In February 2026, Viviane Okorie launched Women of Scale, a global digital implementation experience aimed at a pressing yet underexamined challenge in modern entrepreneurship: the structural burnout of successful mother founders.
Female entrepreneurship continues to rise, with more women building profitable companies than ever before. Yet behind the growth statistics lies a quieter trend. Many high achieving mom entrepreneurs are sustaining revenue at the cost of personal exhaustion. They have proven demand, crossed consistent five figure months, and built loyal audiences. What they lack is infrastructure.
Okorie argues that the issue is not ambition or capability. It is architecture.
When Growth Becomes a Trap
Women of Scale is built for founders who have surpassed early stage uncertainty and are generating at least 15 thousand dollars per month, yet remain indispensable to every operational decision. In these businesses, the founder is the strategist, operator, marketer, and emotional backbone.
The result is a fragile growth model. Revenue increases, but so does dependency.
Drawing from her experience scaling multiple high revenue ventures while raising four children, Okorie developed the TABLE Framework. The methodology focuses on identifying structural leaks, redefining founder roles, and installing skeletal systems that allow revenue to grow without expanding the founder’s workload.
“Most successful mom entrepreneurs are not failing. They are simply structurally overextended,” Okorie says. “For a mother to scale her influence, she must stop being the engine and start being the architect. Sovereignty is the goal. Architecture is the path.”
Redefining Scale for Women
Unlike traditional programs that emphasize marketing tactics or visibility strategies, Women of Scale positions itself as a consultancy and implementation firm. Its mandate is clear: decouple income from manual labor and redesign businesses for sustainability.
This approach reframes scale not as expansion at any cost, but as structural maturity. For Okorie, the true milestone is not a revenue number but a founder who can step back without watching her company stall.
Available globally through digital delivery, the 90 day experience signals a broader shift in how success for women may be defined in the coming decade. If early entrepreneurship was about proving women could build, the next chapter may be about proving they can build without burnout.
Learn More
Discover more about Women of Scale at www.womenofscale.com and follow @womenofscale and @vivianeokorie for updates.




























