Scalability is frequently equated with a company's capacity to expand quickly without being
constrained by structural limitations. Despite receiving more and more attention from academic
researchers, scaleups have not yet been the subject of a bibliometric review study. This study
examines 1688 scaleup documents obtained from the Scopus dataset to fill this research gap. This
bibliometric analysis covered the years 2015 to 2022 and there are 30 sources (books, journals,
etc.) included. This research used 1688 documents in total. 0.08 is the Annual Growth Rate%. 3.44
is the average document age. 9.462 citations per document are average. 72464 references are given.
The ID for Keywords Plus is 236. 4387 is the author's keyword (DE). The ID for Keywords Plus
is 236. 4387 is the author's keyword (DE). Documents that are solely authorship are 343 whereas
documents with co-authors are 2.55 each. The percentage of foreign co-authors is 21.68. There are
1635 articles, 12 conference papers, and 41 reviews among the included documents. This study
found that the top ten corresponding author’s countries are; India (126), the USA (122), China
(89), the United Kingdom (62) Indonesia (59), Malaysia (42), Korea (39), Italy (37), Spain (37),
France (28). This study found that India (410), the USA (364), Indonesia (337), China (289) and
the UK (207) are the top five countries with annual scientific production on scaleups. This study
found occurrences of keywords in thematic maps. The top occurrences are; economic growth (319)
entrepreneurship (192), innovation (101), growth (76), monetary policy (43), firm growth (41)
human capital (41) and investment (40). The key ideas in the literature on scaleups from 2015 to
2022 include economic growth, innovation, emerging markets, financial inclusion, exchange rates,
firm performance and competition, and capital structure. The study's conclusions have
ramifications for a variety of interested parties, including academic researchers, politicians,
entrepreneurs, and practitioners.