If you’re asking this question, you’re probably already doing too much.
Not because you’re incapable.
But because leadership has quietly expanded to include dozens of tasks that don’t actually require you, yet still sit on your plate every day.
Most leaders don’t struggle because they lack discipline or systems. They struggle because they’ve never had clarity on what an executive assistant is truly meant to own.
This article is designed to give you that clarity.
You don’t need an assistant when you’re busy.
You need one when:
At this stage, the problem isn’t time management. It’s ownership.
An executive assistant exists to take ownership of work that pulls you out of your highest-value responsibilities.
Before you decide what to delegate, get clear on what should never leave your plate.
Only you should:
Everything else is a candidate for delegation.
If you’re spending significant time outside these areas, that’s your first clue.
A strong executive assistant doesn’t just help. They run things on your behalf.
Here’s where that shows up most clearly.
You should not be the primary owner of your inbox.
An executive assistant should:
Your role becomes approval and decision, not constant reaction.
Your calendar is a reflection of your priorities.
An executive assistant should:
You shouldn’t be negotiating meetings or rearranging your own day.
Meetings don’t create value. Decisions do.
An executive assistant should:
This keeps momentum moving without you pushing it.
You shouldn’t be the system that holds everything together.
An executive assistant should:
Your mental load drops when someone else owns the process.
This is where many leaders stay stuck the longest.
An executive assistant can own:
These tasks aren’t beneath you, but they are beneath your role.
If you’ve tried delegating before and it didn’t stick, the issue usually isn’t trust. It’s scope.
Real executive support means:
You shouldn’t have to reassign the same tasks repeatedly.
You’re delegating effectively when:
If delegating feels like more work, the role hasn’t been fully handed off yet.
At BELAY, executive assistants aren’t task-takers.
They’re trained to:
The goal isn’t to do more. It’s to free you to do what matters most.
If you’re wondering what an executive assistant should be taking off your plate, the answer is probably more than you think.
Not because you can’t handle it, but because you shouldn’t have to.
Clarity is the first step.
Delegation is the next.
If this list felt uncomfortably familiar, it might be time to explore real executive support.
Talk to BELAY’s Assistant Solutions team to see what it looks like to delegate with confidence, and finally get out of the weeds.