Many food businesses start the same way. A home kitchen. A great recipe. Friends and family asking for more.
What comes next is where most people are unprepared.
Scaling food is not just cooking more. It is systems, safety, sourcing, consistency, and compliance.
This is where many promising ideas struggle. Not because the food is not good, but because the structure is not ready.
Food safety requirements increase. Traceability matters. Staff training becomes critical. Margins tighten.
There is also an emotional shift. Letting go of control. Trusting processes instead of instinct.
The brands that survive are not always the most innovative. They are the most disciplined.
What often surprises people is how unglamorous this phase is.
But this is where real businesses are built. Not in the excitement of starting, but in the quiet work of sustaining.
By Denis Analytis, CEO, Meal Prep Ottawa