Protocol replaces operational chaos with systems, automation, and clarity built to handle the size you're growing into — not the size you started at.
You didn't build this business to spend your days approving schedules, chasing billing errors, and being the only person who knows how anything actually works. Most growing businesses end up there anyway — not because the owner isn't capable, but because the systems that worked at $300K were never built to hold $2M.
It's a pattern that shows up across founder-led businesses at almost exactly this stage: decisions and institutional knowledge stay concentrated in one person until something forces a change. Repeatable, documented operations are what let growth continue without that bottleneck. Without them, growth just adds more weight to the same point of failure.
Clinical practices carry a layer of complexity most small businesses don't: insurance authorizations, payer audits, clinical documentation, and credentialing timelines that can stall revenue for months. Add a second location, and every one of those systems has to keep working without you standing in the room.
That doesn't mean the work isn't worth doing. It means the practices that scale successfully get operationally disciplined before they expand — not after the second location is already underwater.
Most growing businesses try the same things first, and for good reason — they're the obvious moves. New software, a project manager, a generalist consultant who delivers a deck and moves on. Each can help at the margins. The reason none of them solve it for good is usually the same: the gap isn't a tool. It's that workflows were never clearly defined, documented, or owned by anyone other than the founder.
Technology layered on an undefined process just automates the chaos faster. A diagnosis without implementation is a report that gets read once and shelved while the firefighting continues. What's missing isn't more advice — it's someone who builds the system, installs it with your team, and makes sure it survives an actual Tuesday.
Protocol works at the intersection of two disciplines that are rarely combined. That intersection is the whole point.
Most consultants give you one of these. We build both into every engagement, because a process nobody adopts was never actually fixed.
Not sure which tier fits? Start with a Scope Assessment and we'll tell you.
Most practices don't lack ideas. They lack the bandwidth and the bench to execute them. Protocol fills that gap: a senior operations team that embeds directly into your leadership structure and operates the way an in-house VP of Operations and a systems architect would, without the year-long hiring search.
Together, this is what most growing practices are missing: someone who has run the operations, and someone who has built the systems underneath them — both on your team, from day one.