"One of the greatest
discoveries a man makes, one of his great surprises,
is to find he can
do what he was afraid he couldn't do."
Henry Ford
1. Don't Meet
Avoid a meeting if the same information could be covered in a
memo, e-mail or brief report. One of the keys to having more
effective meetings is differentiating between the need for
one-way information dissemination and two-way information
sharing. To disseminate information you can use a variety of
other communication media, such as sending an e-mail or posting
the information on your company's intranet. If you want to be
certain you have delivered the right message, you can schedule a
meeting to simply answer questions about the information you
have sent. By remembering to ask yourself, "Is a meeting the
best way to handle this?" you'll cut down on wasted meeting
time and restore your group's belief that the meetings they
attend are necessary.
2. Set Objectives for the Meeting
Set objectives before the meeting! Before planning the agenda
for the meeting, write down a phrase or several phrases to
complete the sentence: By the end of the meeting, I want the
group to… Depending on the focus of your meeting, your
ending to the sentence might include phrases such as: …be
able to list the top three features of our newest product, …have
generated three ideas for increasing our sales, …understand the
way we do business with customers, …leave with an action plan,
…decide on a new widget supplier, or …solve the design
problem.
One benefit of setting objectives for the meeting is to help you
plan the meeting. The more concrete your meeting objectives, the
more focused your agenda will be. A second important benefit of
having specific objectives for each meeting is that you have a
concrete measure against which you can evaluate that meeting.
Were you successful in meeting the objectives? Why or why not?
Is another meeting required? Setting meeting objectives allows
you to continuously improve your effective meeting process.
3. Provide an Agenda Beforehand
Provide all participants with an agenda before the meeting
starts. Your agenda needs to include a brief description of the
meeting objectives, a list of the topics to be covered and a
list stating who
will address each topic and for how long. When you send the
agenda, you should include the time, date and location of the
meeting and any background information participants will need to
know to hold an informed discussion on the meeting topic. What's
the most important thing you should do with your agenda? Follow
it closely!
4. Assign Meeting Preparation
Give all participants something to prepare for the meeting, and
that meeting will take on a new significance to each group
member. For problem-solving meetings, have the group read the
background information necessary to get down to business in the
meeting. Ask each group member to think of one possible solution
to the problem to get everyone thinking about the meeting topic.
For example, to start a sales meeting on a positive note, have
all participants recall their biggest success since the last
meeting and ask one person to share his success with the group.
For less formal meetings or brainstorming sessions, ask a trivia
question related to the meeting topic and give the correct
answer in the first few minutes of the meeting. These tips are
sure-fire ways to warm up the group and direct participants'
attention to the meeting objectives.
5. Assign Action Items
Don't finish any discussion in the meeting without deciding how
to act on it. Listen for key comments that flag potential action
items and don't let them pass by without addressing them during
your meeting. Statements such as We should really…,
that's a topic for a different meeting…, or I wonder if
we could… are examples of comments that should trigger
action items to get a task done, hold another meeting or further
examine a particular idea. Assigning tasks and projects as they
arise during the meeting means that your follow-through will be
complete. Addressing off-topic statements during the meeting in
this way also allows you to keep the meeting on track. By
immediately addressing these statements with the suggestion of
making an action item to examine the issue outside of the
current meeting, you show meeting participants that you value
their input as well as their time.
6. Examine Your Meeting Process
Assign
the last few minutes of every meeting as time to review the
following questions: What worked well in this meeting? What
can we do to improve our next meeting? Every participant
should briefly provide a point-form answer to these questions.
Answers to the second question should be phrased in the form of
a suggested action. For example, if a participant's answer is
stated as Jim was too long-winded, ask the participant to
re-phrase the comment as an action. The statement We should
be more to-the-point when stating our opinions is a more
constructive suggestion. Remember – don't leave the meeting
without assessing what took place and making a plan to improve
the next meeting!
Meeting Tips Summary
Don't Meet.
Avoid a meeting if the same information could be covered in a
memo, e-mail or brief report.
Set Objectives for the Meeting.
Before planning the agenda, determine the objective of the
meeting. The more concrete your objectives, the more focused
your agenda will be.
Provide an Agenda Beforehand.
Your agenda needs to include a one-sentence description of the
meeting objectives, a list of the topics to be covered and a
list stating who will address each topic for how long. Follow
the agenda closely during the meeting.
Assign Meeting Preparation.
Give all participants something to prepare for the meeting, and
that meeting will take on a new significance to each group
member.
Assign Action Items.
Don't finish any discussion in the meeting without deciding how
to act on it.
Examine Your Meeting Process.
Don't leave the meeting without assessing what took place and
making a plan to improve the next meeting.
1.
Meetings in America: A study of trends, costs and attitudes
toward business travel, teleconferencing, and their impact on
productivity.
A network MCI Conferencing White Paper, 1998.
From
Effective Meetings.com. Your Meeting Resource Centre