When you’re deep in your search for suitable business support, the myriad job titles floating around can be confusing…
Virtual Assistant.
Executive Assistant.
Virtual Chief of Staff.
Online Business Manager.
Remote EA.
Digital Business Manager.
Operations Coordinator.
Etc, etc…

What’s the actual difference between all of these? And more importantly, which one do you actually need? Because hiring the wrong type of support means you’ll still be overwhelmed – just with better-organised chaos.
This post is going to break down these differences and help you decide which role will actually solve your problem.
The three roles explained
Let’s start with some clear definitions:
Virtual Assistant (VA)
What they do: Task execution. Administrative support. Specific, well-defined tasks that don’t require strategic thinking.
Examples:
- Data entry
- Email management (sorting, filtering, basic responses)
- Social media scheduling
- Basic calendar management
- Travel booking (following your instructions)
- Expense tracking
Who they’re for: Small business owners who need help with routine administrative tasks. You know exactly what needs doing, you just need someone to do it.
Key characteristic: Reactive. They wait for your task list and execute it efficiently.

Executive Assistant (EA)
What they do: Administrative and operational support with greater autonomy. They manage your calendar, coordinate logistics, and handle stakeholder communications.
Examples:
- Complex calendar management (prioritising, rescheduling, protecting your time)
- Travel coordination (planning, booking, managing itineraries)
- Meeting preparation and follow-up
- Stakeholder communication and some relationship management
- Expense reports and financial admin
- Some project coordination
Who they’re for: Executives, founders, and leaders who need someone to manage their day-to-day operations and logistics so they can focus on strategic work.
Key characteristic: Proactive within a defined scope. They anticipate needs related to your schedule and logistics, but typically don’t drive strategic initiatives.

Virtual Chief of Staff (CoS)
What they do: Strategic partnership at the intersection of strategy and execution. They manage operations, coordinate projects, solve problems, and think two steps ahead.
Examples:
- Almost everything an EA does, plus:
- Strategic project management and coordination
- Operations management and process improvement
- Problem identification and systems building
- Stakeholder management (not just coordination)
- Cross-functional coordination
- Strategic thinking and decision support
Who they’re for: Leaders dealing with operational complexity who need someone to pick up the reins while they focus on strategy and growth.
Key characteristic: Proactive and strategic. They identify what needs doing, notice patterns, build systems, and solve root problems.

The key differences that actually matter
Let’s forget the job titles for a moment. Here’s what really differentiates these roles:
1. Strategic thinking vs task execution
VA: “Tell me what to do, I’ll do it efficiently.”
EA: “I’ll manage your logistics and anticipate what you need (within my scope).”
CoS: “I’ll identify what’s not working and build systems to fix it.”
The difference:
- VAs execute tasks
- EAs manage operations
- Chiefs of staff solve problems and drive initiatives
2. Scope of work
VA: Narrow scope. Specific tasks. Clear boundaries.
EA: Broader scope. Your calendar, travel, meetings, stakeholder coordination. Focused on keeping your day-to-day running smoothly.
CoS: Holistic scope. Operations, projects, relationships, strategic initiatives – and other things that could impact your professional performance.
The difference:
- VAs handle tasks
- EAs handle your operational life
- Chiefs of staff manage things around the interconnected parts of your life
3. Level of autonomy
VA: Low autonomy. They follow your instructions and ask for clarification when needed.
EA: Medium autonomy. They make operational decisions (rescheduling meetings and coordinating logistics) without checking in constantly.
CoS: High autonomy. They identify problems, propose solutions, make strategic decisions within their scope, and drive initiatives forward.
The difference:
- VAs need management
- EAs need some direction (but less management)
- Chiefs of staff are self-directed strategic partners
4. Proactive vs reactive
VA: Reactive. They respond to your task list.
EA: Proactive within logistics. They anticipate scheduling conflicts, prepare materials before meetings, and coordinate travel efficiently.
CoS: Proactive strategically. They see patterns, identify root problems, and handle issues before you realise they’re problems.
The difference:
- VAs respond
- EAs anticipate (operationally)
- Chiefs of staff prevent (strategically)
How to know which one you actually need
Here’s how to figure out which role solves your actual problem.
You need a virtual assistant if:
- You have specific, well-defined tasks that need executing
- You know exactly what needs doing, you just don’t have time
- You’re comfortable managing and directing someone
- Your needs are primarily administrative (data entry, scheduling, email management)
- You don’t need strategic thinking, just efficient execution
- Budget is tight (VAs are the most affordable on this list)
Example: You need someone to manage your email inbox, schedule social media posts, and handle data entry. You know what needs doing and you just need hands to do it.
You need an executive assistant if:
- Your calendar is chaos, and you need someone to optimise it
- You’re spending too much time on logistics (travel, meetings, coordination)
- You need someone to manage stakeholder communications
- You want operational support, but not a strategic partnership
- Your needs are primarily logistical and operational
- You’re comfortable with someone who anticipates within their scope
Example: You’re an executive with back-to-back meetings, frequent travel, and stakeholder coordination eating up your time. You need someone to manage your operations so you can focus on strategy.
You need a virtual chief of staff if:
- You’re bogged down by operational complexity, not just tasks
- Important projects keep stalling because you’re buried in day-to-day
- You need strategic thinking and execution support
- Your calendar chaos is a symptom of deeper problems (unclear priorities, poor boundaries)
- Relationships are slipping because you don’t have a maintenance system
- You need someone who identifies problems and builds solutions
- You want a strategic partner, not just support
Example: You’re a founder juggling operations, strategy, stakeholder relationships, and growth initiatives. Beyond just calendar management, you need someone to manage operations, coordinate projects, and maintain important relationships.

Self-assessment questions:
Ask yourself:
1. Do I know exactly what needs doing, or do I need help to figure that out?
- Know what needs doing → VA or EA
- Need help to figure it out → CoS
2. Is my problem tactical (too many tasks) or strategic (unclear priorities, systemic issues)?
- Tactical → VA or EA
- Strategic → CoS
3. Do I need someone to execute my plan, or help me build the plan and execute it?
- Execute → VA or EA
- Build + execute → CoS
4. Am I comfortable managing someone, or do I need someone self-directed?
- Comfortable managing → VA
- Need self-directed → EA or CoS
What to look for (regardless of title)
Here’s the truth: job titles matter less than approach.
Some VAs operate at CoS level. Some EAs are just glorified task managers.
What actually matters:
Look for problem-seeking, not just problem-solving
- Do they ask “Why is this a problem?” or just “What needs doing?”
- Do they identify patterns and build systems or just tick things off the task list?
- Do they anticipate needs or wait for instructions?
Look for strategic thinking + execution
- Can they think strategically and handle execution?
- Can they manage complex situations, not just tasks?
Look for holistic understanding
- Do they understand that personal chaos affects professional performance?
- Do they see you as a whole person, not just a client?
Wrapping things up
Virtual assistant: Task execution. You know what needs doing, so you need efficient hands.
Executive assistant: Operational support. You need someone to manage your logistics and day-to-day operations.
Virtual chief of staff: Strategic partnership. You need someone who can bridge the gap between planning and doing, handling the tricky stuff so you can concentrate on building the business.
The real question isn’t, “Which title should I hire?”
It’s: “Do I need someone to execute my plan, or someone to help me figure out what’s actually wrong and solve it?”
If it’s the former, hire a VA or EA.
If it’s the latter, you need a virtual chief of staff. Click here to see how I work.



