For growth-stage companies, focus is often treated as the ultimate operating principle. Clear priorities, disciplined execution, and strong playbooks help teams scale faster and avoid the chaos that comes from chasing every new idea. And most of the time, that is exactly right.
As companies grow, leaders require more structure. Without it, teams get distracted and priorities shift. But there is an important counterbalance that often gets overlooked: too much focus can create its own problem. When companies become so locked in on the quarter ahead that they stop investing in what comes next, growth eventually stalls.
As companies move beyond early traction and into real scale—often north of $20M in ARR—the pressure to perform intensifies. Leadership teams become increasingly focused on hitting the quarter, protecting margins, and improving operational efficiency. This level of discipline is necessary, but can also create blind spots.
When leadership no longer spends meaningful time thinking about what customers will need next year, instead of next month, the company can begin drifting toward a product deficit, making innovation reactive instead of intentional.
This becomes especially dangerous during moments of major market change. With AI reshaping how companies build and sell products, standing still is rarely a safe strategy.
One of the easiest traps for founders is confusing product innovation with product ideas. Customer feedback creates urgency. Sales conversations create opportunities. CEOs naturally see possibilities everywhere. but new products built from isolated requests often just turn into expensive distractions.
Innovation cannot rely on bright, shiny objects. It requires ownership. This is where strong product leadership becomes critical.
Chief Product Officers and VPs of Product work to create a system for testing ideas, validating opportunities, and balancing creativity with execution. Their job is to help leadership teams move from instinct-driven product decisions to repeatable product strategy.
This does not, however, mean removing the CEO from product vision. In most growth-stage companies, the CEO remains the clearest strategic thinker about where the business should go. Vision without process creates noise, whereas process without vision creates bureaucracy.
Focus still wins. Across the board, most companies could benefit from more discipline, clearer priorities, and stronger execution. But the best growth-stage leaders protect today’s revenue stream, while building the next one. They...
Create room for innovation without sacrificing accountability
Invest in product development before growth slows
Measure how much of tomorrow’s revenue is coming from something new
Because eventually, success is no longer defined by how well a company runs its first product. It is defined by whether it built the second one.
Growth-stage companies balance execution and innovation by creating clear operating discipline while intentionally protecting time, budget, and leadership attention for future growth. Strong execution helps teams hit quarterly goals, but long-term growth depends on continued investment in new products, new go-to-market strategies, and evolving customer needs.
A product deficit happens when a company becomes too focused on maintaining its current business and stops investing in what comes next. This often shows up when new product revenue slows, product roadmap conversations disappear, and innovation becomes reactive instead of strategic. Over time, the company risks losing relevance as the market evolves faster than the business does.