Year 1 Prove, Year 2 Scale, Year 3 Dominate: The Complete Roadmap
From 25 practitioners and EUR 100K to 300+ practitioners and EUR 2-5M. Year-by-year targets for revenue, practitioner count, recurring percentage, and founder time allocation.
Scaling a methodology business isn't a sprint. It's a three-year campaign with distinct phases, each building on the last. The founders who succeed are the ones who resist the temptation to skip stages — who prove before they scale and build density before they expand.
Yet the most common mistake methodology founders make is treating every year the same. They try to scale in Year 1 before the model is validated. They try to dominate in Year 2 before the flywheel is spinning. They optimize for revenue at the expense of compounding.
Verne Harnish teaches that scaling companies must think in three horizons simultaneously: executing today's plan, building tomorrow's capabilities, and envisioning the day-after-tomorrow's opportunities. The allocation should be ruthless — 70% of resources on Horizon 1, 20% on Horizon 2, 10% on Horizon 3. Not because the future is unimportant, but because certainty earns the right to invest in uncertainty.
Applied to a methodology business, these horizons translate into a clear three-year roadmap. Each year has a singular purpose, specific targets, and a measurable proof point that tells you whether you have earned the right to advance to the next stage.
01 — Year 1: Prove
Nothing Else Matters Until the Model Works Without You
Year 1 has one purpose: validation. Not revenue maximization. Not geographic expansion. Not technology investment. Pure, focused validation that your methodology delivers consistent results when someone other than you delivers it.
This distinction is critical. Most methodology founders can deliver excellent results personally. That proves nothing about the scalability of the business. What must be proven in Year 1 is that certified practitioners — people who did not invent the methodology — can deliver quality that matches or approaches the founder's own standard.
The Year 1 targets:
- Practitioners: 25-50 certified in your founding cohort, deeply positioned by specialty. These are not just certified people — they are your co-creators, your early believers, your founding tribe. They took a risk on an unproven ecosystem, and that risk deserves a founding free period that builds their commitment and behavioral lock-in.
- Clients: 100-200 completed assessments, generating your first meaningful benchmark data. This isn't about volume for volume's sake. Each completed assessment is a data point that makes the next assessment more valuable. The benchmarking database begins here.
- Methodology: Validated through independent delivery. Clients get consistent quality regardless of which practitioner serves them. If practitioner A delivers a 4.5/5 experience and practitioner B delivers a 2.0/5 experience, the methodology isn't yet validated.
- Revenue: EUR 100,000-300,000 from a mix of direct services (sunsetting), certification fees, and early platform access. This number feels modest. It should. Year 1 is about proof, not profit.
The founder role in Year 1 is the most difficult transition in the entire journey. You must shift from doing the work to designing the system that enables others to do the work. The target allocation: 50% Designing (methodology, systems, tools), 30% Delegating (onboarding, coaching practitioners), 15% Deciding (quality oversight, strategic choices), and 5% Doing (direct client delivery, rapidly declining).
"The key proof point for Year 1 is the Four-Week Vacation test. You took a month off and the ecosystem continued to function. Practitioners delivered. Clients were satisfied. Revenue arrived. If that test passes, you have a business. If it fails, you have a practice — regardless of the revenue number."
The financial milestone is deceptively simple: break even on ecosystem operations. Not profitable yet — that comes in Year 2 when the founding cohort converts to paid subscriptions. The free founding period is a strategic investment, not a cost. It creates behavioral lock-in, social lock-in, identity lock-in, and data lock-in that makes the Month 13 conversion feel natural rather than adversarial.
Year 1 will feel slow. You are building infrastructure — systems, documentation, quality standards, community rituals, data pipelines — that produces no visible revenue but creates the conditions for everything that follows. The founders who survive Year 1 are the ones who trust the process and measure progress in validation milestones, not revenue milestones.
02 — Year 2: Scale
The Proven Model Gets Replicated
Year 2 is the year of multiplication. The model that was validated in Year 1 now gets replicated across multiple cohorts, multiple geographies, and multiple practitioner segments. This is where the flywheel begins to spin — and where the temptation to skip quality controls is strongest.
The Year 2 targets:
- Practitioners: 100-200 certified across multiple cohorts and geographies. The founding cohort has converted to paid subscriptions. Cohort 2 may have a shorter free period or an early adopter rate. Cohort 3 pays full price from day one. The pricing ladder is established.
