by Jana Franklin
In times like these, measuring the right things becomes critical.
Revenue.
Expenses.
Cash flow.
Yet one of the most important resources in any business rarely appears on a balance sheet.
Time.
Most CEOs track operational costs with precision. They know what they spend on payroll, software, and marketing, often down to the dollar. But far fewer can clearly quantify how they allocate their time over a typical week.
And that gap is becoming harder to ignore.
A closer look at executive calendars reveals a pattern that is both common and often overlooked. While leaders are responsible for strategic direction and high-level decisions, much of their time is absorbed by coordination.
Email management.
Scheduling logistics.
Internal follow-ups.
Routine approvals.
Each task is necessary in isolation. Together, they reshape how leadership time is actually spent.
The issue is not inefficiency. It is allocation.
Consider a founder leading a company generating $500,000 annually, working approximately 2,000 hours per year. Their time carries an implied value of roughly $250 per hour. When a significant portion of those hours is spent on work that does not require executive-level input, the cost is not always visible, but it is substantial.
In stable conditions, this misalignment can persist without immediate consequences. In more volatile environments, it becomes a constraint on decision-making and growth.
Many organizations respond to pressure by focusing on productivity. They introduce new tools, streamline workflows, and increase communication speed.
These efforts can improve output, but they rarely address the underlying issue.
They do not change where leadership attention is concentrated.
And attention, particularly at the executive level, is both finite and increasingly valuable.
As a result, a shift in perspective is emerging among operators and advisors. Rather than asking how to get more done, the more relevant question becomes: who should be doing the work?
Executive support firms such as CEO Concierge are approaching this challenge by redesigning workflows at a structural level. Their role extends beyond task support. The focus is on removing unnecessary touchpoints from the CEO’s day and redistributing ownership more effectively across the organization.
Communication is filtered before it reaches leadership.
Scheduling is managed proactively, without back-and-forth.
Recurring processes are owned and executed without constant oversight.
The tools themselves often remain unchanged. What changes is how responsibility flows.
For leaders, the impact is less about abstract time savings and more about regaining focus.
Decisions are made with greater clarity.
Strategic priorities receive sustained attention.
Execution moves with fewer interruptions and delays.
As one executive described the shift, the change was not about doing less, but about “finally spending time on the work that actually moves the business forward.”
In a climate where external variables are increasingly unpredictable, internal structure becomes a critical lever.
Financial statements will continue to reflect where money has been spent.
But a company’s calendar reveals something different. It shows how the business actually operates, how decisions are made, and where leadership attention is directed.
For many CEOs, it is also where their most valuable resource remains unaccounted for.
Their time.
Jana Franklin is the founder of CEO Concierge, where she helps CEOs and business owners reclaim their time through high-level executive support. With a focus on efficiency and strategic growth, she has built a trusted service that enables leaders to operate with greater clarity and impact.