Delegation is one of those classic leadership skills we all talk about—handing off tasks to build team capacity, empower people, and free up time for more strategic work. Great, right?
AND there’s a sneaky twist that can mess with all of that: reverse delegation.
It’s subtle. It’s common. And it can seriously slow a team down if you don’t catch it early.
Let’s break it down—what it is, why it matters, and what to do about it.
What Is Reverse Delegation?
Reverse delegation happens when an employee who was given a task or responsibility hands it back to the manager—either directly or subtly.
It might sound like:
Sometimes it's said out loud. Other times, it shows up in the form of delays, half-finished work, or decisions that magically boomerang back to your desk.
The Impact of Reverse Delegation
On the Employee
On the Manager
On the Organization
What To Do About It
If you’re a manager:
✅ Notice the patterns – Are you picking up tasks you assigned? Are decisions coming back to you more than they should?
✅ Pause before jumping in – When someone comes to you with a problem, ask:
✅ Coach, don’t rescue – Support your team in solving their own problems, even if it takes a little longer.
✅ Be clear on expectations – Ownership includes authority, not just accountability. If someone owns a task, make sure they feel empowered to actually do it.
If you’re an employee:
✅ Take a beat – Before handing work back to your manager, ask yourself:
✅ Ask for support, not a hand-off – It’s okay to need help, but frame it as a checkpoint, not a surrender.
✅ Own the outcome. Even if it’s not perfect, seeing something through builds confidence and shows leadership.
If you’re part of the organization:
✅ Model accountability at every level – Celebrate employees who step up, not just those who perform flawlessly.
✅ Train for delegation – Delegation is a skill on both sides. Help teams learn how to lead and be led.
✅ Check your systems – Are roles and decision-making clear? If not, it creates the perfect setup for reverse delegation.
Final Thought: Empowerment ≠ Abandonment
Empowering someone doesn’t mean walking away and hoping for the best. It means giving them the tools, support, and trust to figure it out—even if it takes a few tries.
Reverse delegation often comes from a place of fear—fear of getting it wrong, of disappointing someone, of wasting time. But if we want teams that grow, adapt, and thrive, we have to give people space to own it—not hand it back when it gets tricky.
So, whether you’re leading a team or just trying to grow in your role, remember this:
Hold the line. Don’t take the work back. Coach. Empower. Move forward. Together.