To stop being the bottleneck in your business, get clear on your core competency, build a documented process for everything outside it, then delegate in phases until the process - not your approval - moves the work forward. The company can only grow as fast as it can run without you.
The bottleneck in most growing companies is the founder. Not because they're not capable - because they're too capable. They've built the company on their own judgment, their own relationships, their own ability to solve problems faster than anyone on their team. And that works until it doesn't. Right around the time the company starts to scale, that strength becomes the constraint. The company can only grow as fast as one person can personally manage.
How Do You Know If You're the Bottleneck in Your Business?
You're the bottleneck if your team can't move without you. Decisions sit in your inbox waiting for your reply, every significant initiative needs your personal sign-off, and the company slows or stops when you're unavailable. If you've built yourself into the infrastructure of the business, that's what eventually stops the growth.
If your team can't move without you, you're the bottleneck. If decisions sit in your inbox waiting for your reply, you're the bottleneck. If every significant initiative requires your personal sign-off before it can proceed, you're the bottleneck. And if the company slows down or stops when you're not available - you've built yourself into the infrastructure of the business in a way that will eventually stop the growth entirely.
The thing I've seen across thirty years of building and investing in companies is that most founders in this position already know it. They can feel it. The problem isn't awareness - it's that the solution requires letting go of things they've always done, handing them to people they're not entirely sure can do them as well, and trusting a process instead of trusting themselves. That's genuinely hard. And it doesn't get easier unless you build the systems that make it work.
What Should Only You Be Doing in Your Business?
Start with your core competency - the few things you do better than anyone you could realistically hire. Everything outside that should be delegated. The moment you work outside your core competency, you pull mental bandwidth away from the few key actions that actually drive growth in your business.
Before you can stop being the bottleneck in your business, you have to be clear about what only you can do - and what only looks like it needs you because you've never built the process for it to run without you. Those are two completely different categories, right?
Your core competency is the set of things you do better than anyone you could realistically hire. In my case, that's locating and attracting target audiences, building teams, systematizing operations, and scaling companies. Everything else should be delegated. And I mean everything. I've gotten myself involved in things as small as trying to change something on my own website and done more damage than a team member would have - because I stepped outside my core competency and convinced myself it would be faster to just handle it myself.
The moment you're doing something outside your core competency, you're pulling your mental bandwidth away from the few key actions that actually drive growth. Your mental bandwidth is one of the most valuable resources in your business. Every decision you make that someone else could make is a draw against what you have available for the decisions only you can make.
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Build the process before the person. Every role gets a box on a chart holding the five to fifteen tasks that role is responsible for, and you define what success looks like before you hire. When the process tells people what to do, your approval is no longer required - the process is the approval.
The framework I use across my portfolio starts with a simple principle: every role in the company has a box on a chart. Inside that box are the five to fifteen most important tasks that role is responsible for. The person's name goes in the box temporarily - but the box, and what's inside it, outlives any individual. Including me.
Most companies do this backwards. They build around the people they have and then try to create structure after the fact. The right approach is to build the process first. Define what needs to happen in every role. Define what success looks like in every role. And then hire for the role, right? Not for the person.
When you do it this way, any given person can step into any box because the process tells them what to do. Your approval is no longer required for things to move forward. The process is the approval. And that's when you start getting your time and your mental bandwidth back.
How Does Phased Delegation Remove You as the Bottleneck?
Phased delegation works because the role is earned, not handed off. Someone owns thirty percent of the work while you keep seventy, then fifty-fifty, then they run seventy while you review, then it's fully theirs. Over a couple of months they own it because trust was built in stages.
The most common mistake I see founders make is treating delegation like a transfer. They hand something off entirely, it goes poorly, they take it back, and they conclude that nobody else can do it the way they can. That becomes the story they tell themselves for years.
Delegation that actually works is phased. You start by having someone own thirty percent of the work while you maintain the other seventy. Then fifty-fifty as they demonstrate competence. Then they're running seventy percent with you reviewing. Then it's fully theirs and you're checking results against the standard. Over a couple of months of this, the person in the role owns it - not because they were handed keys, but because they earned them through progressively increasing responsibility as trust was built.
If you've tried delegating and it's failed, I'd be willing to bet it wasn't phased. It was a hand-off. And hand-offs almost never work, right?
If the only person who can do something in your company is you, that is not a strength. It is a liability. What happens when you are sick, travelling, or working on the next opportunity? If the answer is "things stop," you have not built a company. You have built a job.
What Is the One Question That Removes You as the Bottleneck?
Ask yourself constantly: "What's the best use of my time right now?" Not what's urgent - the best use. Apply that question to everything you're currently doing and you'll find a meaningful percentage of your workload that shouldn't be yours. That's the bottleneck. Start there.
I ask myself constantly throughout the day: "What's the best use of my time right now?" Not what's urgent. Not what's on the list. What's the BEST use of my time. That question changes which things I touch. It changes how long I spend on any given task. And it forces me to confront every time whether the thing I'm about to do should actually be done by me at all.
Apply that question to everything you're currently doing and you'll find a meaningful percentage of your workload that shouldn't be yours. That's the bottleneck. Start there. Build the process. Phase the delegation. And build the company around the few things only you can do.
If you want a clear picture of where the bottleneck actually is in your specific business right now - not where you think it is, but where the data points - the Built to Grow Review was built specifically for this. It surfaces the constraints before they become ceilings.
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