Growing a business sounds great in theory.
More clients. More revenue. More momentum.
But in practice, growth has a habit of exposing everything your team isn’t set up to handle.
This is the point where many businesses realise something important:
It’s not just about working harder. It’s about introducing the right roles at the right time.
The businesses that scale well don’t just add people.
They introduce roles that bring structure, ownership, and capacity into the business.
Most businesses approach this reactively.
They think:
So they start handing off tasks in fragments.
The result:
Because tasks don’t scale. Roles do.
A role creates:
That’s the real shift.
Here’s a better way to think about it:
If a function in your business is repeatedly pulling you or your team into low-value work, it needs ownership.
Not more effort. Not better time management. Ownership.
These are not random hires.
These are the roles that typically create the fastest and most meaningful capacity gains.
This is almost always the first unlock.
This role takes ownership of:
The impact:
This is where many businesses start building structure within Customer Support & Operations.
Most businesses leave this too late.
This role owns:
The impact:
This typically sits within Finance & Accounting.
When founders or senior team members handle customer queries, things slow down quickly.
The customer support role owns:
The impact:
And importantly, it protects your ability to focus on higher-value work.
Not strategy. Execution.
This role owns:
The impact:
This fits naturally into Sales & Marketing.
As the business grows, complexity increases. An operations specialist is crucial for a scaling business.
This role owns:
The impact:
This is often the difference between a business that is busy and one that is scalable.
This is where the conversation becomes commercial.
Introducing the right roles doesn’t just reduce workload. It changes how the business operates.
You get:
And most importantly: You create the space to scale properly.
Not every role needs to be full-time immediately.
We explored this in more detail in Flexible vs Full-Time Support, where the model you choose directly impacts how effective the role becomes.
Let’s be honest.
The biggest mistake is not choosing the wrong role.
It’s:
That is how businesses stay stuck in operational chaos longer than they should.
Instead of asking: “What should I delegate?”
Ask: “What part of my business needs ownership right now?”
That question will give you a far better answer.
Start there. Then build the structure your growth actually demands.
Delegating tasks involves handing off individual pieces of work, often without clear ownership. Introducing roles means assigning responsibility for an entire function, which improves accountability, consistency, and scalability.
In most cases, an operations or admin support role is the first step. It removes pressure from day-to-day operations and creates immediate capacity.
Yes. Many businesses start with flexible support, allowing them to introduce role ownership without committing to a full-time hire too early.
Look at where pressure is building. If a function repeatedly pulls you or your team into low-value work, it likely needs a dedicated role.
Role ownership creates accountability, improves consistency, and allows businesses to scale without overloading leadership or relying on fragmented task delegation.
A bad hire costs more than £130,000. This free online session shows you how to get the next one right.
When:Thursday 11 June at 4pm (UK)
Host: James Townsend-Rose, CEO of Outsourcery
No fluff. Honest insight. Real examples. Live Q&A.