Analytics play a vital role in understanding how users interact with your CMS. By tracking metrics such as page views, bounce rates, and user engagement, you can gain insights that inform your content strategy.
Popular tools include Google Analytics and other specialized CMS analytics plugins. These tools can help you make data-driven decisions to enhance your content.
You’ve built something that works.
You’ve got a team, real customers, and reliable revenue.
Now comes the hard part: figuring out how to keep growing without losing what made the business work in the first place.
If your company has been around for a while and has between 50-200 people, you’re no longer in startup territory, but you’re not yet a large, structured enterprise either. You’re in that in-between stage where complexity starts to surface. Product lines expand. Teams specialize. Growth becomes bumpier, and what used to work doesn’t scale the same way anymore.
This is where strategy begins to matter more than ever. Not just a bold vision or a good idea, but a shared, practical strategy that keeps your team aligned as the business gets more layered. Getting this right can unlock your next phase of growth. Getting it wrong can slow everything down or send you in too many directions at once.
Let’s take two companies as examples.
Both companies started strong. The difference came down to focus versus sprawl.
If you’re leading a business at this scaling stage—past the scrappy beginnings but not yet at full operational maturity—you need frameworks designed for your level of complexity. Tools like the Business Model Canvas or Lean Startup methods are great when you’re still finding product-market fit. But once you’ve found it and are thinking about how to grow intentionally, you need a different toolkit.
Here are four frameworks I’ve found especially useful for companies in this stage. They’ll help you make smarter decisions, stay aligned, and build with purpose.
Best for: Making deliberate strategic choices as you grow
Originally developed by Roger Martin and A.G. Lafley, this framework helps companies move beyond vague mission statements by forcing real, consequential choices. It’s built around five questions:
What makes this framework powerful is that it creates clarity through constraint. It helps leadership teams say no to distractions. Should we double down on one customer segment or expand into a new one? Should we compete on experience, price, or speed? Should we build or partner?
These choices ripple through every department. Playing to Win forces alignment at the top so that teams can execute in sync. It’s a foundational tool when you’re facing your next phase of growth and need the whole company rowing in the same direction.
Best for: Balancing short-term execution with long-term growth
The Three Horizons model helps you manage growth without losing sight of what keeps the business running today. It breaks your activities into:
Mid-sized companies often fall into one of two traps: they either overcommit to the core and stop innovating, or they overinvest in speculative ideas before they’ve fully scaled what’s working. The Three Horizons model creates a structure for pacing growth investments while protecting operational focus.
This framework also helps you resist strategic sprawl. By categorizing initiatives by time horizon and maturity, you can place bets without disrupting the core or neglecting it. It helps you innovate without losing your footing.
Best for: Aligning leadership and creating a repeatable planning rhythm
Created by Lenny Rachitsky and Nels Gilbreth, the W Framework brings structure to how you define, align on, and communicate strategy over time. It gets its name from the shape of the process:
This framework shines at companies that have outgrown ad hoc planning and need a consistent, inclusive way to align leadership around what matters most. It helps make the strategy process visible, participatory, and repeatable.
More importantly, it builds buy-in. When your team feels part of the planning loop—not just handed a slide deck—they’re more likely to stay focused and own the outcomes. And that’s what scaling requires: strategic alignment that holds, even as you grow.
Best for: Finding your next market without chasing every opportunity
Developed by W. Chan Kim and Renée Mauborgne, Blue Ocean Strategy helps businesses move out of crowded, hyper-competitive markets (“red oceans”) and into uncontested spaces (“blue oceans”) where they can stand alone and create new demand.
It encourages you to stop fighting over the same customers and instead rethink how you deliver value. The core tools include:
For companies looking for their next lever, this framework forces bolder thinking. It helps you see beyond incremental improvements and imagine a different game altogether. Done well, it creates strategic clarity and real differentiation and avoids the trap of trying to be all things to all customers.
Best for: Making strategy measurable and aligned across the company
This one is a personal favorite. Coming from an engineering and analytical background, I love frameworks that can be broken down into inputs, understood with numbers, and improved over time. Your growth formula does exactly that.
Every business has one—even if you haven’t written it down yet. It might look like:
Revenue = Leads × Conversion Rate × Average Deal Size × Retention × Expansion
What matters is not the exact structure, but making the variables visible. Once you define your formula, you can use it as a decision-making tool. Where are we underperforming? What metric matters most right now? Are we solving for growth at the top of the funnel or retention at the bottom?
This model becomes a strategic compass. It helps teams focus on the inputs that actually move the needle, rather than chasing interesting ideas that don’t connect to outcomes. It also creates a shared language for product, marketing, sales, and finance to align around.
When you plug your strategic bets into this formula, it helps you figure out whether those bets will matter—and when.
These frameworks won’t give you all the answers. But they will give you a way to ask better questions, align your team, and avoid the common trap of trying to do too much at once.
That said, even the best frameworks fall flat without a regular rhythm. Strategy isn’t something you revisit once a year at an offsite and forget. The best companies come back to it regularly—quarterly or semi-annually—to test assumptions and adjust course when needed.
At the same time, don’t overcorrect too quickly. One of the fastest ways to lose trust inside a company is to change direction before anyone’s had time to make progress. A 50+ person company doesn’t pivot overnight. Strategic clarity needs time to cascade through the team, into roadmaps, and out into execution.
Find the balance. Revisit strategy often enough to stay responsive, but not so often that your team starts to say, “We’re always changing strategy.” Build in space for learning, but give your decisions time to stick.
In the next post, I’ll break down how to build a lightweight, repeatable operating cadence—one that reinforces your strategy without overwhelming your team.
Transitioning to a new CMS can be a complex process. It involves careful planning and execution to ensure that all content is transferred smoothly without loss. Key steps include:
By following these steps, you can minimize disruptions during the migration process.
The landscape of CMS is constantly evolving. Some current trends include:
Staying updated with these trends can help you leverage the full potential of your CMS.