A care business built around one person. And that person couldn't be everywhere.
Lukas Mendroch built LM Alltagshilfe on something real: his own presence, warmth, and accountability. In Hessen, clients trusted the service because they trusted Lukas. But a business that depends entirely on one person has a ceiling — and Lukas could see it.
The brand needed to grow beyond him. Not by losing what made it human, but by encoding it into something bigger than any single visit. The challenge: how do you scale a service built on personal trust without betraying the trust that built it?