- Clients: 500-1,000 completed assessments, enabling rich benchmarking across 5-10 industry segments. The data asset is now genuinely valuable — not just to individual clients, but as an industry resource that practitioners can leverage in their sales conversations.
- Methodology: Evolving based on aggregated data. Practitioners contribute insights. The methodology is alive, not static. This is the moment when the feedback loop between practice and theory becomes self-reinforcing.
- Revenue: EUR 500,000-1,500,000, predominantly from recurring certification fees and platform subscriptions. The critical word is "predominantly." If the majority of revenue still comes from founder direct delivery, Year 2 has failed regardless of the total number.
The founder role shifts again. Year 2 allocation: 70% Designing (vision, strategy, partnerships, thought leadership), 20% Delegating (building the leadership layer within the practitioner community), 10% Deciding (governance, quality standards, strategic partnerships), and 0% Doing. Zero. If the founder is still delivering client work in Year 2, the extraction has stalled and the ceiling is in place.
The key proof point for Year 2 is organic supply growth: practitioner applications exceed recruited ones. The network is attracting supply without the founder's direct effort. When practitioners seek you out — because they have seen other practitioners succeeding in the ecosystem, because the brand has credibility, because the data is valuable — the ecosystem has achieved organic pull.
"The financial milestone for Year 2: 70%+ gross margins, recurring revenue exceeding 80% of total revenue, and a negative Cash Conversion Cycle. Annual upfront billing means cash arrives before delivery. The business funds its own growth."
Year 2 feels exciting because the compounding effects become visible. Every new practitioner adds value to the network. Every completed assessment enriches the benchmarking database. Every successful engagement strengthens the brand. The flywheel that felt like pushing a boulder uphill in Year 1 now has momentum — and that momentum is the most valuable asset you're building.
03 — Year 3: Dominate
The Platform Becomes the Standard
Year 3 is the year of market leadership. If Year 1 proved the model and Year 2 replicated it, Year 3 establishes it as the dominant framework in your category. This isn't arrogance — it's the natural consequence of compounding network effects, data accumulation, and brand momentum.
The Year 3 targets:
- Practitioners: 300-500+ certified, establishing your methodology as the dominant framework in your category. At this density, practitioner-to-practitioner referrals become a significant revenue channel. Cross-practitioner collaboration creates value that no individual practitioner could generate alone.
- Clients: 2,000-5,000+ completed assessments, creating an industry-defining benchmarking database. The data asset is now a competitive moat that cannot be replicated without rebuilding the entire ecosystem from scratch.
- Methodology: The reference standard. Industry analysts cite your data. Conference organizers invite your practitioners. Competitors define themselves in relation to you. Job postings list your certification as a qualification.
- Revenue: EUR 2,000,000-5,000,000+ from certification, platform licensing, data products, and enterprise partnerships. The revenue mix is fully diversified — no single stream represents more than 35% of total revenue.
The founder role has transformed completely. Year 3 allocation: 90% Designing (vision, strategy, partnerships, thought leadership), 10% governance and quality oversight. The founder is no longer managing the business — they are leading the movement. The difference is critical. Managers solve operational problems. Leaders define the direction that makes operational problems solvable by others.
The proof point for Year 3 is external validation: your benchmarking data is cited in industry publications. Your certification is listed as a qualification in job postings. Your practitioners command premium fees because of the brand, not despite it. When the market validates your position without your direct advocacy, dominance has been achieved.
"The financial milestone for Year 3: enterprise value of 5-10x revenue. The data moat, the recurring revenue base, and the network effects justify premium valuation multiples. You have built an asset, not a job."
Year 3 feels inevitable because the compounding effects have built a business that is genuinely difficult to compete with. A competitor entering your space must recruit practitioners, build a data asset, establish a brand, and create network effects — all from zero. You did that work in Years 1 and 2. The distance between you and any new entrant is measured not in months of effort, but in thousands of accumulated data points and hundreds of activated practitioners.
04 — The Metrics That Matter at Each Stage
Ten Numbers That Tell You Whether You Are on Track
Aspirational goals are worthless without measurable benchmarks. The following metrics aren't wishful thinking — they're the benchmarks that distinguish a methodology business on track for platform scale from one that will stall at the franchise stage.
