How to Run Better Meetings
August 15, 2023 | BY Simcha Felder, CPA, MBA
Meetings are critical to a company’s success. Good meetings, that is.
Leading an effective and productive meeting is part science and part art. The science is in putting in the pre-meeting work to ensure that the essential elements of the meeting structure are in place. The art is in the way we run the meeting and promote positive engagement with participants. Here are six strategies to help you lead positive, engaging and efficient meetings that actually yield results.
- Clearly Articulate the Purpose – Be clear and concise about the goal of your meeting. If you can’t describe why you’re holding a meeting in a sentence or two, you probably don’t need to have it. The meeting objective should have results-oriented terms and actionable goals.
- Prepare an Agenda – Have the meeting leader prepare an agenda beforehand and send it to participants in advance. This will sharpen and clarify the purpose of the meeting and give everyone a chance to prepare. The agenda provides a compass for the conversation, so the meeting can get back on track if the discussion wanders off course.
- Invite the Right People – Meetings are expensive and time-consuming. Avoid inviting anyone who is not needed to achieve the meeting objective. At the same time, be sure that you have enough participants for a productive, open discussion with diverse perspectives. A good meeting strikes a balance between minimizing attendees and maximizing the creative potential of a group.
- Keep Detours Brief –The meeting leader’s job is to intervene when the conversation gets derailed. And nothing derails a meeting faster than discussing something that may be connected to the agenda, but not essential to the meeting. If you or someone else introduces an idea that’s only tangentially related or unrelated, get ‘in and out’ quickly so you can refocus on the purpose of the meeting. Set the climate for engagement by encouraging productive behavior and discouraging unproductive behavior. Nothing prevents engagement like letting bothersome behavior and random discussions run rampant in your meeting.
- Keep the Meeting Short – Don’t overload your meeting agenda. Better to have four 30-minute meetings than a single 2-hour meeting. Setting a time limit for meetings is a respectful way to honor people’s time get them back to their schedules as promptly as possible.
- End With Meaningful Action Steps – One of the biggest blunders people make when leading meetings is failing to record, recap, and follow up on action items, next steps, and important meeting outcomes. Leave the last few minutes of every meeting to discuss who is responsible for what, and what the deadlines are. Otherwise, all the time you spent on the meeting will be for naught. Every action item needs three things: 1) Clear deliverable; 2) Owner; and 3) Due date.
Meetings are a critical avenue for growing your business, improving productivity and communication, promoting team integration and increasing job satisfaction. It pays to run them well.
This material has been prepared for informational purposes only, and is not intended to provide or be relied upon for legal or tax advice. If you have any specific legal or tax questions regarding this content or related issues, please consult with your professional legal or tax advisor.
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