The 111 Framework: How to Scale Your Business to $100M Without Burnout
Elijah TobsBy Elijah Tobs
Finance
May 24, 2026 • 7:14 PM
7m7 min read
Verified
Source: Unsplash
The Core Insight
Chiron Shvatza, CEO of acquisition.com, reveals the counter-intuitive strategies behind scaling businesses to billions. He emphasizes 'growth by subtraction,' the '111' operational framework (one traffic source, one conversion method, one delivery channel), and the power of 'memo culture' to drive clarity and institutional knowledge. The content provides a masterclass in simplifying complex operations, recruiting A-players, and maintaining optionality through financial discipline.
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Original insights inspired by Kodawire Business Insights — watch the full breakdown below.
As the founder and primary investigative voice at Kodawire, Elijah Tobs brings over 15 years of experience in dissecting complex geopolitical and financial systems. His work is centered on the ethical governance of emerging technologies, the shifting architectures of global finance, and the future of pedagogy in a digital-first world. A staunch advocate for high-fidelity journalism, he established Kodawire to be a sanctuary for deep-dive intelligence. Moving away from the ephemeral nature of modern headlines, Kodawire delivers permanent, verified insights that challenge the status quo and empower the global reader.
Adopt the 111 Framework: Focus on one traffic source, one conversion method, and one delivery channel to diagnose and scale your business.
Implement Memo Culture: Use the "No Memo, No Decision" rule to force clarity and remove fear from your leadership process.
Freeze Your Lifestyle: Maintain a flat monthly budget regardless of net worth growth to preserve the optionality needed for high-stakes risks.
Build for the Exit: Operate as if you are selling your business to gain objectivity and identify the true bottlenecks in your operations.
Many entrepreneurs fall into the "Curse of Capability." Because you are smart, you naturally gravitate toward complex solutions. You build intricate webs of service lines and chase shiny objects because you can. In high-growth business, capability is often the enemy of scale. Complexity is exponential; adding a new service line adds a new department, new customer expectations, and a new layer of management. Understanding the DNA of high-performance leadership is essential to avoiding these common traps.
Simplicity in operations starts with a clear, uncluttered focus. (Credit: Maëva Catteau via Unsplash)
Founders often recover 90% of their time by cutting non-essential services, with only a marginal 10% dip in revenue. To do great things, you must do fewer things. If you want to build a $100 million company, you cannot operate with the same complexity you used to build a $1 million one. Studying the architecture of leadership, strategy, and culture can provide the necessary framework to pivot effectively.
The Unpopular Opinion
Most advice suggests "diversifying income streams." I argue the opposite. Diversification is a hedge against ignorance. If you truly understand your business, you should double down on the one thing that provides the most value. When you offer everything, you stand for nothing. Successful companies win because they are the best at one specific thing, not because they are broad.
The 111 Framework: Your Blueprint for Scale
If you are struggling to scale, you likely have a "plumbing" problem. Before you send more traffic through your pipes, you must ensure the pipes are built to hold it. I use the 111 Framework to diagnose business health:
One Traffic Source: A single, controllable channel to fill your funnel.
One Conversion Method: A repeatable process to turn leads into cash.
One Delivery Channel: A standardized way to fulfill your promise.
By isolating these three variables, you stop guessing. If your conversion rate is low, you don't need to change your traffic source; you need to refine your script. If you have no leads, you don't need to change your delivery; you need to fix your traffic. This clarity allows you to hit $300,000 in revenue quickly. Only after you dial in the 111 do you earn the right to add a second traffic source. For those looking at larger organizational structures, consider how scaling AI in a large firm requires similar disciplined focus.
Behind the Scenes
This content is synthesized from operational frameworks used in high-stakes exits. It avoids the "hustle" narrative in favor of forensic business analysis. The principles, such as the 10/10 Forever Rule, are applied here to prioritize long-term equity over short-term cash grabs.
At my companies, we live by the "WAFM" rule: Write A Memo. If there is no memo, there is no decision. If there is no memo, there is no meeting. This forces clarity. Fear has no place on paper. When you write down your disorganized thoughts, you see the gaps in your logic. By requiring a memo before a meeting, you ensure that everyone arrives with a shared understanding. The meeting then becomes a high-level discussion about the questions raised in the document, rather than a chaotic brainstorming session.
Memo culture forces the discipline required for high-stakes decision making. (Credit: Brett Jordan via Unsplash)
Recruiting and Incentivizing A-Players
Hiring is not about filling a role; it is about solving a pain. When you are drowning, you need to articulate that pain clearly. I use AI to take my raw, frustrated thoughts about what is broken in my business and turn them into a high-converting job description. An A-player wants to solve a specific, meaningful problem.
To keep them, I use Phantom Equity. Giving away actual shares can be a legal and tax nightmare. Phantom equity allows you to give key employees the financial upside of ownership, a percentage of the exit value, without changing your corporate structure or giving them voting rights. It aligns their incentives with yours, ensuring they stay for the long haul.
Financial Optionality: The 'Monthly Nut' Rule
The most important thing an entrepreneur can do to set themselves up for scale is to freeze their lifestyle. My family has operated on the same monthly "nut" (budget) for over a decade, even as our net worth has grown significantly. Why? Because it gives us optionality. When your lifestyle is fixed, every dollar above that threshold is risk-adjusted capital. You are never forced to make a bad business decision just to pay your mortgage. You have the freedom to wait for the right opportunity.
The Decision Matrix
When you are faced with a tough choice, run it through this four-step filter:
Understand the Context: Do we have shared information?
Isolate the Issue: What is the specific problem we are solving?
Accept the Risk: If we make this decision, what breaks?
Map the Decision: What are the immediate next steps?
If you cannot answer these four questions, you are not ready to make the decision.
AI Memo Framework: Use voice-to-text AI to dump your thoughts, then prompt it to organize them into a "Story So Far," "Issue," and "Recommendation" structure.
The 10/10 Rule: Focus your mentorship and investment on 10 people for 10 years to build a legacy of high-performing talent.
What Do You Think?
We have covered a lot of ground, from the 111 Framework to the psychological discipline of the "monthly nut." But I want to hear from you. If you had to cut one service line or one complex project from your business today to regain 90% of your focus, what would it be? Let me know in the comments below, I will be replying to every response within the first 24 hours.
The 111 Framework is a diagnostic tool for business health that focuses on one traffic source, one conversion method, and one delivery channel to simplify operations and enable scaling.
Memo Culture forces clarity by requiring a written document before any decision or meeting. This removes fear, exposes gaps in logic, and ensures all participants have a shared understanding.
It is the practice of freezing your personal lifestyle budget regardless of net worth growth. This creates financial optionality, allowing entrepreneurs to make decisions based on long-term strategy rather than immediate financial pressure.
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Editorial Team • Question of the Day
"If you had to cut one service line or one complex project from your business today to regain 90% of your focus, what would it be?"