For years I believed the lie that successful people do everything themselves. Every email, every task, every call, all me, because that's what hustle looked like. That belief kept me sprinting on a hamster wheel, working more hours and getting nowhere. My business couldn't grow past the size of my own calendar.
The day that changed was the day I started letting go. Since 2015 I've had remote team members handle everything from cold calling and research to operations and website updates, which freed me to focus only on the things that actually grow the business. If you want freedom and scale, this is the skill, and here's how to build it.
Step 1: Write down everything you do
Take 15 to 20 minutes and list every task you do regularly. No task is too small: responding to emails, scheduling calls, following up with leads, posting on social, paying bills. The list gives you a crystal-clear picture of where your time actually goes, and what you could hand off.
Step 2: Calculate your real hourly rate
This is the number that makes delegation obvious. Add up all your income (salary, investments, rentals, side hustles) and divide by the hours you work, or use 2,000 as an average year. If you earned $300,000, that's $150 an hour.
Now the rule: any task you can outsource for less than your hourly rate should be handed off. For the clearest wins, look at anything you can delegate for 25% of your rate or less. Paying someone $25 an hour to do a task so you can spend that hour on a $150 activity isn't an expense. It's buying back your life.
The tasks I freed myself from first:
- Bookkeeping, because tracking every transaction doesn't grow anything
- Email management
- General operations
- Project management
- Website creation
Step 3: Decide what you actually need
This is where most people hire the wrong person. There are two very different roles.
A virtual assistant executes specific recurring tasks, follows established workflows, works independently on what you assign, and relies on your direction. Great for admin and day-to-day execution.
A remote integrator is a different animal entirely. They act as your second-in-command, translating your vision into actionable strategy, designing and optimizing systems, managing other team members, and making decisions on their own to keep things moving. They directly contribute to scaling and revenue, and they grow with the business.
| Virtual Assistant | Remote Integrator | |
|---|---|---|
| Role | Executes tasks | Second-in-command |
| Systems | Follows workflows | Builds and optimizes them |
| People | Works solo | Manages the team |
| Decisions | Needs direction | Acts independently |
| Hire when | You need execution and admin | You want to delegate leadership and scale |
Meet Stefan, my operations director from North Macedonia, who's been with me since 2019 and is central to everything we run. Under his leadership we've launched new businesses, expanded our website (he hired Meri, a developer from Albania), brought bookkeeping in house for about $1,500 a month in savings, migrated our CRMs, and even built a custom AI agent. Some of those new businesses are software products, which turned out to fit an investor's skill set better than I expected, a story I tell in why a real estate investor should build apps. That's what an integrator does that a task-based VA can't: they take ownership.
Step 4: Find great talent
Where you look depends on what you need:
- For short-term or very part-time work, Upwork and Fiverr let you hire fast, often the same day. Just know those freelancers usually juggle multiple clients and follow instructions precisely without much autonomy, so be detailed.
- For a dedicated long-term hire, part-time (15-plus hours) or full-time, I prefer platforms like Jobrack and OnlineJobs.ph. You're far more likely to find someone who works exclusively with you and brings their own efficiency and creativity. The hiring process takes more time up front, and it's worth it.
Step 5: Run a real hiring process
Don't wing it. A simple, repeatable process:
- Write a clear job description with daily, weekly, and monthly tasks and the outcomes you expect.
- Post it and automate screening. Put specific application instructions in the post. Anyone who doesn't follow them gets excluded automatically; it's your first filter for attention to detail.
- Use test projects. A small paid test task tells you more than any interview.
- Ask the right interview questions. A few I rely on: Describe a challenging project and how you overcame obstacles. How do you prioritize and manage your time remotely? How do you handle feedback in a remote team? How do you stay productive working from home?
Step 6: Train without drowning
The biggest objection I hear is "I don't have time to train someone." I felt the same. Then someone reframed it for me: what if the training wasn't on you, and you just followed a daily plan until it was done?
That's the key. Don't build training from scratch every time. Use a repeatable system: clear task lists, prebuilt SOPs recorded with a screen-recording tool, and simple accountability. Focus on one small milestone a day, 20 to 30 minutes. Within a week or two you have a trained team member who knows exactly what success looks like, and you're out of the day-to-day.
My remote-team tool stack is deliberately simple: Slack and weekly Zoom for communication, ClickUp or Asana for tasks, Loom for recording SOPs, Google Drive for files, and Wise for international payroll. That's it. We stay perfectly in sync across continents, and we've even met up to travel together in Montenegro, Greece, France, and Thailand.
Where this leads
This is the same path I took to bring property management in house and fire two PMs, which I wrote about in how I replaced two property managers with one remote hire. The remote-team skill isn't just for software businesses; it's how you run a rental portfolio without it running you. And it pairs directly with the operational systems in maximizing NOI and self-managing your rentals.
The takeaway
You will never build serious wealth or real freedom doing every task yourself. The math is simple: your time has an hourly value, and most of what fills your day is worth a fraction of it. It's the same leverage that lets you build a rental portfolio in just 5 hours a week while working full-time. Write down your tasks, find your number, and start handing off everything below it.
So this week, do just the first two steps. List what you do, calculate your hourly rate, and circle the three tasks you'd most love to never do again. That short list is the beginning of buying back your life, one task at a time.
This article is educational and reflects my own experience. It isn't legal or financial advice. Employment, contractor, and international payroll rules vary by location, so consult the right professionals when hiring.

