When you think of high-growth agencies, you probably imagine fancy rebrands, pitch wins, and funding announcements splashed across LinkedIn. But behind every headline, there’s a team, a real team, doing the work.
Most agencies in hypergrowth mode get caught up hiring fast, stacking roles like Legos. But smart ones? They build teams with strategy. They know that culture isn’t a poster, and high performance isn’t luck. It’s structure. It’s alignment. It’s repeatable habits.
In fact, companies that actively design their teams for scalability are 1.5× more likely to outperform their competitors in productivity, innovation, and client retention.
So, what exactly are these fast-growing agencies getting right?
1. Hire for Grit, Not Just Credentials
It’s tempting to fall in love with shiny résumés. Ivy League schools. Big-name past employers. But in the heat of client sprints and shifting scopes, a fancy CV means little if the person can’t adapt, solve fast, or own their zone.
That’s why fast-growing agencies hire for grit, resilience, and coachability, not just a clean LinkedIn profile.
Take Zapier, a remote-first company that scaled to millions of users without a physical HQ. They built their hiring process around real-world trial projects and value-based interviews. Instead of “Where have you worked?”, they ask:
“How do you handle incomplete briefs?”
“What do you do when a client ghosts you mid-project?”
Because what matters most is how someone shows up under pressure.
And it’s not just about stress tests. Angela Duckworth’s research on grit found that perseverance is a stronger predictor of success than intelligence or experience. Top agencies know this. So they build hiring scorecards that screen for mindset, not just mastery.
Red flag? The candidate who blames “bad clients” for everything.
Green light? The one who says, “It was messy, but here’s how I cleaned it up.
2. Build Culture on Purpose, Not by Accident
Culture isn’t the Spotify playlist. It’s not “we’re a family” on the About page. At its core, culture is how things get done when nobody’s watching.
Fast-growing teams that scale well don’t leave culture to chance. They architect it.
Companies like Buffer and GitLab made their values public and operational. That means rituals, handbooks, and actual behaviors that match their mission.
At Buffer, transparency isn’t a buzzword, it’s policy. Salaries are public, team updates are shared, and decisions are documented. That culture of openness builds trust and attracts the kind of people who thrive in it.
At GitLab, every employee uses a shared handbook-as-a-service, a dynamic doc that outlines everything from communication expectations to how they handle meetings across time zones.
For growing agencies, the takeaway is simple:
Culture isn’t what you say. It’s what you systemize.
Whether you define values through onboarding rituals or leadership shadowing, what matters is this: Don’t assume it will build itself. Design it, refine it, protect it.
Because when you’re scaling fast, culture isn’t the cherry on top, it’s the glue that holds it all together.
3. Communicate Like a Product Team. Async, Fast & Documented
High-growth agencies don’t just move fast, they communicate faster. But not louder.
Instead of endless Slack threads and scattered feedback, successful teams communicate like product teams: with clarity, documentation, and async rhythm.
At Doist, the creators of productivity app Todoist, async communication isn’t just preferred, it’s policy. They believe meetings are expensive and written documentation is scalable. The result? Teams collaborate across 25+ time zones without chaos.
This kind of clarity doesn’t just help remote teams, it strengthens decision velocity. When people can access what’s been decided, how, and by whom, they stop waiting for permission and start building.
Here’s how to do it right:
- Use shared documentation tools like Notion or Coda to keep briefs, updates, and processes in one place.
- Default to writing first. Before a call, drop a one-pager summary with the context, goals, blockers, and what you need. Writing forces clarity.
- Embrace async tools like Loom for walkthroughs, client updates, or design critiques, perfect when calendars don’t align.
Communication in fast-growing teams isn’t about more talking, it’s about better understanding.
4. Role Clarity & Scorecards From Day One
One of the fastest ways to ruin a team? Hire someone into a role that nobody really understands. It happens more often than you think, especially when you’re hiring fast.
High-growth agencies that scale well do one thing differently: they define the role before they fill it. That means outcomes, metrics, and behaviors, not just a job title and a vibe.
A great example of this is the WHO hiring method by Geoff Smart. Instead of starting with a JD, you build a scorecard that outlines:
- The mission of the role
- 3–5 key outcomes
- Critical competencies (e.g. ownership, curiosity, collaboration)
This becomes your hiring blueprint and later, your management tool.
