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"I Don't Have Enough Work for a VA": Why That's Probably Wrong

"I Don't Have Enough Work for a VA": Why That's Probably Wrong

Nicola Berry

“I Don’t Have Enough Work for a VA”: Why That’s Probably Wrong

You don’t think you need one. Let’s check.

What You'll Learn

  • The Most Common Objection
  • The Invisible Admin Problem
  • The Time Audit That Changes Everything
  • "But It Only Takes Me Five Minutes"

The Most Common Objection

When I suggest to business owners that they might benefit from a Virtual Assistant, the most frequent response isn’t “I can’t afford it.” It’s:

“I don’t think I have enough work to justify it.”

They’re almost always wrong. Not because they’re lying, but because they’ve stopped seeing the admin. It’s become invisible. It’s the wallpaper of their working day.


The Invisible Admin Problem

Admin doesn’t announce itself. It doesn’t sit on your to-do list with a time estimate. It hides in the gaps:

  • The 10 minutes checking email between client calls
  • The 15 minutes updating a spreadsheet before lunch
  • The 5 minutes scheduling a meeting
  • The 20 minutes chasing a late payment
  • The 30 minutes at the end of the day “tidying up”

Individually, these feel like nothing. Cumulatively? They’re 1-2 hours per day. That’s 5-10 hours per week. That’s 20-40 hours per month.

You don’t see it because it’s distributed. Five minutes here, ten minutes there. But it adds up to a part-time job that you’re doing on top of your actual work.


The Time Audit That Changes Everything

Try this exercise for one week:

Every time you do a task that isn’t directly serving a client or growing your business, note it. Set a timer on your phone if you need to. Be honest. Include:

  • Email reading and responding
  • Calendar management
  • Invoicing and payment chasing
  • Filing and document management
  • Data entry
  • Research that isn’t strategy
  • Social media maintenance
  • Travel booking
  • Quote preparation (the admin parts, not the expertise parts)
  • Any “quick” task that interrupts your flow

At the end of the week, add it up.

Most business owners who do this exercise discover 15-25 hours of admin per week that they didn’t realise was there. Even the ones who said “I don’t have enough work for a VA” find 10+ hours.


”But It Only Takes Me Five Minutes”

This is the most dangerous phrase in business operations.

Yes, that one task takes five minutes. But you do 30 “five-minute tasks” per day. That’s 2.5 hours. And each one doesn’t just cost five minutes; it costs the context switch.

Context switching (the mental effort of stopping one type of work and starting another) has been studied extensively. Research suggests it takes an average of 23 minutes to fully refocus after an interruption. You don’t have 23 minutes between tasks, so you’re operating in a constant state of partial attention.

Your “five-minute task” doesn’t cost five minutes. It costs five minutes plus the 10-15 minutes of degraded focus on either side of it.


Tasks You’ve Forgotten Are Tasks

Here are admin jobs that most business owners have mentally filed as “just part of my day” rather than recognising them as delegatable work:

Morning routine admin:

  • Checking and triaging email
  • Reviewing the day’s calendar
  • Checking messages on Slack, WhatsApp, social media
  • Dealing with overnight enquiries

Between-meetings admin:

  • Sending follow-up emails from the last meeting
  • Updating CRM or spreadsheets with meeting notes
  • Scheduling the next meeting
  • Sharing documents discussed in the meeting

End-of-day admin:

  • Processing the day’s emails
  • Updating task lists
  • Sending quotes or proposals
  • Logging time or expenses

Weekly admin:

  • Invoicing
  • Expense tracking
  • Social media scheduling
  • Newsletter preparation
  • Report generation

Monthly admin:

  • Bookkeeping preparation
  • Client reviews
  • Supplier payments
  • Filing and archiving

When you list them out, it’s a lot. When they’re distributed across your week in five-minute chunks, they’re invisible.


”My Business Is Too Small”

You don’t need to be a big business to benefit from a VA. In fact, smaller businesses often benefit more, because the owner is typically doing everything.

A sole trader spending 10 hours a week on admin has less proportional capacity for growth than a 10-person company where admin is already distributed across the team.

A VA for 10 hours a month gives a sole trader back 2.5 hours per week. That’s 2.5 hours of client work, business development, or rest that they didn’t have before.

At even a modest billing rate of £40/hour, those 2.5 hours generate £100/week in potential revenue (£400/month). A VA for 10 hours at £30/hour costs £300/month. The ROI is positive from month one.


”My Admin Is Too Specific: Nobody Else Could Do It”

This is almost never true.

What feels specific and complex to you (because you’ve been doing it your way for years) is usually a learnable process. A good VA picks up new systems quickly because that’s literally their job.

The tasks that genuinely require your expertise (pricing decisions, client strategy, creative direction) should stay with you. But the execution around those decisions (sending the quote, updating the CRM, scheduling the follow-up) doesn’t need your brain, just your brief. In fact, many of these processes can be streamlined completely through automated business workflows.

Test it: Could you explain the task to a competent person in 10 minutes? If yes, it’s delegatable. If it takes you 30 minutes to do but only 10 minutes to explain, a VA gives you 20 minutes back every time.


”I’ll Get Around to It When I’m Busier”

This is backwards.

The time to put support in place is before you’re overwhelmed, not after. When you’re already drowning, you don’t have the headspace to properly onboard a VA. You’re more likely to delegate poorly, get frustrated, and decide it “doesn’t work.”

The best client-VA relationships start when the business owner has enough breathing room to invest time in the handover. They share how they like things done, they provide feedback, and they build a working rhythm.

Waiting until you’re desperate means starting the relationship under stress, which sets it up to fail.


Start With 10 Hours

You don’t need to commit to full-time support. You don’t even need to commit to weekly hours.

Start with 10 hours per month. Pick one or two categories of admin: maybe email management and invoicing. Hand them over. See how it feels.

If after a month you haven’t found enough work to fill 10 hours, then maybe you were right. (But in five years of doing this, that’s never happened.)

What actually happens is this: in week one, you delegate the obvious tasks. In week two, you notice other things that could be handed over. By week four, you’re wondering how you ever managed without support.


Ready to Test the Theory?

At Empower VA Services, we offer flexible, no-commitment support starting at just 10 hours per month. No long-term contract; rolling 30-day terms.

Book a free discovery call →

Tell us about your business and how you spend your week. We’ll help you find the hidden admin that’s eating your time, and show you what 10 hours of support could free up.


Nicola Berry is the founder of Empower VA Services, based in Falkirk, Scotland. Finding the admin you didn’t know you had.