Establish an explicit delegation protocol for Q3 tasks

Define in advance who receives which types of urgent-but-not-important tasks — before they arrive.

Why it works

Q3 delegation fails in teams when there’s no clear protocol: everyone takes the task because no one is sure who should, or the most available person always absorbs it regardless of fit. Pre-defining delegation routing means the decision is made once, in a low-urgency state, rather than being made repeatedly under pressure — when urgency is highest, the mental overhead of deciding who should handle something is most costly.

How to do it

  1. Map your team’s common categories of urgent-but-not-strategic tasks.
  2. For each category, decide in advance: who handles this, with what scope and authority?
  3. Write the routing as a simple reference document the whole team can see.
  4. Review the routing quarterly — delegation needs change as people’s roles evolve.

Evidence

Pre-decided protocols reduce decision fatigue and improve coordination by converting repeated in-the-moment decisions into single upfront ones. This aligns with research on decision fatigue and with organizational management literature on clear role definition. (mechanistic)

The decision-fatigue reduction from pre-commitment is supported in principle; the specific application to Q3 delegation routing is a practitioner framework rather than a studied intervention.

Common mistake

Creating a delegation protocol for the team’s ideal structure rather than its actual structure — who people are and what they can realistically do — which means the protocol is ignored the first time reality diverges from it.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach keeps the team’s delegation protocol as a reference during shared sessions and flags when a task matches a pre-defined category, so routing is a lookup rather than a live decision under pressure.

Start with IX Coach

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