Field note

Why Excel breaks at 20 employees

Excel does not fail because it is bad. It fails when a growing business starts treating one file as shared operational infrastructure.

Excel starts as a shortcut

Someone needs a faster way to track work, costs, approvals, exceptions, or customer details. Excel is available, flexible, and familiar, so the first version works well enough.

Then it becomes the system of record

The problem appears when the file becomes shared infrastructure. More people edit it, formulas carry business rules, and managers depend on manual consolidation before they trust the numbers.

The real problem is ownership and workflow

At around 20 employees, the risk is rarely one formula. It is unclear ownership, weak permissions, no audit trail, and work that happens outside the file before someone cleans it up later.

What to replace first

Start with the spreadsheet that has the most users, the most manual copying, or the highest management dependency. The goal is not to eliminate every spreadsheet. It is to move the operational workflow into a system the team can trust.

Have a workflow that is starting to bend around tools?