Stop Procrastinating And Start Delegating
THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
Release Date: 08/06/2025
THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
Leaders today are stuck in a constant three-way tug-of-war: time, quality, and cost. In the post-pandemic, hybrid-work era (2020–2025), the pressure doesn’t ease—tech just lets us do more, faster, and the clock keeps yelling. This is a practical, leader-grade guide to getting control of your calendar without killing your standards or your people. Why does leadership time management feel harder now, even with better technology? It feels harder because technology increases speed and volume, so your workload expands to fill the space. Email, chat, dashboards, CRMs, and...
info_outlineTHE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
When you’ve got a dozen priorities, meetings, emails, and “urgent” requests hitting you at once, the real problem usually isn’t effort—it’s focus. This is a simple, fast method to get your thinking organised, coordinate your work, and choose actions that actually improve results: build a focus map, then run each sub-topic through a six-step action template. How do I get focused when I’m overwhelmed with too much work? You get better results by shrinking the chaos into one clear “area of focus,” then organising everything else around it. In practice, overwhelm...
info_outlineTHE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
In Parts One and Two, we covered the relationship fundamentals: stop criticising, give sincere appreciation, understand what people want, show genuine interest, smile, and remember names. In Part Three, we move to the final three skills that make those principles work in real leadership: listening, speaking in terms of the other person’s interests, and making people feel important—sincerely. 1) Be a good listener and encourage others to talk about themselves Many leaders unintentionally weaken relationships because they listen selectively. If the conversation isn’t “useful,”...
info_outlineTHE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
In Part One we covered three foundational human relations principles: avoid criticism, offer honest appreciation, and connect your requests to what the other person wants. In Part Two, we level up the relationship-building process with three more principles that are simple, timeless, and strangely rare in modern workplaces. How do leaders build trust when everyone is time-poor and transactional? Trust is built by slowing down “relationship time” on purpose—because rushed efficiency kills human connection.In post-pandemic workplaces (hybrid, remote, overloaded calendars), teams can...
info_outlineTHE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
Most leaders genuinely want a strong relationship with their team, yet day-to-day reality can be messy—especially when performance feels uneven. The trap is thinking “they should change.” The breakthrough is realising: you can’t change others, but you can change how you think, communicate, and lead. Why do leaders get annoyed with the “80%” of the team (and what should they do instead)? Because the Pareto Principle (80/20 rule) makes it feel like you’re paying for effort you’re not getting—but the fix is to lead the whole system, not just the stars. In most...
info_outlineTHE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
When markets are kind, anyone can look like a genius. The test arrives when conditions turn—your systems, skills, and character decide what happens next. What are the five drivers every leader must master? The five drivers are: Self Direction, People Skills, Process Skills, Communication, and Accountability. Mastering all five creates resilient performance across cycles. In boom times (think pre-pandemic luxury hotels in Japan) tailwinds mask weak leadership; in shocks (closed borders, supply chain crunches) only strong drivers keep teams delivering. As of 2025, executives in...
info_outlineTHE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
Newly promoted and still stuck in “super-doer” mode? Here’s how to rebalance control, culture, and delegation so the whole team scales—safely and fast. Why do new managers struggle when they’re promoted from “star doer” to “leader”? Because your brain stays in production mode while your job has shifted to people, culture, and systems. After promotion, you’re accountable not only for your own KPIs but for the entire team’s outcomes. It’s tempting to cling to tasks you control—dashboards, sequencing, reporting—because they’re tangible and quick wins. But...
info_outlineTHE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
Feeling busier and more distracted than last year? You’re not imagining it—and you’re not powerless. This guide turns a simple “peg” memory method into a fast, executive-friendly workflow you can use on the spot. Why do we forget more at work—and what actually helps right now? We forget because working memory is tiny and modern work shreds attention; the fix is to externalise what you can and anchor what you can’t. As channels multiply—email, LinkedIn, WhatsApp, Line, Telegram—messages blur and retrieval costs explode. First, move details out of your head and into...
info_outlineTHE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
How to reshape culture in Japan without breaking what already works. What is the first question leaders should ask when inheriting a Japanese workplace? Start by asking better questions, not hunting faster answers. Before imposing a global “fix,” map what already works in the Japan business and why. In post-pandemic 2025, multinationals from Toyota to Rakuten show that culture is a system of trade-offs—language, seniority, risk appetite, client expectations—not a slogan. Western playbooks prize decisive answers; Japan prizes deciding the right questions. That shift...
