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Ask HN: Advice on Hiring an Assistant?
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20 points
by And1
1496 days ago
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I run a small business and I'm totally swamped. I've outsourcing the standard stuff (bookkeeping, financial ops, most writing) but I'm still drowning in a lot of one-off tasks. I've tried one virtual assistant service, but I've been underwhelmed with the help I've been getting (been through 2 candidates so far). I'm really trying to not expect too much, but it would be nice to not field a million questions on what seems like a straightforward task. I'm open to the idea that I'm doing a bad job of formulating tasks, and that this is a skill I need to get better at, but has anyone found success with hiring an assistant? Local/virtual? What worked? How long does it take to have someone get your style? Do you know if its not a fit right away? Any wisdom appreciated. |
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Retooling for an assistant is the most important thing you will ever do for your company, it is what will ultimately allow you to perhaps grow or exit someday.
For new assistants - start them writing down your processes as an operations manual. Every day, they should be making updates and journal entries in the operations manual. The primary purpose of this is to see they can write in a way you can understand, if they can't do this - then fast fire.
If you find somebody who can write/edit/update -- Make sure they know "this role temporary, until it is permanent" and their role is to make themselves indispensable by anticipating your needs.
review your inbox, edit your documents, organize your calendar, and do research, follow up with clients, billing/collections, whatever tasks they can identify and offload from you.
A good assistant once fully trained will be 80% right, 20% wrong, .. you need to accept they aren't you - but eventually you'll both find how to make sure they do the 80% .. and defer/check with you for the other 80%.
A good assistant will write things down for your next assistant. We call this the "BUS" (or Tram) factor.
I know this seems cold & harsh, but having/updating an operations manual should be the first week of any new person as they are training.