What Should You Delegate, and What Should You Keep?
What Should You Delegate, and What Should You Keep? Delegation is not a dump. It is a boundary-setting practice. Framing the Question Knowing what to delegate is one of the quiet tests of leadership. Delegate too little and you become the bottleneck. Delegate too much, or delegate the wrong things, and you create confusion, rework, or ethical drift. The question matters because delegation is not just a productivity tactic. It is a judgment call about trust, standards, growth, and accountability. Delegation Is a Judgment Test The direct answer: delegate work that can be done inside clear intent, visible standards, and recoverable risk. Keep the work that defines direction, values, final trade-offs, trust, and accountability. That sounds clean until a real decision lands in your lap. A client is angry. A junior manager wants approval. A launch is late. Your inbox fills with “quick questions.” Suddenly delegation is not a theory. It is a test: Is this mine because my judgment is needed, ...