Going On Vacation? Here’s How To Prepare Your Team In Advance

As a leader with critical responsibilities that seem endless, stepping away from your team and the business for a vacation may be challenging. Not being around to supervise your employees or to approve important information yourself can make you more stressed than relaxed during your time off.

Before heading out of the office, there are some steps leaders can take to set their minds at ease and ensure things will run smoothly in their absence. Below, 15 Forbes Business Council members shared their best tips for preparing their teams to handle the business while they’re away.

1. Take A Short Vacation First

There is nothing better than practice. Therefore, before taking an extended vacation as a manager, I strongly recommend doing a short vacation leaving the office for only two to three workdays. However, there is one specific technique that works great. Before leaving, you can co-create with your team a to-do list of the essential things they should prioritize during your absence. – Vilma NunezConvierte Mas

2. Help Your Team Develop A Solution-Oriented Mindset

Create a culture where everyone is empowered to make decisions and mistakes without fear. Sometimes, mistakes are the best lessons, so showing grace and allowing your team to learn from mistakes helps them become confident and self-sufficient. Eliminate the fear of failure that often prevents people from getting things done. – Catherine KuoElite Commercial Real Estate

3. Support Your Team In Making Decisions On Their Own

I believe the best approach is to build your team to be independent and solution-oriented from the get-go. Support them in making decisions on their own, making mistakes and learning from those mistakes. That way, the structure you’ve built runs on whether you’re there or not. – Ran RonenEqually AI

4. Trust Your Team

Building a good team is difficult, but it is even more difficult to learn to trust and believe in the responsibility of your employees. Unless you teach your workers to be independent, you’ll never have complete confidence in them and you will always be as involved in all processes as possible. Learning to delegate is a necessity for any entrepreneur. – Mark SnellPolestar Plumbing, Heating & Air Conditioning

5. Set Clear Expectations And Procedures

You limit your growth when your business is dependent on one person for success. Instead, setting clear expectations and building repeatable standards of work and procedures can help leaders step away from the business with confidence. Setting up reliable systems is an essential recipe for any successful business. Avoid complicating your processes. Build systems that are simple and easy to follow. – Loubna NoureddinMind Market Consultants

6. Create Goals And Check-Ins With Employees

Vacation is a perfect intersection of demonstrating by example the importance of life balance while at the same time demonstrating trust in your staff. Confidence is built with clarity of the expectations within that trust. Before vacation, managers should connect with each employee to reach a mutual agreement on outputs expected on the supervisor’s return and ensure the employee has what they need. – Lowell AplebaumVista Cova

7. Create An Accountability Chart

Create an accountability chart, and mark all the lines of communication necessary for the operational movement of the business. Then, trial it for the same period of time prior to your vacation. This will also help you to more generally step away from the operational execution to concentrate on the strategic direction of the business. – Samuel Johnstonnth Venture

8. Find Your Number Two

Assign someone to cover and be your contact. Be clear on the level of authority you are granting them, share how they can handle situations and give direction on what to do if they are unsure. Hold a team meeting to ensure everyone has work and knows their responsibilities. Upon your return, schedule an early morning debriefing allowing yourself to jump back into things as if you never left. – Alisha RaeszFourlane

9. Leave Top-Level Talent In Charge

I think you can have more confidence stepping away when you know you’ve got intrapreneurs and the right leaders in place. This means incentivizing them with things like stock options, bonuses and other things that will attract top-level talent. When you have that top-level talent in place and they’ve bought into your company and mission, stepping away seems like you weren’t even gone at all. – Michael LeonardThe Market Vibe

10. Engage In Scenario Planning

The key to fueling others’ independence and confidence—whether it’s a worker taking charge when you’re away or a child learning to ride a bicycle—is to engage in scenario planning. Help employees visualize the road ahead, coach the person’s self-confidence, support the most difficult part (i.e., getting started) and reinforce the initial success before you “let go of the bike seat” and they keep going! – Jerry CahnAge Brilliantly

11. Be Available In Case Of Emergency

Strike a balance by asking your managers to be backups for certain tasks and let them know they can contact you in case of emergencies. That way you demonstrate trust for the team while at the same time letting them know they can count on you in case they are stuck. Build systemic processes that can sustain the business even when you are not there, and build a lean culture. – Sudha ChandrasekharanTrelleborg

12. Assign Tasks To Specific Team Members

When leaders go on vacations, it’s usual for the team to witness delays in deliverables. However, this is a chance to empower the team to make decisions independently. One thing leaders can do is to make a checklist of deliverables and deadlines. Assigning tasks to each team member will make them accountable. Communicate your vacation plans in advance so that they can take up priority items accordingly. – Saravana KumarKovai.co

13. Have Solid Processes In Place

Creating a culture of trust is key, and while trust is the basis of strong leadership, so are processes. Balancing both faith in the processes and faith in the individuals executing the processes allows managers to confidently step away for a vacation without their own tension or worry spilling into the team and negatively impacting their experience trying to manage things while the leader is away. – Karim ZuhriCascade Strategy

14. Do Some Advance Planning

To be able to step away from the business for a vacation, leaders must do some advance planning and have a realistic view of the priorities that must be addressed during that time. It’s important to hire people you can trust and rely on who can also think independently and make good decisions. This will give you the confidence to take time off without worrying about what’s going on at the office. – Meighan NewhouseInspirant Group

15. Nurture Leadership Skills

As leaders, managers should nurture the leadership values of everyone on the team. They must do this from day one, not only out of necessity. This is done by communicating with the team constantly, trusting them and supporting them to be their best at work. Remember that great leaders must produce leaders, not followers. – Lane KawaokaSimplePassiveCashflow.com

This article was published on Forbes.com