Seven Rules for More Effective Meetings

Today, I attended a very productive meeting. It was long, but we accomplished what we set out to do. We made significant decisions, established accountabilities, and left the meeting knowing exactly what was expected of us. I think everyone left feeling that it was a good use of time.

Boardmeeting

Unfortunately, too many corporate meetings don’t go this well. Often, they are a complete waste of time. But the good news is that they can be substantially improved by observing a few simple rules. Here is my list of seven rules for more effective meetings.

  1. Establish hard edges. Good meetings start and end on time. When you start late, you inadvertently penalize the punctual and reward the tardy. This only make the problem worse rather than better. People get “trained” to come late because they know nothing significant will happen until well after the announced start time.

    When you finish late, you also frustrate participants. People are busy. Meetings that finish late domino into other meetings which must then also start late. Instead, we have to be as disciplined about our ending times as our beginning times. It’s amazing how much you can cover if you know you absolutely must finish on time.

  1. Create an agenda. I don’t think any meeting should proceed without an agenda. If it’s not important enough to create a written agenda, then it’s not important enough to attend. Leaders must set the example here.

    They need to think about the topics to be covered and how the meeting should flow. I always like to start the meeting with a review of the minutes from the previous meeting (more about this in a minute). I like to end every meeting with two items: a review of the agreed-upon action items and setting—or confirming—the date for the next meeting. Agendas should always be circulated in advance of the meeting, so that people know what to expect and how to prepare.

  2. State the desired outcome. If you are the leader, it is important to know exactly what outcome you want from the meeting. If you don’t know where you are going, how will you know when you have arrived?

    I would suggest that you state the desired outcome in the meeting invitation and then re-state it as you begin the meeting. For example, “the purpose of our meeting is to report on the results of our latest market research and give you a chance to ask questions.” Or “the purpose of our meeting is to evaluate prospective titles for Don Miller’s new book and determine which one we are going to recommend to the author.” Or “the purpose of or meeting is review the company’s Q3 operating results and provide a progress report on our five strategic initiatives.”

    By stating the outcome, the participants can work together to achieve it and keep the meeting from wandering off-track.

  3. Review the minutes and action items. The first thing I do in any meeting is to review the minutes and action items from the previous meeting. This gives the participants context and gives those that were absent an opportunity to get up-to-speed.

    You also want to get a progress report on each action item from the person responsible for it. If you make a habit of always doing this, people will soon learn that you expect them to complete their assignments. If they have to give an account in front of their peers, so much the better. This may give them the added “incentive” to complete their assignments, so that they are not embarrassed in front of their colleagues.

  4. Take written minutes. Someone should take minutes, even if the meeting only has two participants. However, detailed notes that chronicle the discussion as it unfolds are usually—in fact, almost always—unnecessary. In most meetings, recording the key decisions and action items are sufficient.

    You want to document decisions, so there is no misunderstanding later. You want to document action items, so that you can hold people accountable and track progress. Beyond that, you’re probably just engaging in busy work. You should distribute minutes as soon after the meeting as possible, so that participants can review the key items while they are fresh in their memory as well as review what is expected of them.

  5. Clarify action items. At the end of the meeting, the person recording the minutes should read off the action items. It is particularly important that these be stated in a specific format.

    First, each action item should start with a verb. For example, “review Milford contract with the agent” or “call Jim and get latest turnover figures.”

    Second, articulate the deliverable. What exactly do you expect the person completing the action to do. It must be an observable behavior with a specific end point. It may be a phone call, a written report, or a presentation. It should not be a process.

    Third, assign a single owner to each action. No action should have more than one owner. You want one person to blame if the action isn’t completed.

    Finally, agree on a due date. Get a commitment from the person responsible. Be realistic but put it in writing. This is a commitment and should be treated as such.

  6. Determine the next meeting date. This is easy to do when everyone is together. Everyone should be encouraged to bring their calendar to the meeting (or their Blackberry or other PDA).

    If the meeting disperses without setting the next date, it makes it that much harder to schedule the next meeting. Take advantage of everyone being in one place to get this settled. It’s one less thing you have to do later.

Improving the quality of meetings takes work. Every once in a while we need to step back from the meeting itself and ask, “How can we make our time together more productive?” We need to be honest. Meetings consume a lot of resources. The more efficient they are, the better the return on our investment.

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Posted on 01 February 2007

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5 Comments so far

  1. Ian says:

    I am the leader of a 35 person student project team at Cornell University. We have a weekly 1-2 hour long “leaders meeting” (11 attendees total) to go over each sub-project’s progress over the past week and (re-)plan next week’s tasks.

    Since the meeting is regularly scheduled, and every meeting involves the same series of updates and re-planning, is it still appropriate/effective for me to create and disperse a written agenda ahead of time? (Points 2, 3, and 7)

    I used to send out agendas but on the weeks where nothing “bad” was disrupting our plans, it devolved into: “get status update and make appropriate changes to schedule.”

  2. No, i don’t think you need to send out an agenda for a standing meeting with a fixed agenda. I have one of these, too, and I don’t send out an agenda in advance. Thanks.

  3. farejiig says:

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  4. Tobin says:

    Michael
    Do you know of any research protocol on meetings with a cross regional meeting. When I worked in Europe they were very good about never having an extended team dial into a team room because of the mixed user exerience. Even though 5 members were in the same building none of us would get into a team room because the the rest of the team was all over teh continent. Any advice?


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I am the Chief Executive Officer of Thomas Nelson Publishers, the largest Christian publishing company in the world and the seventh largest trade book publishing company in the U.S.

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