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Best practices for home care clients

Mastering the 8 Steps of Delegation for Remote Team Member (RTM) Excellence and Reverse Delegation Strategies

The 8-Step Delegation Journey

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Steps 1-2: Foundation Setting

Step 1: Define Task and Outcome

Clearly articulate the specific task, desired result, and estimated completion time. Align expectations regarding deliverables and success criteria.

Step 2: Set Clear Responsibility and Authority

Explicitly define the RTM's role and level of autonomy. Establish authority levels for tasks such as 'Do and Report' or 'Recommend and Act'.

Steps 3-4: Resource Provision

Step 3: Provide Context and Resources

Ensure the RTM has necessary credentials for tools, CRM access, and file-sharing systems. Provide background information and relevant documentation.

Step 4: Agree on Timeline and Reporting

Define the frequency (daily/weekly) and format of progress updates. Establish transparent communication protocols and milestone checkpoints.

Steps 5-6: Active Training

Step 5: Demonstrate the Task

Lead by example by walking the RTM through the task from start to finish. Record the session to create a Standard Operating Procedure (SOP).

Step 6: Verify Understanding

Shadow and support the RTM as they perform the task. Offer guidance, check back as needed, and ensure comprehension before proceeding.

Steps 7-8: Independence and Mastery

Step 7: Grant Independent Execution

Allow the RTM to complete the task alone, fostering initiative-taking and proactive management capabilities while remaining available for support.

Step 8: Provide Feedback and Follow-Through

Offer constructive feedback to refine performance until the RTM can complete the task accurately and efficiently without supervision.

The 4-Step Training Progression

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Understanding Reverse Delegation

What is Reverse Delegation?

Reverse delegation occurs when a RTM pushes tasks, decisions, or responsibilities back to the client instead of taking ownership and finding solutions independently.


Common Signs

  • Constantly asking for detailed instructions on familiar tasks
  • Seeking approval for routine decisions within their authority
  • Returning problems without attempting solutions first

Prevention Strategies

  • Set clear decision-making boundaries and authority levels
  • Encourage solution-oriented communication patterns
  • Provide frameworks for independent problem-solving


Empower Initiative

Encourage RTMs to propose solutions alongside problems.

Clear Communication

Establish when to escalate versus when to proceed independently.

Recognize Growth

Acknowledge and reward independent decision-making and initiative-taking.

Handling Reverse Delegation


When RTMs Push Back

  • Redirect with questions: 'What solutions have you considered?'
  • Reinforce their authority: 'You have the power to decide this task.'
  • Provide frameworks rather than specific answers for decision-making.

Building Independent Thinking

  • Create decision trees for common scenarios and problem types.
  • Encourage research and fact-gathering before escalating issues.
  • Set up regular check-ins to discuss decisions after they're made.

ClearDesk Delegation Best Practices to Implement


Do's for Successful Delegation

  • Record training sessions to create reusable Standard Operating Procedures for future reference.
  • Set clear authority levels and decision-making boundaries from the beginning of the relationship.
  • Provide regular, constructive feedback that focuses on improvement and skill development opportunities.

Don'ts That Undermine Success

  • Don't skip the demonstration step thinking RTMs will figure it out independently without guidance.
  • Don't micromanage after granting independence - trust the process and your RTM's capabilities.
  • Don't accept reverse delegation without redirecting RTMs to find solutions first before escalating.

Implementation Action Plan

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The goal of delegation is not just task completion, but developing Remote Team Member independence and initiative-taking capabilities.

This principle reminds us that successful delegation extends beyond immediate task completion to building long-term VA capabilities, fostering independent decision-making, and creating scalable business operations that don't require constant supervision.