Issue #08 · May 2026
This Week's Topic
You Cannot Do Everything. That Is Not the Job.
Most founders know they should delegate more. They just can't quite stop themselves from checking in, stepping in, and quietly taking things back. Here's why that happens, and how to actually let go.
7 minute read · Every Wednesday
Why I Am Writing This

Almost every founder I have worked with reaches a point where the thing that got them here starts to get in the way. The drive to be across everything. The difficulty trusting others with work that matters. The feeling that checking in is the same as being responsible.

It is one of the most common traps in early-stage building, and one of the hardest to see from inside it.

This week: Why founders get stuck in the doing, what it costs the team and the company, and a clearer way to think about where your time and attention actually belong.

Jatin was the first to arrive and the last to leave. He reviewed every piece of copy before it went out. He sat in on sales calls he didn't need to be on. He was, by any measure, working harder than anyone on his team. And the company was barely moving.

Jatin came to me with a specific problem: his team wasn't delivering, and he couldn't understand why. He had hired well, he said. The people were capable. Over the next few sessions, working through how decisions were being made and where accountability actually sat, a different picture emerged. Jatin wasn't the manager of the team. He was the team. Every output passed through him. Every decision waited for him. The business wasn't stuck because of the market or the product. It was stuck because he had built himself into the centre of every process, and nothing could move without him in it.

The team had stopped taking initiative. Not because they weren't capable, but because they had learned, over time, that he would step in anyway. So they waited. And the more they waited, the more he stepped in. It was a loop, and he had built it himself without realising it.

The Trap

The doing trap is seductive because it feels like responsibility. If you are across everything, nothing can go wrong without you knowing. If you review everything, standards stay high. If you check in constantly, you stay in control. These feel like leadership. They are often the opposite of it.

What they actually signal, to your team, is that you don't trust them. And a team that doesn't feel trusted stops bringing their full thinking to the work. They bring enough to satisfy the check-in. They stop owning outcomes and start managing your expectations instead. The cost of a founder who does too much is not just their own time. It is the capability and confidence of everyone around them.

Delegating is not the same as letting go of quality. The founder who delegates well is not less rigorous. They are rigorous about the right things, at the right level. They set the standard clearly, create the conditions for their team to meet it, and then get out of the way.

The 80/20 principle, applied honestly, is uncomfortable for most founders. It says that 80% of your results come from 20% of your inputs. Which means that most of what you are doing right now, most of what you are holding onto, most of what feels essential, is not where your highest value lies.

The question is not "what needs to be done?" That list is infinite. The question is "what can only I do?" That list is much shorter than most founders think.

From My Own Journey
Learning What the Job Actually Is

When I was building VisionVoyage as a solopreneur, I did everything. That was the job. There was no one else. And over time, I got very good at doing everything, which meant I also got very attached to doing everything. The habit of full involvement became the default, even when the context had changed.

When I started working with others, the instinct to stay across every detail didn't disappear. I would delegate something and then find a reason to check in on it, or quietly take it back when it wasn't going the way I expected. I told myself I was maintaining standards. What I was actually doing was preventing the people around me from fully owning anything.

The shift came when I started asking a different question. Instead of "is this being done the way I would do it?", I started asking "is this being done well enough to serve its purpose?" Those two questions lead to very different places. The first is about me. The second is about the work.

Good enough, done by someone else, is often better than perfect, done by you. Because perfect takes your time, and your time is the most finite resource you have.

A Framework for Letting Go
This Week's Tools
Three Questions to Help You Delegate Better
1
What can only you do?
Make an honest list of the things in your business that genuinely require you: your relationships, your vision, your judgment in specific situations. Everything else is a candidate for delegation. Most founders, when they do this exercise properly, find the list is much shorter than they expected. Protecting your time for the things only you can do is not laziness. It is the job.
2
Are you delegating the task or the outcome?
Most delegation fails because the founder hands over the task while holding onto the outcome. They tell someone what to do but not what good looks like, and then step back in when the result doesn't match the picture in their head. Delegating the outcome means being clear about what success looks like, then trusting the person to find their own way there. That requires a higher upfront investment in clarity, but it creates ownership rather than execution.
3
Is your check-in about the work or about your anxiety?
Not all check-ins are equal. Some are genuinely useful, structured, and add value. Others are a way of managing your own discomfort with not being across something. Learning to tell the difference is one of the more useful things a founder can develop. A check-in that is really about reassuring yourself is a tax on your team's time and confidence, even if it feels like accountability.
This in Practice

Shantanu Deshpande, the founder of Bombay Shaving Company, has spoken candidly about this. He has said that he realised early on that he was "not as good an operator as he is a strategy guy" and that his ability to see patterns mattered more than his ability to execute. So he built a leadership team specifically designed to make his presence in most settings unnecessary. His job, as he defines it, is to communicate vision constantly, hold the culture, ensure financial discipline, and stay close to the consumer. Everything else, he has explicitly handed over. (Source: Shantanu Deshpande: Building FMCG 2.0 with Bombay Shaving Company, Founder Thesis)

That clarity about role did not come from stepping back. It came from getting honest about where he was genuinely irreplaceable, and having the discipline to stay in that lane. The company scaled because he stopped trying to be in every lane at once.

This Week's Reflection

Pick one thing you are currently holding onto that someone else could own. What would need to be true for you to hand it over completely, not just in task but in outcome? And what is the real reason you haven't done it yet?

The founders who scale well are almost never the ones who do the most. They are the ones who have figured out what only they can do, protected their time for that, and built the people and systems around everything else.

Perfect is not the standard. Progress is. And most of the time, a good decision made fast by someone you trust beats a great decision made slowly by you.

Next week, we look at how to stay grounded in your own judgment when the noise around you gets very loud.

See you Wednesday.
Riddhi
Founder, VisionVoyage

* Name changed to protect privacy. The story and context are real.

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