Many teams eventually decide to delegate or outsource work to relieve pressure.
Tasks are handed off. External partners are hired. Responsibilities are moved away from overloaded individuals.
At first, this seems like the solution to the workload problem.
But sometimes the opposite happens. The work returns repeatedly for corrections. Questions multiply. The original team spends more time explaining, reviewing, and fixing than they did doing the work themselves.
The delegation technically happened—but the load never truly left.

Systems Layer
Delegation and outsourcing function as load transfer mechanisms within a system.
For load transfer to succeed, three structural elements must be defined:
Work must move with enough structure that the receiving node can process it without constant reattachment to the original source.When that interface exists, outsourcing truly redistributes load rather than simply circulating it.


