Gemini Delegation & Task Assignment Framework Prompt
You are an executive coach who has helped 500+ managers master delegation and scale their impact.
Category
🚀 Productivity
Difficulty
Intermediate
Models
3
Last Updated
2026-06-28
Works with
📄 Example output
⚠️ Common Mistakes
❓ FAQ
⚙️ Fill in your variables
📋 Prompt
You are an executive coach who has helped 500+ managers master delegation and scale their impact.
Your role: [your role]
Team: [team size]
Tasks: [tasks to delegate — describe 3–5 specific tasks]
Challenges: [delegation challenges — trust/perfectionism/lack of time to brief/unclear outcomes]
Task: Build a complete delegation system:
1. DELEGATION AUDIT: Score each task on a 2×2 (impact × urgency) and decide: do/delegate/delete/defer
2. DELEGATION LEVELS: Match each task to the right autonomy level
Level 1: Do exactly this
Level 2: Research and recommend, I decide
Level 3: Decide and tell me
Level 4: Full ownership
3. DELEGATION BRIEF TEMPLATE: The 5 elements every hand-off needs
4. CHECK-IN CADENCE: Not micromanagement — the right touchpoints per task type
5. FAILURE MODES: What goes wrong when delegation fails + prevention
6. CONVERSATION SCRIPTS: How to delegate to someone who pushes back
Your role: [your role]
Team: [team size]
Tasks: [tasks to delegate — describe 3–5 specific tasks]
Challenges: [delegation challenges — trust/perfectionism/lack of time to brief/unclear outcomes]
Task: Build a complete delegation system:
1. DELEGATION AUDIT: Score each task on a 2×2 (impact × urgency) and decide: do/delegate/delete/defer
2. DELEGATION LEVELS: Match each task to the right autonomy level
Level 1: Do exactly this
Level 2: Research and recommend, I decide
Level 3: Decide and tell me
Level 4: Full ownership
3. DELEGATION BRIEF TEMPLATE: The 5 elements every hand-off needs
4. CHECK-IN CADENCE: Not micromanagement — the right touchpoints per task type
5. FAILURE MODES: What goes wrong when delegation fails + prevention
6. CONVERSATION SCRIPTS: How to delegate to someone who pushes back
DELEGATION SYSTEM: Marketing Director, team of 8
DELEGATION AUDIT:
Task: Weekly social media posting → Delegate fully (Level 4)
Task: Monthly board report → Keep + delegate data gathering (Level 2)
Task: New agency selection → Delegate research (Level 2), keep final decision
Task: Team 1:1 meeting prep → Delegate agenda creation (Level 3)
Task: Email newsletter → Delegate writing (Level 3), keep final approval
DELEGATION BRIEF — 5 ELEMENTS:
1. OUTCOME: What does 'done' look like? (Measurable, specific)
2. CONTEXT: Why this matters, how it connects to bigger goals
3. CONSTRAINTS: Budget, time, non-negotiables, who to involve
4. RESOURCES: What they have access to, who to ask for help
5. CHECK-POINT: When you'll review (not daily — when appropriate)
EXAMPLE BRIEF — Social media:
'Outcome: 3 posts per week on LinkedIn and Twitter, maintaining our brand voice guide. Done = posted, scheduled, engagement checked by Friday 5pm.
Context: Social is driving 15% of our inbound leads — each post matters.
Constraints: Use approved content bank for Tuesday posts; Wednesday and Friday are original.
Resources: Content bank in Notion, Canva Pro access, budget for $50/post boosting if needed.
Check-point: Monthly review of engagement metrics — I don't need to see every post.'
CONVERSATION WHEN THEY PUSH BACK:
'I hear that you're not sure you have capacity. Let's look at your current load together and decide what to move or drop to make room for this. This task is going to be yours long-term — I want to invest in you owning it.'
DELEGATION AUDIT:
Task: Weekly social media posting → Delegate fully (Level 4)
Task: Monthly board report → Keep + delegate data gathering (Level 2)
Task: New agency selection → Delegate research (Level 2), keep final decision
Task: Team 1:1 meeting prep → Delegate agenda creation (Level 3)
Task: Email newsletter → Delegate writing (Level 3), keep final approval
DELEGATION BRIEF — 5 ELEMENTS:
1. OUTCOME: What does 'done' look like? (Measurable, specific)
2. CONTEXT: Why this matters, how it connects to bigger goals
3. CONSTRAINTS: Budget, time, non-negotiables, who to involve
4. RESOURCES: What they have access to, who to ask for help
5. CHECK-POINT: When you'll review (not daily — when appropriate)
EXAMPLE BRIEF — Social media:
'Outcome: 3 posts per week on LinkedIn and Twitter, maintaining our brand voice guide. Done = posted, scheduled, engagement checked by Friday 5pm.
Context: Social is driving 15% of our inbound leads — each post matters.
Constraints: Use approved content bank for Tuesday posts; Wednesday and Friday are original.
Resources: Content bank in Notion, Canva Pro access, budget for $50/post boosting if needed.
Check-point: Monthly review of engagement metrics — I don't need to see every post.'
CONVERSATION WHEN THEY PUSH BACK:
'I hear that you're not sure you have capacity. Let's look at your current load together and decide what to move or drop to make room for this. This task is going to be yours long-term — I want to invest in you owning it.'
🏆
💡 Pro Tips
Best model for this prompt
Claude
Claude (Opus 4 / Sonnet 4)
Delegate the outcome, not the method — specifying HOW to do it undermines ownership and learning
The first time you delegate something, build in one more check-in than you think you need — then reduce it on the second iteration
Delegation without context is task assignment — people do better work when they understand why it matters
Accept that 'good enough' is usually enough — perfectionism in the delegator creates learned helplessness in the team
Delegating the work but keeping the authority — handing off a task then overruling every decision defeats the purpose
Not briefing properly and then being surprised by the output — the time you save by not briefing you lose in revisions
Delegating only tasks you don't like — delegate the interesting projects too, or talented people leave
Checking in so frequently that the person doesn't feel trusted — set a check-in schedule and keep it
- How do I delegate when I think I can do it better myself?You probably can do it better — for now. The question is whether you doing it better is worth your time. Delegation is an investment: the first time costs extra time, the fifth time saves enormous time. Calculate the ROI over 12 months, not one task.
- How do I handle it when delegated work comes back wrong?Diagnose before reacting: was the brief unclear (your fault), was the person unqualified (selection issue), or was this a genuine mistake (learning opportunity)? The right response is different for each. Rarely is 'do it yourself in the future' the right answer.
- What's the right check-in frequency?For new tasks or new team members: more frequent (daily for first week, then weekly). For experienced team members on familiar tasks: monthly performance check, not task-by-task approval. The goal is the minimum oversight needed to catch problems before they compound.
- Can I delegate to people who don't report to me?Yes — with different language. Instead of assigning, you're requesting and collaborating. Be clear about timelines, express the importance, and reciprocate when they need something from your team. Cross-functional delegation is a negotiation, not an instruction.