"But what if ...?" "What happens when ...?" "Don't we need to plan for ...?"
Don't make up problems you don't have yet. It's not a problem until it's a real
problem. Most of the things you worry about never happen anyway.
Besides, the decisions you make today don't need to last forever. It's easy to
shoot down good ideas, interesting policies, or worthwhile experiments by
assuming that whatever you decide now needs to work for years on end. It's just
not so, especially for a small business. If circumstances change, your decisions
can change. Decisions are temporary.
At this stage, it's silly to worry about whether or not your concept will scale
from five to five thousand people (or from a hundred thousand to 100 million
people). Getting a product or service off the ground is hard enough without
inventing even more obstacles. Optimize for now and worry about the future
later.
The ability to change course is one of the big advantages of being small.
Compared with larger competitors, you're way more capable of making quick,
sweeping changes. Big companies just can't move that fast. So pay attention to
today and worry about later when it gets here. Otherwise you'll waste energy,
time, and money fixating on problems that may never materialize.