not all of it is maintained or updated. Worst of all, not all of it is compatible. Even great tech tools can spit out results that are incompatible with other systems you need to use. Proprietary or uncommon formats can quickly erase the tech advantage by introducing new challenges to getting utility from your outputs. Be sure to consider whether a tech option will play nice with your entire tech ecosystem, and whether in a year’s time it will still be useful… or even in existence.
So many areas of operations overlap. It’s not hard to mistake a tax issue for a finance issue. Or an accounting issue with a payroll issue. Or an HR issue with any of these. It’s never bad to tighten up operations in one area so they are more efficient and reliable, but be meticulous in tracing the origin of your issues. You don’t want to invest time and effort in fixing your bookkeeping only to learn there’s a persistent tax issue that was behind most of your problems.
No business of any size would publicly say they tolerate “mostly accurate” anything. Stakeholders and investors operate in a world of choices that ceaselessly tugs at their attention and resources. Don’t pale by comparison.
Great finances start with a great model. Graphite Financial offers free financial model templates for eComm/CPG and SaaS industries.