Top executives and founders increasingly delegate routine work to remote assistants, reclaiming hours for strategy and growth. A skilled virtual assistant (VA) or remote executive assistant can manage emails, schedules, customer inquiries and more, effectively multiplying a leader’s productivity. This trend is reflected in explosive market growth: the global VA services industry is projected to grow from roughly $5 billion in 2023 to $15.9 billion by 2028. In practice, a remote assistant acts as an extension of the executive’s team – handling day-to-day tasks so leaders can focus on high-impact decisions.
Top leaders reap several clear benefits from hiring remote assistants. For one, time savings are enormous. Surveys find business owners waste 300+ hours a year on admin tasks (emails, scheduling, data entry, etc.) – time a VA can reclaim. Delegating these chores lets executives concentrate on strategy and growth. Virtual assistants also dramatically cut costs. Because VAs work remotely, companies avoid office space, equipment and full-time benefits. Experts report businesses can save up to 78% on operating costs by using VAs instead of local staff, and a U.S. employer typically saves about $11,000 per half-time remote worker per year. In other words, a virtual assistant often pays for itself through these savings.
Beyond time and money, VAs give executives access to specialized talent and flexibility. You’re no longer limited by geography – you can hire expert help in finance, marketing, IT or niche fields from anywhere. Many virtual assistants are trained in tools and skills (CRM systems, bookkeeping software, social media, compliance, etc.), so they hit the ground running. Importantly, virtual staffing is infinitely scalable: you can dial hours up or down as projects demand. As Paul Østergaard of MySigrid puts it, his company “built [the] remote staffing engine” so clients can increase support without recruiting hassles. In practice, that means a startup can add a marketing VA one month and a project manager the next, all without lengthy hiring.
Finally, having a trusted assistant frees leaders to enjoy better work-life balance. With tedious tasks offloaded, many executives find they can finish work on time and reclaim evenings or weekends. Reduced burnout and stress in turn fuel sharper decision-making and a healthier company culture. In sum, VAs boost productivity and focus – and the data bear this out: executives who delegate effectively grow their businesses faster and generate more revenue.
Virtual assistants can handle almost anything that doesn’t require a leader’s personal presence. Common tasks include:
By listing every routine task they perform, top leaders often see dozens of items they can outsource to a VA. Almost any recurring or time-consuming task can be delegated – from billing insurance claims in a clinic to scheduling showings for a real estate agent.
When considering support staff, executives have several options. Virtual Assistant vs. Executive Assistant: An Executive Assistant (EA) is traditionally a full-time, in-office hire. A virtual executive assistant provides many of the same services (handling calendars, calls, correspondence, etc.) but remotely. The big differences are cost and flexibility. A VA can perform senior-level tasks without a large salary or office overhead. Modern collaboration tools allow you to treat a VA much like an on-site EA, but with pay-as-you-go hours.
Virtual Assistant vs. Full-Time Employee: A local, full-time employee comes with a salary, benefits, taxes and workspace requirements. By contrast, most VAs work as contractors or are employed by an agency, so you pay only for the time used. There are no hidden costs like healthcare or equipment. This makes virtual assistants ideal for startups or businesses with fluctuating needs. Of course, coordinating multiple contractors can add complexity; that’s why many entrepreneurs prefer VA services or agencies. For example, MySigrid provides full-time VAs on its payroll, combining the reliability of an employee with the flexibility of a contractor.
Outsourcing vs. In-House: Outsourcing administrative support to remote professionals often trumps building an in-house team. Studies show that over half of small businesses plan to increase outsourcing in 2024, drawn by cost savings and flexibility. By hiring assistants overseas (offshoring), companies can pay 30–60% less than U.S. salaries for comparable talent. MySigrid’s Paul Østergaard notes that their “system” – recruitment, training, and compliance infrastructure – is already built, so clients skip those headaches. In short, outsourcing via a remote staffing solution lets you tap vetted global talent without starting from scratch. It bypasses recruiting and reduces overhead, letting even small teams operate like a much larger company.