info_outlineTHE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan
Short intro: Forgetting names kills first impressions. The good news: a few simple, repeatable techniques can make you memorable and help you recall others—consistently, even in noisy, post-pandemic mixers and business events. Is there a simple way to say my name so people actually remember it? Yes: use “Pause, Part, Punch.” Pause before you speak, insert a brief “part” between your first and last name, then punch (emphasise) your surname. The pause stops the mental scroll, the parting creates a clean boundary (helpful in loud rooms or across accents), and...
info_outlineThe most fatal words ever spoken by a leader are , “it will be faster if I do it myself”. No it won’t. If you want to scare yourself, sit down and write down all the tasks that you face both regular and irregular. That is one long, long list for leaders. Are you really going to be able to get through all of these items and take care of filing your taxes on time, see the kids sports events, have a romantic dinner with your partner, lie on the couch and read a book, magazine or the newspapers? In short, you won’t, because you will be working all of the time, putting off life to earn a living. The treadmill you should be the on is the one down at the gym, not the one where you are working like a dog, because you are trying to do it all yourself.
Inherently, we know we should delegate, but we have had prior bad experiences with it and are now gun shy about using this important tool in our leader toolkit. When I was growing up in Australia there was a common expression that “a good workman doesn’t blame his tools”. Delegation gets a bad rap because it is a misused tool and the tool itself is fine. What we are mistaking is dumping for delegating. What does dumping look like? My old boss at Jones Lang LaSalle literally dumped two huge file collations on my desk, with a “whump”, they were so thick. He just said “take care of this” and walked away. I had to take on the work in those files, but there was no guidance, no instructions, I just had to work it by myself.
Is there a simple and better way to make sure that as the leader we are only working on the most high level tasks that only we can do? Here is an eight step process to make delegation work for you.
Step One: Identify The Need
Among the many tasks facing us, which ones will lend themselves to being delegated and what does a successful delegation outcome look like in our mind?
Step Two: Select The Person
This may sound counterintuitive, but select the person on the basis of how this delegated task will help them achieve their goals. Wait a minute? Isn‘t the delegation about me achieving my leader goals of getting work off my leader desk? Actually no. We are focused on using delegation to build leader bench strength in the organisation not playing “pass the parcel” at work. Think about the team and identify which strengths need attention and how this piece of work will build this person’s capabilities.
Step Three: Plan The Delegation Meeting
We don’t plan to fail, but we fail to plan and this is one of the big missing pieces in the delegation puzzle. Leaders will just willy-nilly grab the person and starting downloading what they want them to do, without thinking the conversation through in any meaningful way. There are three sub-goals involved here.
- Desired outcome – what is the outcome to be accomplished and what does success look like? Think ahead to be able to explain what is in it for the person receiving the task.
- Current Situation – Clearly analyse where we are today both internally and externally. What factors may hinder or help this delegation?
- Goals – Define and set goals which are reasonable and yet challenging.
Step Four: Hold The Delegation Meeting
There are four subset goals.
- Identify their vision or goals. We are trying to align the task with their own goals so we need to be clear what is in it for them.
- Identify specific results to be achieved. We need to make success clear and also talk about the strengths they have which will allow them to succeed in this task.
- Outline the rules and limitations. There are bound to be resource limitations around time, money and people. These need to be made clear from the start.
- Review the performance standards. To what level of sophistication are they required to deliver results?
Step Five: Create A Plan Of Action
We don’t create the plan – they do. This is important to give them authority and ownership of how this task gets done.
Step Six: Review Their Plan
They create it but we must check it so that we are all on the same page and have a clear understanding of what happens next.
Step Seven: Implement the Plan
If there are other people going to be impacted by the plan then the leader’s job is to clear the way and provide any needed air cover, while the task is under way.
Step Eight: Follow Up
Without micro managing the task, the leader needs regular progress updates so that everything is going as expected and there are no surprises at the end.
None of these steps are diabolically difficult or complex. Well then, why don’t all leaders follow them? It could be because they haven’t thought about a process for delegation or they fear the time required for Steps Three and Four.
Stop procrastinating. These two steps, Three and Four, are not that big a time steal, so suck it up and get going. You will never have the time available which you need, unless you start seeing delegation as a tool to develop the talents of your subordinates and treat the whole process that way. Delegation is just Latin for coaching!