06.03.2026

Why Roles Drift in Growing SMEs

Why Roles Drift in Growing SMEs

twitter icon

In most small and medium sized businesses, roles do not begin with complexity.

They start simply.

A founder hires someone to solve a specific problem or take responsibility for a defined area of work. Expectations are clear. Decisions move quickly.

Over time, however, the organisation changes.

New customers arrive. New priorities emerge. Teams expand.

Gradually, the original role begins to absorb responsibilities that were never part of its initial design.

This is how role drift begins.

How role drift quietly develops

In growing organisations, work evolves faster than structure.

Responsibilities accumulate around capable individuals.
Tasks migrate across teams.
Decisions shift informally depending on who happens to be available.

None of this feels unusual in the moment.

The organisation adapts to immediate needs and progress continues.

Yet over time, the original clarity of the role fades.

Ownership becomes less obvious.
Accountability overlaps.
Important work sits in the gaps between functions.

From the outside, the organisation appears stable.

Inside, it becomes harder to explain exactly who is responsible for what.

Why hiring often makes role drift worse

When pressure builds, hiring feels like the obvious response.

A new role promises additional capacity and relief for an overloaded team.

But if the underlying structure has already drifted, the new hire often enters an environment where expectations are unclear.

Responsibilities are negotiated rather than defined.
Decisions continue to circulate between people.
The new role adapts to the system rather than improving it.

In this way, role drift becomes embedded rather than corrected.

The organisation grows, but structural clarity does not.

The hidden cost of unclear roles

For SMEs, the cost of role drift is rarely visible in financial reports.

It appears instead as friction.

Work loops between teams.
Strong individuals compensate for structural gaps.
Leaders spend increasing time resolving misunderstandings rather than moving the business forward.

Teams feel busy, but progress becomes harder to sustain.

Restoring clarity as businesses scale

The SMEs that avoid this pattern usually pause periodically to examine how work is actually organised.

Not through rigid bureaucracy, but through deliberate role design.

They ask questions such as:

• What outcomes is each role truly responsible for?
• Where should decisions sit to prevent constant escalation?
• Which responsibilities have accumulated without clear ownership?

Answering these questions allows roles to be redesigned before pressure forces reactive hiring.

A structural advantage for growing organisations

Role drift is not unusual. It is a natural consequence of growth.

What matters is whether leaders recognise it early enough to respond deliberately.

When roles are periodically clarified and redesigned, organisations become easier to run. Decisions move faster. Teams develop confidence in their responsibilities.

In that environment, hiring becomes simpler and far less risky.

Because new roles are created to strengthen the organisation, not compensate for uncertainty that has been quietly building over time.

  

  • #SMEWorkforceAdvisory
  • #WorkforceArchitecture
  • #ThamesValleyBusiness
  • #BerkshireBusiness
  • #RoleDesign

We help SME leaders design, structure, and de-risk their workforce with our purpose-built three-pillar framework for SMEs.

Follow us for more articles and posts direct from professionals on      
Loans, Finance, Vehicles, Refinancing

🚗 Vehicle Refinance for Private Individuals & Businesses 💷

Looking to reduce monthly outgoings or gain more control over your finances? Vehicle refinance could help you unlock a…
Accountant, Tax advice, Bookkeeping

The Honest Truth About What An Accountant Should Actually...

Most business owners have a vague sense that their accountant could be doing more. They just cannot quite put their…
Capacity, Forecasting, Mutherboard

Your Forecast Assumes People Are Perfect

Forecasting feels scientific. You plug in the numbers, map out the timelines, estimate capacity, and suddenly…

More Articles

Business, Start up business

Most Businesses Pull the Wrong Lever

Smart leaders slow down to gain clarity before moving forward with purpose and confidence.One of the biggest growth…
Luxury Goods, UnderInsurance, High Net Worth

When a Handbag Is More Than a Handbag

For some people, a handbag is simply practical. Something to carry the everyday essentials. Keys, cards, lipstick, the…
#ColourTheory #PropertyStaging

How to use Colour Theory to make a room feel bigger

Colour is the most powerful tool in a stager's kit and it's the most misunderstood.When I work with agents, homeowners…

Would you like to promote an article ?

Post articles and opinions on Lancashire Professionals to attract new clients and referrals. Feature in newsletters.
Join for free today and upload your articles for new contacts to read and enquire further.