If You Don’t Delegate Tasks, You’ll Ruin Your Business

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process.st https://www.process.st/2015/12/delegate-tasks/ If You Don’t Delegate Tasks, You’ll Ruin Your Business Successful business owners know the advantages of scaling through delegation and at the same time, preserving the quality of the service experience. Success is not something you achieve “all by yourself”. Handing over some of the reigns is something most one-man businesses struggle with. It makes me think of a good friend who launched her own public relations agency just over a year ago. She told me about having just acquired two influential new clients, on top of how well some of her existing clients were doing, creating a lot more work for her in the process. But instead of being happy and excited about her successful venture, she was complaining about the additional workload, and quite apprehensive about how it might increase even more in the future. “How can I duplicate myself?” she asked nervously.

Transcript of If You Don’t Delegate Tasks, You’ll Ruin Your Business

Page 1: If You Don’t Delegate Tasks, You’ll Ruin Your Business

process.st https://www.process.st/2015/12/delegate-tasks/

If You Don’t Delegate Tasks, You’ll Ruin Your Business

Successful business owners know the advantages of scaling through delegation and at the same time, preserving thequality of the service experience. Success is not something you achieve “all by yourself”.

Handing over some of the reigns is something most one-man businesses struggle with.

It makes me think of a good friend who launched her own public relations agency just over a year ago.

She told me about having just acquired two influential new clients, on top of how well some of her existing clients weredoing, creating a lot more work for her in the process.

But instead of being happy and excited about her successful venture, she was complaining about the additionalworkload, and quite apprehensive about how it might increase even more in the future.

“How can I duplicate myself?” she asked nervously.

Page 2: If You Don’t Delegate Tasks, You’ll Ruin Your Business

This question of my friend – call her Angie – is quite normal for the new business owner who has their first taste ofsuccess.

At some point the small business owner has to consider hiring help. At this point, it’s natural to experience anxiety anda preference for cloning yourself instead of getting extra help.

As a business grows, the business owner becomes involved in more and more diverse tasks: in addition to beingchief of client liaison, you are also:

• Marketing to drum up new business• Performing numerous admin tasks like a receptionist or secretary• Paying the bills and balancing the books• Researching and developing new products or services.

Angie was complaining about having to take on all the admin tasks of a business in addition to doing press releasesand planning media campaigns – the things she is really good at – but also about the fact that she could no longerspend the same amount of face-to-face time with individual clients. She was being stretched in all directions.

Ironically, the success and growth that a young company experiences in its first year may also be its downfall. Bytrying to do everything in the business, the entrepreneur is stretched thin, standards drop, the initial high-qualityservice suffers, clients feel neglected, and decide to go elsewhere.

It may not happen overnight. In fact it may take some time as the business owner initially juggles priorities andmanages to keep some balls in the air, but slowly the business begins to suffer.

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There really is only one answer if a one-person enterprise wants to grow and remain successful, and that is to employpersonnel.

But even this can be tricky.

My friend Angie relies on her skills and knowledge of the PR industry to provide a great service. So naturally shewonders who she could possibly employ that would provide the same level of service, make the same informeddecisions and maintain the same level of professionalism? Who would care for her business as much as she does?

The truth is that we cannot duplicate ourselves.

But we can systemize what we do, and provide an assistant – an employee or contractor – with an exact set ofguidelines on how to act in every given set of circumstances.

Process Street is a powerful way to manage your systems and processes. Having all your systems documentation inone central place allows your new team to get up and running quickly in your business and will save countless hoursof training. Using workflow management software such as Process Street means you can easily organise all yourbusiness activities and details of how you want them performed.

You can sign up for a free account and see how easy it is to get started.

The dilemma faced by my friend Angie is, in fact, the norm rather than the exception in successful start-ups and one-person ventures.

A business owner simply cannot do everything in a business, and should systemize and automate the businessprocesses as soon as possible, so that he or she will be able to let the business run itself, even without the owner’sphysical presence.

That way, the business owner is freed up to manage the business and improve it, rather than becoming bogged downin the many mundane tasks and activities of an increasingly poorly functioning business.