A common challenge entrepreneurs face is letting go of tasks as
the company grows. Do women business owners have more difficulty
with delegating?
"Most entrepreneurs I know feel compelled to try to run
every aspect of their businesses," says Rachel Weingarten, the
thirtysomething president and co-founder of GTK Marketing Group
in New York City, a full-service integrated marketing and
promotions agency with nearly $2 million in revenues. "Women
in the workplace, especially, hate to be perceived as incompetent
or weak and try to overcompensate by doing it all on their
own."
Weingarten says that because she's never found an aspect of
business that was too menial for her to do, she also has no problem
asking staff members to take care of the things she cannot get to.
"Since it's something I'm prepared to do, I don't
see why someone else shouldn't be."
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While working at Leo Schachter & Co., one of the world's
largest diamond manufacturers, Weingarten hated being referred to
as "the girl" and being ignored by most senior staff
unless they wanted cups of coffee. She, on the other hand, tries to
be sensitive when delegating. "If we all handle small pieces
of a project, it will run more efficiently, and the end result will
be more successful."
Discussing delegation with a male business owner recently,
Weingarten realized women often nurture when delegating tasks.
"A woman tends to praise the importance of a task before
assigning it, while a man simply announces 'Here's what I
need you to do,'" she explains.
Weingarten feels comfortable breaking down a project for her
team to handle, from design work to writing press materials. But
delegating doesn't mean distancing. "I will always be
hands-on with the creative angles of the project," she says.
"I work closely with each project leader to ensure the quality
of the work is up to our standards." Delegating doesn't
mean minimizing your involvement in the project. Instead,
you're freeing yourself to concentrate on the parts of the
project you're uniquely qualified to produce.
Delegation has also come relatively easy to Sarah Speare, 47,
co-founder, vice president of marketing and president of Chomp, a Lebanon,
New Jersey-based manufacturer of pet "candy," with
projected revenues for 2004 exceeding $5 million. But Speare admits
that her sister, co-founder Lesley Lutyens, 41, was not always as
comfortable with delegation. "My sister and I are polar
opposites and have handled delegation in different ways,"
explains Speare. "I'm much more trusting and have had
experience managing people, so once I got over the initial stage of
identifying what help we needed and got great people on board, it
[was] relatively easy for me to delegate."
Lutyens, who is also clerk and vice president of product
development, was less trusting at first, mostly because she had
fewer positive experiences working with others. "She's a
worrier and always preparing for the worst to happen."
Speare admits she and Lutyens tend to "mother" the
staff and have been guilty of micromanaging at times. She believes
delegating is easier when trust, teamwork and purpose are embedded
into your company's corporate culture. "We found the best
talent to fill [in the] gaps," says Speare. "Without
being able to delegate and trust others to do what they're good
at doing, we would be nowhere today."
"It's all about balance," says Weingarten.
"Don't delegate something because you don't want to do
it, but rather because your time and attention would be best served
elsewhere. Don't be hung up on being nice. You pay [employees]
to do their jobs and are entitled to ask them to do [the
work]."
Aliza Pilar
Sherman is an author, freelance writer and speaker specializing
in women's issues.