At Reforge, a company that builds growth-focused programs for tech leaders, they don’t hire until the team has agreed on a 30/60/90-day outcome doc. That’s how they ensure alignment from day one.
Want to do this too? Build a simple table:
Outcome | Metric | By When |
---|---|---|
Launch new agency site | Live with analytics & forms | 45 days |
Increase client retention | Improve feedback scores from 7.5 to 9+ | 60 days |
Hiring someone without this clarity is like boarding a plane with no destination.
And yes, this takes more time upfront. But it saves you months of misalignment, churn, and “we thought you were doing that.”
5. Prioritize Psychological Safety & Autonomy
Fast growth can create high pressure. And under pressure, trust breaks down unless your team feels safe. Safe to fail, to speak up, to challenge an idea without backlash.
Google’s massive Project Aristotle study found that the number one factor in high-performing teams wasn’t skills, tools, or experience. It was psychological safety.
That means your copywriter can say, “I’m stuck.”
Your junior designer can say, “I disagree.”
Your ops lead can say, “This isn’t working anymore.”
And they won’t get punished for it.
Agencies like Help Scout bake safety into their feedback loops, retros, and even product reviews. They ask leaders to model vulnerability first, because it sets the tone.
But safety alone isn’t enough. Pair it with autonomy.
As Daniel Pink’s research in “Drive” shows, top performers are driven by autonomy, mastery, and purpose. Fast-growing agencies get this. They set expectations, then step out of the way.
What this looks like:
- Clear briefs → but freedom in execution
- Shared goals → but no micromanagement
- Regular check-ins → not constant Slack pings
Trust is the real performance fuel and autonomy is how you prove it.
6. Retention Starts With Recognition and Growth Loops
Hiring is hard, but keeping great people? That’s the long game and fast-growing agencies win by playing it early.
The mistake most scaling teams make is assuming retention happens through salary alone. But what really keeps A-players engaged is a mix of recognition, progression, and purpose.
Start with recognition.
As Gallup’s State of the Global Workplace report shows, employees who receive regular praise are 4x more likely to be engaged. Recognition doesn’t need to be grand. Think:
- Weekly shoutouts on Slack
- Quick “win” highlights during standups
- A personal email from a founder after a great client presentation
Now add growth loops.
Fast-growing agencies don’t just retain talent, they develop it. They give team members the chance to stretch, lead, and evolve.
- Give your junior designer the chance to lead a mini-campaign.
- Let your operations coordinator shadow leadership calls.
- Launch an internal learning budget, like Buffer’s personal development fund, which offers $20/month for any learning material (courses, books, etc.).
The message you send when you invest in growth?
“We’re not just giving you work. We’re building your future.”
And that’s a message people stick around for.
7. Build Teams Like Products: Iterate, Measure, Improve
Most founders and leaders obsess over product roadmaps. But your team roadmap deserves just as much love.
The best agencies treat team-building like product development: they test, iterate, and optimize. Nothing stays static. And that’s what makes them scale without falling apart.
Here’s how they do it:
- Quarterly team reviews: Not just performance reviews, but retros on structure, roles, and tools. What’s working? What’s noisy?
Inspired by the Agile sprint retrospective, this approach keeps your team design lean and responsive. - Culture health checks: Use lightweight tools like Officevibe or Culture Amp to pulse-test morale, engagement, and alignment.
- Talent forecasting: As you scale, you need to look ahead. Tools like Lattice help you map internal mobility and upcoming role needs so you’re not always hiring reactively.
Great teams don’t just happen. They’re built, observed, broken, rebuilt and improved with intention.
Think of your team like a product MVP. Don’t just ship it and forget it. Keep upgrading the engine.
Team Building Is the Competitive Advantage
Campaigns can flop and clients can leave. But your team? If built right, it’s your moat.
Fast-growing agencies that succeed long-term don’t just hire quickly or scale operations. They invest in the people systems that hold it all together: scorecards, rituals, communication habits, and culture codes.
They know that:
- Hiring isn’t a vibe, it’s a blueprint.
- Culture isn’t words, it’s structure.
- Retention isn’t luck, it’s feedback and opportunity, over and over again.
So whether you’re building your first team or scaling your fifteenth, ask yourself this:
Are you growing fast or are you growing well?
And if you’re ready to grow well? Start building your team like a product, with strategy, feedback loops, and a human touch.