Running a virtual assistant agency fully remotely sounds simple — until you try doing it at scale.
Different time zones.
Clients across the world.
A founder traveling from country to country.
A team that has never met in the same room.
And yet, for almost six years, 2xYou has operated without a traditional office — while supporting clients, growing a team of EAs, and keeping operations running smoothly.
The secret isn’t luck.
It’s systems.
Here’s the exact behind-the-scenes breakdown of how we built a remote-first company that runs with clarity, accountability, and autonomy.
From Co-Working Space to Fully Remote
When 2xYou began in October 2019, we were just three people meeting in a co-working space.
Then the pandemic hit — and suddenly the entire world became remote.
Because our workflow was already hybrid, the transition was easy.
But scaling the company?
That required one big shift:
👉 Everything needed to be mapped, written, stored, and accessible — without relying on any single person.
And that became the foundation of our remote systems today.
Step 1: Map the Client Journey & the EA Journey
Before we documented how we work, we had to understand how the business flows.
We mapped:
The Client Journey
- How leads discover us
- Scorecard, forms, and resources
- Consultation calls
- Onboarding → support → results
The Executive Assistant Journey
- How applicants find us
- Recruitment and interview steps
- Onboarding
- Performance structure and expectations
This visual map (yes — we still use Miro for this!) became the “big picture” guide.
No more assumptions.
No more relying on memory.
No more explaining the same thing over and over.
When everyone sees the full journey, they finally understand their role in it.
Step 2: Turn Every Process Into an SOP Anyone Can Follow
Mapping the journey gives direction.
SOPs give execution.
We created a simple, repeatable template for documenting:
- What a process is
- When it should be used
- Step-by-step instructions
- Tools, links, and templates needed
Over time, the SOP library became our “recipe book.”
If onboarding a client is a dish, the SOP tells you exactly how to cook it every time — no matter who is in the kitchen.
That consistency is what makes a remote team reliable.
Step 3: Build a Central Asset Library
SOPs alone aren’t enough.
You also need a single source of truth for:
- Email templates
- Contracts
- Client decks
- Brand assets
- Internal tools
- Master documents
This eliminates the worst remote-work problem:
❌ “Can you send me the link?”
❌ “Where’s that template again?”
❌ “Who has the latest file?”
Instead, everything is stored, labeled, and easy to grab — even if someone is offline, traveling, or on leave.
Step 4: Have a Systems Owner (Not Just a Founder)
One of our smartest internal hires was a Systems Manager.
Her responsibilities:
- Ensure SOPs are clear and standardized
- Update process maps
- Catch inconsistencies
- Support clients in building their own systems
Systems should not live in the founder’s brain.
They need a dedicated guardian.
This turned our documentation from a “project” into a living system that evolves with the company.
Step 5: Use the Systems Daily (Not Just Write Them)
A system no one uses is a system that dies.
At 2xYou:
- We follow SOPs daily
- We update them when reality changes
- We refer back to them in meetings
- We refine them when someone finds a better way
Systems are not static.
They improve through use — not through theory.
This is what creates freedom for the whole team:
- The founder works from Thailand
- Operations can travel to Europe
- EAs can support clients from anywhere
And the business STILL moves because systems, not people, hold the instructions.
Step 6: Review & Update Regularly
Every SOP has a “last updated” timestamp.
If something hasn’t been touched in 6 months, the owner gets a nudge:
“Is this still accurate? Does anything need updating?”
This prevents “zombie SOPs” that no longer match reality — a common reason remote teams break down.
We teach this same habit to our EAs when maintaining client operations.
What This Means for Your Business
Running a remote company without systems leads to:
- Constant misalignment
- Work delays
- Founder burnout
- Repeating the same instructions
- Team dependency on one person
Running a remote company with systems leads to:
- Predictability
- Freedom
- Accountability
- Scalability
- True ownership for every role
Remote work becomes easy when the business is clear, not just the people.
Want This Level of Clarity and Scalability in Your Business?
If you're tired of:
❌ Being the bottleneck
❌ Re-explaining tasks
❌ Worrying the business will break if you step away
Then you don’t just need more people —
You need smarter systems your people can plug into.
If you’d like help:
👉 Take the 2-Minute Scale You Scorecard: 2xyou.com/scorecard
Your future self (and your remote team) will thank you.
