Pronunciation: /skeɪl-ʌp/
noun a proportional increase in the size or extent of something
A1 The company is planning a scale-up of their production line.
A2 The scale-up of the business led to increased profits.
B1 The scale-up of the project required additional funding.
B2 The scale-up of the software was completed ahead of schedule.
C1 The scale-up of the company's operations required extensive planning.
C2 The successful scale-up of the business was attributed to effective leadership.
verb to increase the size or extent of something
A1 I want to scale-up my small business by hiring more employees.
A2 The company is planning to scale-up production to meet the increasing demand.
B1 The startup successfully scaled-up its operations after securing additional funding.
B2 The organization is looking for ways to scale-up their services to reach a wider audience.
C1 The company implemented a strategy to scale-up its international presence.
C2 The CEO's vision is to scale-up the company into a global industry leader.
formal The company is planning to scale-up its operations in the next fiscal year.
informal They're looking to ramp up their business in the coming months.
slang They're aiming to level up their game and expand rapidly.
figurative The project has the potential to skyrocket and reach new heights with a scale-up strategy.
scaled-up
scale-ups
more scale-up
most scale-up
scale-up
will scale-up
have scaled-up
is scaling-up
scale-up
scale-up
to scale-up
scaling-up
scaled-up