We don’t talk enough about what doesn’t scale.
Which is ironic, because we talk about scale constantly. Scale is the shorthand for success in just about every industry. If it can’t scale, is it even worth doing? That’s the kind of thinking that floods strategy decks, venture capitalist meetings, and quarterly reviews.
But here’s the question I keep circling back to: Can it still matter if it doesn’t scale?
Because I’ve seen real impact in spaces where scale wasn’t the point. And frankly, it wasn’t even possible.
THE MYTH OF “MASS = MEANING”
There’s a quiet arrogance baked into how we treat scale, as if the size of a thing is what determines its significance. But some of the most meaningful changes happen in small rooms, not big stages.
Think about financial education programs in rural communities. Or credit-building initiatives that are culturally tailored for a single neighborhood. They’re unpolished, localized, hard to replicate…and deeply effective. Yet because they don’t lend themselves to scale, they’re often dismissed or deprioritized.
Scaling can absolutely expand access. But we shouldn’t mistake repeatability for revolution.
WHAT’S LOST IN THE RUSH?
Here’s what often gets left behind when scale becomes the headline:
- Nuance. What works in Memphis might not work in Minneapolis.
- Relevance. One-size-fits-all is rarely true in communities that have historically been overlooked or underserved.
- Feedback loops. When you scale too quickly, you lose the intimacy that invites honest feedback and real-time course correction.
When we chase scale at all costs, we sometimes lose the very texture that made the original idea impactful.
Small, sharp, and mighty.
THERE’S POWER IN THE PILOT
I’ve watched high-touch, hyper-relevant initiatives change the trajectory of communities—initiatives that no one would label “scalable.”
The FICO Educational Analytics Challenge is a great example. It started with a small set of universities, giving students hands-on exposure to real-world AI and data science problems. The goal wasn’t to reach millions overnight. It was to invest deeply in students who otherwise might never get that kind of access.
The early results were powerful. Students walked away with skills that shifted their career aspirations. One university even added a data science minor after participating. Those are outcomes that don’t need millions of participants to matter.
Sometimes, small is the strategy. Sometimes, we need depth before breadth.
WHEN SCALE IS THE LEVER
That said, scale still has its place. Especially when the problem is systemic.
Programs like the Educational Analytics Challenge are now growing toward a repeatable framework that more schools can adopt, while keeping the student voice at the center. The lesson? Scale works when it builds from authenticity, not when it erases it.
The key is not to romanticize smallness or villainize growth. It’s to stay honest about what kind of impact we’re after, and whether our obsession with scale is helping or hurting that mission.
WHAT IF WE MADE ROOM FOR BOTH?
What if our strategies had space for pilots that weren’t polished, partnerships that were scrappy, and impact that wasn’t measured solely by reach?
What if we treated scale as a choice, not a default?
And what if we stopped asking “Will it scale?” as the first question, and started asking, “Will it matter?”
That’s the kind of question worth building around.
Rukiya Kelly is head of corporate impact and engagement at FICO.