Effective remote collaboration relies on the right tools. Today’s virtual assistants use a suite of cloud software to stay connected and productive. Common platforms include instant-messaging apps like Slack or Microsoft Teams, and video tools like Zoom or Google Meet for face-to-face catch-ups. For task management, VAs often work in project management apps – think Asana, Trello, ClickUp or Monday.com – to assign tasks and track progress. Document collaboration runs through Google Workspace or Microsoft 365. Calendars (e.g. Google Calendar) and CRM systems (like HubSpot or Salesforce) keep schedules and client data synchronized. Cloud accounting tools (Xero, QuickBooks) are used by finance VAs.
Advanced tools are also part of the mix. Many VAs leverage AI-powered tools: for example, they might use ChatGPT or Jasper.ai to draft emails and content faster, or transcription software to turn meeting audio into text. Automation services (Zapier, IFTTT) link apps together so that routine workflows happen with a single trigger. By 2025, even video conferencing is AI-driven – for instance, Zoom’s AI Companion can auto-summarize meetings and capture action items. In fact, a survey found 53% of businesses plan to use more AI-driven assistants for tasks like customer service.
Through these tools, a virtual assistant can work as seamlessly as an on-site colleague. All they need is a laptop, internet, and headset – and they join your team from anywhere in the world. The right tech stack essentially makes geography irrelevant; your VA can begin work on Day 1 without missing a beat.
Remote assistants aren’t one-size-fits-all. In practice, their impact varies by industry:
Each of these examples shows the executive advantage in action: leaders get expert support tailored to their field, improving response times and freeing them to drive growth. As one e-commerce CEO said after hiring a MySigrid VA: “I don’t know what I did before… you truly make everything possible!”.
Technology is rapidly reshaping remote assistance. Modern VAs often leverage AI tools to work smarter. For instance, they might use ChatGPT or other text generators to produce first drafts of emails, blog posts, or reports. They might use AI transcription services to summarize meetings or customer calls. MySigrid even integrates AI into its platform so clients can automate mundane tasks.
However, the human element remains crucial. Even as 53% of companies plan to increase AI-powered chatbots for customer service, complex customer interactions still benefit from empathy and judgment. A human VA can sense frustration on a customer call and diffuse it, or make decisions based on nuanced company knowledge – something an AI bot can’t do alone. In practice, the future of remote assistants is hybrid: using AI to handle rote chores (like data lookup or first-pass editing) while relying on humans for relationship-building, problem-solving and strategic input.
Getting started with a remote assistant is straightforward if you follow best practices:
When managed well, a VA becomes an extension of your team. Start with small tasks and expand their role as you build trust. Many executives find that delegating effectively is a learned skill – one that pays off with hours saved and stress reduced. As Gallup’s research on delegation shows, companies led by executives who delegate wisely tend to grow faster and create more jobs.
For busy executives, leveraging remote assistants isn’t just a convenience – it’s a competitive advantage. By outsourcing routine work, leaders free up time, cut costs, and tap global expertise, allowing them to focus on vision and strategy. Remote staffing solutions make it easy: agencies like MySigrid provide vetted virtual assistants on demand, equipped with the latest tools and AI, so you can scale support instantly.
If you’re an entrepreneur or C-level leader wondering how to reclaim your day and drive growth, consider the executive advantage of virtual assistants. Ready to get started? Book a consultation with MySigrid to discuss your needs and meet pre-screened remote assistants who can become your next strategic partner (link below). You can also connect with MySigrid co-founder Paul Østergaard on LinkedIn to learn more about building a high-performing remote team. Take the first step toward scaling your business and work smarter – not harder.
CTA: Book a Consultation with MySigrid – to find your ideal virtual assistant and transform how you work.
Sources: Industry research and expert insights have informed this article, ensuring up-to-date data and best practices.