If you run an agency and things feel harder than they should, you’re not imagining it.
You’re also not failing. What we see again and again is this:
Most agencies don’t break because the work is bad. They break because the business underneath it can’t handle what it’s being asked to carry.
And that shows up in very specific ways.
At DXG, we spend our time inside agencies that are under strain. Not in theory. Not in hindsight. In the middle of it.
Over time, three distinct states appear. Most agencies will recognise themselves in one - sometimes uncomfortably clearly.
This is where it usually starts.
These agencies are working hard. Often harder than anyone else around them.
The team is busy. Clients are being delivered for. The founder hasn’t stopped in months.
And yet:
What founders say quietly:
This stage is emotionally heavy.
There’s pressure, confusion, and usually a layer of shame - because from the outside, the agency looks “successful enough”.
What’s actually happening isn’t incompetence or poor effort.
It’s that the business is no longer supporting the level of work being pushed through it.
Processes are informal. Financial visibility is limited. Decisions rely on memory and instinct. Everything still works - but only because people are compensating.
That’s exhausting. And it isn’t sustainable.
These agencies look fine on paper.
Revenue is steady. Clients are retained. The team exists.
But growth has slowed - and it feels harder than it used to.
Founders often say:
What’s really happening here is founder dependency.
The business still runs through one or two people:
Nothing is on fire - but nothing is moving either.
This is one of the most frustrating stages because it feels like you’re doing the right things… and still not getting momentum.
The issue isn’t ambition or capability.
It’s that the structure that worked at one size is now quietly limiting the next stage.
The ceiling isn’t visible - but it’s there.
This is the point where strain becomes unavoidable.
Margins tighten. Delivery stress becomes visible to clients. Leadership conversations get harder. Sometimes there’s external pressure – investors, partners, or potential exits raising uncomfortable questions.
Founders say things like:
By this stage, most founders know something fundamental has to change. What they’re unsure about is how deep the issue really goes.
Is this a pricing problem?
A delivery problem?
A people problem?
Usually, it’s none of those in isolation.
It’s the operating model itself - stretched beyond what it was designed to carry.
This is where surface fixes stop working. More hustle, more process, more tools won’t stabilise the business. It needs intervention at the structural level.
What these three states share is not mindset, motivation, or talent.
They share this reality:
The agency has grown faster than the business structure underneath it.
Early on, people compensate.
Later, founders compensate.
Eventually, the system pushes back.
That’s not failure.
That’s physics.
We don’t meet agencies with a playbook or a pitch.
We meet them where they are:
Because the fix for a struggling agency is not the fix for a plateaued one.
And a distressed agency doesn’t need inspiration - it needs stabilisation.
If you recognised yourself in any of the above, you’re not behind.
You’re clearly at a point where the business needs to be rebuilt to match the reality it’s now carrying.
That’s the work we do.
And it always starts with understanding the pressure, not judging the outcome.
If any part of this felt uncomfortably familiar, you’re not alone.
Most agencies don’t talk about this until the pressure is already high.
We’re always open to a quiet, off-the-record conversation if it helps you name what’s actually going on.