Building commercial control after rapid growth in a raw materials trading business
An anonymized case from a raw materials trading company selling into international markets.
Situation
The organization had grown quickly in foreign markets, but the sales function had become increasingly difficult to manage. As commercial activity expanded, existing processes, systems, and team structure were no longer sufficient to maintain control or support the next stage of growth.
The company needed better visibility into sales activity, contracts, expected future sales, and market development opportunities. Without stronger commercial control, rapid growth risked becoming harder to sustain.
Challenges
The situation was driven by a set of interconnected challenges that limited sales management and international expansion.
- Sales activity was growing faster than internal systems and processes
- Commercial work was difficult to track and manage consistently
- Contract management lacked sufficient structure and visibility
- Employee roles and responsibilities needed clearer definition
- Expansion required a more systematic view of existing and potential export markets
- Coordination between purchasing and sales needed to become more predictable
Without stronger systems and clearer functions, the organization risked losing control over growth.
Actions Taken
The engagement focused on creating a more disciplined commercial operating model that could support continued expansion.
Key actions included:
- Implementing a CRM system to improve visibility into sales activity and pipeline
- Introducing a contract management system to strengthen commercial control
- Clarifying operating processes and employee responsibilities
- Conducting export market analysis to identify opportunities in existing and new markets
- Updating the team to support the next phase of commercial development
- Redesigning the organizational structure to separate commercial and operational activities
The updated structure helped distinguish between customer development, sales execution, purchasing coordination, and operational delivery. This created clearer ownership and reduced overlap between roles.
Outcomes
The organization maintained its rapid sales growth while improving control over commercial activity. The team also began working with new customers in both existing and new export markets.
The newly implemented systems gave management better visibility into expected sales, contract status, and near-term commercial opportunities. This improved planning discipline and enabled more effective cooperation between purchasing and sales.
The updated organizational structure separated commercial and operational work more clearly. This helped refine employee functions, reduce complexity, and improve overall efficiency as the business continued to expand.
Reflections and Lessons
The case reinforced that rapid commercial growth requires stronger systems before complexity becomes unmanageable. Sales momentum alone is not enough if leadership lacks visibility into pipeline, contracts, roles, and market opportunities.
Sustainable international growth required clearer processes, better management information, and a structure that separated commercial development from operational execution. Once these foundations were in place, the organization was able to continue growing while improving control and efficiency.
Facing a similar situation?
If your organization is growing quickly across export markets but struggling to maintain commercial control, a clarity call can help identify which systems, roles, and operating routines need to be strengthened first.
