By Mark Creedon
Right Person, Wrong Role: The Hidden Reason Your Business Feels Stuck
Right Person, Wrong Role: The Hidden Reason Your Business Feels Stuck
Most business owners, when things feel stuck, look for an external answer. A new marketing strategy. A different system. A better hire. They assume the problem is out there somewhere, waiting to be found. But more often than not, the friction isn’t coming from the outside, it usually comes down to one overlooked thing: the right people doing the wrong work.
Not wrong people, rather wrong roles. There’s a BIG difference.
When someone’s in a role that doesn’t match their strengths, you don’t always see it in the numbers right away. You feel it first in the repetitive conversations that go nowhere, in the team that keeps bringing every small decision back to you, in the kitchen table that keeps turning into the boardroom.
So, we came up with the concept of working in your genius. It means spending the majority of your time doing work that draws on your natural strengths, that creates real value for the business, and that you actually enjoy doing. Not just tolerate. Enjoy.
The same principle applies to your team. When people are doing work that plays to what they’re genuinely good at, performance tends to take care of itself. Confidence builds; momentum follows. You stop having to push so hard for results because the right conditions are already in place.
See, getting role clarity right isn’t complicated, but it does require slowing down long enough to analyse the situation.
Step one is to understand everyone’s strengths and weaknesses, that means asking your team directly. What are they good at? What drains them?
Step two is to take a helicopter view of the roles inside the business itself. What actually needs to be done? And of those things, what should be delegated, what should be automated, and what should simply be deleted?
Step three is to review and refine. People grow, businesses change, and the role that was a perfect fit twelve months ago might need adjusting now. Every six months or so, pull the business apart and ask three questions. What are we doing that we should stop? What aren’t we doing that we should start? And what are we doing that we need to double down on?
REMEMBER, role clarity isn’t about writing better job descriptions. A neat position description on a shared drive doesn’t tell you whether the right person is actually doing the right work in practice.
If the full process feels like too much to take on at once, start smaller. Pick one role in the business this week. Ask whether the person doing it is genuinely well suited to it. Ask whether the role itself still makes sense. Change in business rarely arrives as a single breakthrough, it arrives as a series of small, deliberate adjustments made consistently over time.
Relax. You already have what you need. The only question is whether it’s in the right place.
Looking for more? Check us out at The Family in Business Podcast
Mark Creedon
Mark Creedon is the founder of Business Accelerator mastermind by Metropole and business coach to some of Australia’s leading entrepreneurs – helping them build a true business, not a job.
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