In February 2026, Viviane Okorie quietly introduced something that feels less like a program and more like a correction. Women of Scale, now available globally, is aimed at a specific kind of entrepreneur. The one who has already proven she can build, sell, and sustain revenue, yet finds herself carrying too much of the business on her own shoulders.
There is a particular tension at this level. The numbers look healthy. The brand has traction. From the outside, it works. Internally, it depends too heavily on the founder’s constant presence.
Okorie has seen this pattern up close, including in her own life while raising four children and managing multiple high revenue ventures. Her conclusion is simple, though not easy to act on. Growth without structure eventually turns into strain.
The Weight Behind the Revenue
Many of the founders entering Women of Scale are already earning beyond 15 thousand dollars a month. That milestone, often celebrated, can quietly introduce a new kind of pressure. Every decision still routes through the founder. Every gap becomes her responsibility.
It is not a visibility problem. It is not even a strategy problem. It is structural.
The TABLE Framework, developed by Okorie over years of practical experience, focuses on what she calls skeletal systems. These are the underlying structures that allow a business to function without constant founder intervention. Clear roles. Defined boundaries. Decision pathways that do not rely on a single person.
“Most successful mom entrepreneurs are not failing. They are simply structurally overextended,” Okorie says. “For a mother to scale her influence, she has to step out of the engine of the business and into the role of architect.”
A Shift in How Scale Is Understood
There is a tendency in entrepreneurship circles to treat scaling as a matter of doing more. More content. More offers. More effort. That approach holds for a while, then it starts to break.
Women of Scale approaches the problem from another angle. It assumes that the next level of growth requires subtraction, refinement, and structural clarity. The founder’s time becomes more deliberate. Her role becomes narrower and more strategic.
The 90 day implementation experience is designed to install these changes in real time. It is not reflective work alone. It is operational.
This matters for a group that often sits between categories. Too advanced for early stage advice. Not interested in chasing venture backed models. They need something else. A way to stabilize what they have built and expand it without losing themselves in the process.
Learn More
Visit www.womenofscale.com to explore Women of Scale and follow @womenofscale and @vivianeokorie for ongoing insights.































