Hiring an executive assistant (EA) to delegate work tasks and life admin to has long been something reserved for celebrities and Fortune 500 executives. But that belief might now be changing, as rank-and-file workers decide they, too, want a taste of the EA experience.

As Callum Borchers wrote earlier this month in The Wall Street Journal, more workers outside the C-suite are finding assistants—virtual, in person, or AI, and sometimes just for a couple of hours a month—to help with everything from booking bouncy castles to managing work calendars.

Nowadays, everyone’s schedules are packed right down to the last minute. Plus, labor has never been easier to offload thanks to artificial intelligence and a globalized network. So it could be argued that what was once considered a luxury is no

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