The progression across three years:
- Active practitioners: 25-50 (Year 1) to 100-200 (Year 2) to 300-500 (Year 3). Healthy growth is 2-3x annually. Faster growth risks quality dilution. Slower growth suggests the value proposition is not compelling enough to attract supply.
- Completed assessments (cumulative): 200 (Year 1) to 1,000 (Year 2) to 5,000 (Year 3). Each assessment enriches the database. The gap between 200 and 5,000 is the gap between "interesting pilot data" and "industry-defining benchmark."
- Cross-practitioner referral rate: 10% (Year 1) to 25% (Year 2) to 40% (Year 3). This is the purest measure of network health. When practitioners refer work to each other, the ecosystem is creating value that transcends individual capability.
- Recurring revenue percentage: 30% (Year 1) to 75% (Year 2) to 90% (Year 3). This is the single most important number for valuation. Every percentage point of recurring revenue shifts your business from "services company" to "platform company" in the eyes of acquirers and investors.
- Practitioner retention rate: 85% (Year 1) to 88% (Year 2) to 92% (Year 3). Retention below 80% signals a value proposition problem. Retention above 90% signals an ecosystem people can't afford to leave.
Five additional metrics complete the picture: client satisfaction scores should rise from 4.3 to 4.6 out of 5. Founder time in delivery should drop from 20% to 0%. Organic inbound for practitioners should grow from 20% to 75%. Organic inbound for clients should grow from 15% to 60%. Industry segments with benchmark data should expand from 3 to 15 or more.
"The single most important number at every stage is completed engagements per practitioner per quarter. This measures whether practitioners are active, whether clients are buying, and whether the ecosystem is generating real value — all in one number. If this metric is growing, almost everything else follows."
Review these metrics quarterly. Celebrate progress. Investigate stalls. Adjust strategy based on the data, not on feelings. The founders who treat these benchmarks as navigation instruments — not scorecards — are the ones who reach Year 3 with a business that justifies premium multiples.
05 — The Compounding Effect
Why Patience Is the Most Underrated Strategy
Everything in this roadmap compounds. The data gets richer with every assessment. The network gets denser with every practitioner. The brand gets stronger with every successful engagement. The methodology gets sharper with every pattern recognized. These are not linear improvements — they are exponential, and the difference between linear thinking and exponential reality is why most founders underestimate Year 3 while overestimating Year 1.
The service businesses that fail at scale are the ones that optimize for Year 1 revenue at the expense of Year 3 compounding. They certify too many practitioners too quickly, destroying quality in pursuit of certification fee revenue. They skip the data infrastructure, losing the moat that justifies premium multiples. They keep the founder in delivery, creating a ceiling that no amount of practitioner recruitment can break through. They expand geographically before achieving local density, spreading thin instead of building deep.
The businesses that win at scale do the opposite. They prove before they scale. They build density before they expand. They protect quality above all else. And they let the compounding do the work.
Year 1 feels slow because you're laying foundations. Year 2 feels exciting because the flywheel is spinning. Year 3 feels inevitable because the compounding effects have created a business that competitors can't replicate without starting from scratch and investing three years of their own.
Every methodology founder eventually faces the same question. Not "how do I grow?" — that is tactical with tactical answers. The real question is deeper: am I building a practice, or am I building a business? A practice depends on you. A business depends on a system. A practice is worth your last year's revenue. A business is worth 5-10x its annual recurring revenue. A practice ends when you stop. A business continues — and compounds — without you.
"Gerber says: work on the business, not in it. Harnish says: the founder who becomes dispensable creates the most valuable business. Warrillow says: build it like you are going to sell it, even if you never do. They are all saying the same thing. Let go of the artisan. Become the architect."
The three-year roadmap isn't a prediction. It's a design. Every decision you make — about practitioner quality, data infrastructure, founder extraction, pricing discipline, geographic expansion — either accelerates or decelerates the compounding. The founders who design for Year 3 from Day 1 are the ones who arrive there with a business worth building, worth owning, and worth keeping.
Luis Goncalves
Three-time founder. Built and exited Evolution4All before this. Now building FIKR Space — the operating infrastructure underneath every innovation ecosystem (startups, accelerators, governments, investors). Lisbon-based, works global.