
19/05/2025
I once spoke to a business owner who hadn’t taken a proper weekend off in three years.
She was brilliant, passionate, talented, but totally burned out.
She wore every hat in her business. Sales? She did it.
Client onboarding? Her again.
Social media, invoices, scheduling, tech issues? … all her.
When I gently asked why she hadn’t hired help, she said,
“I just don’t trust anyone to do it the way I do.”
Sound familiar?
Here’s the thing: delegation isn’t about giving up control; it’s about taking back your power.
Power to focus on what you do best.
Power to grow.
Power to breathe.
When you work with a Virtual Assistant, you’re not just offloading tasks; you’re freeing up mental space, reclaiming time, and building a support system.
But if you’re not used to it, delegation can feel big.
So here’s how you can start:
✨ Start small.
Delegate one low-stakes task—maybe inbox sorting, calendar management, or research. Something that doesn’t feel too personal.
✨ Communicate clearly.
Give context, expectations, and a bit of grace. No one reads minds.
✨ Focus on what drains you.
If you hate it or it slows you down, that’s the perfect thing to hand off.
✨ Build trust.
Every successful VA-client relationship is built on communication and consistency. It’s a partnership, not a handoff.
And here’s what happened to that business owner?
She eventually hired a part-time VA (me) to handle her inbox and client scheduling.
Within a month, she said,
“I didn’t realize how much of my brain was tied up in stuff I didn’t need to be doing.”
She finally took a weekend off. Then a long weekend. Now, she takes every Friday afternoon to brainstorm, create, and lead the parts of her business she actually loves.
You don’t have to do it all.
You were never meant to.
Delegate with intention. Reclaim your time. And watch what opens up.