If you’re the hardest working person in your store, something is wrong.
Be honest. How much of your day is spent doing tasks someone else on your team could do? Processing shipment, fixing the schedule, ringing through the line, resetting that display for the third time.
You didn’t become a manager to be the best employee in the store. You became a manager to build a team that performs without you touching everything. But somewhere along the way, “it’s faster if I just do it myself” became your default setting. Here’s how to break it.
Figure Out Where Your Time Actually Goes
Most managers can’t tell you where their week went. It just disappeared into tasks, interruptions and putting out fires.
Track yourself for one week. Every hour, jot down what you were doing. Then sort it into two piles: work only a manager can do, like coaching, planning and developing people, and work someone else could own. Most managers are shocked by how small the first pile is.
If a task doesn’t require your title to complete it, why is it on your plate?
Stop Confusing Delegation With Dumping
There’s a reason your last attempt at delegating didn’t stick. Handing someone a task with no context, no training and no follow up isn’t delegation. It’s dumping. And when they get it wrong, you take it back and add it to your pile forever.
Real delegation means picking the right person, explaining why the task matters, showing them what great looks like, and then letting them own it. Yes, it takes longer the first time. That’s the investment. Every time after that, it’s free.
“It’s faster if I do it myself” is true exactly once. After that, it’s the most expensive sentence in retail.
Let Go of Perfect
Here’s the real reason most managers won’t delegate. It’s not time. It’s trust. Nobody folds the table quite like you. Nobody writes the schedule quite like you. So you keep it all.
But 80% done by your team beats 100% done by you, every single time. Because while they’re handling the tasks at 80%, you’re free to do the work that actually moves your numbers: coaching sellers, developing your next keyholder, managing the business instead of drowning in it.
Every task you refuse to hand off is a development opportunity you’re stealing from your team.
Protect Your Manager Time Like It’s Money
Once you’ve handed off the tasks, guard the time you’ve won back. Block it in your schedule. An hour a day for coaching on the floor. Time each week for one on ones, planning and developing your people.
Because here’s what happens if you don’t. The tasks creep back. The interruptions return. And in three months you’re right back in the stockroom, wondering why your numbers haven’t moved. Priority management isn’t a one time fix. It’s a discipline.
If coaching time isn’t in your schedule, it doesn’t exist. What gets booked gets done.
The Bottom Line
The busiest manager in the mall is rarely the best one. The best ones do less, on purpose. They delegate real ownership, accept 80%, and spend the hours they win back on the only work that actually grows a store: leading people.
So this week, pick one task you’ve been hoarding and hand it off properly. Then do it again next week. Your team gets stronger, your days get saner, and your store gets better. That’s not a coincidence.
Delegation, priority management and coaching are exactly the skills we build in our virtual bootcamp for store managers.
The Certificate of Excellence in Retail Store Management starts September 21st, 2026. Register by July 31st to lock in the Early Bird rate of $695 (regular $795).
© Graff Retail | Stop Doing Everyone’s Job