Question
How do I practice how to get better at delegating?
Quick Answer
Identify one task you currently do that someone else could do at 70% quality. Delegate it this week with clear specifications (what 'done' looks like, the deadline, and one constraint). When the result comes back imperfect, write down: (1) what specifically fell short, (2) whether the shortfall.
The most direct way to practice how to get better at delegating is through a focused exercise: Identify one task you currently do that someone else could do at 70% quality. Delegate it this week with clear specifications (what 'done' looks like, the deadline, and one constraint). When the result comes back imperfect, write down: (1) what specifically fell short, (2) whether the shortfall actually mattered, and (3) what you would change about your specification next time. Do not redo the work yourself. Repeat with the same person and a slightly harder task next week. You are not optimizing for output quality — you are training a capacity.
Common pitfall: Delegating once, getting a mediocre result, and concluding that delegation doesn't work for your context. This is like going to the gym once, being sore the next day, and deciding exercise is counterproductive. The mediocre result IS the training signal. The discomfort of imperfect output is the resistance you push against to build the muscle. People who abandon delegation after one attempt never develop the calibration — the intuitive sense of what to delegate, to whom, and with how much specification — that only comes from accumulated reps.
This practice connects to Phase 27 (Delegation Patterns) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
Learn more in these lessons