How to Craft Meetings People Love
(Really)
We
open today on a familiar scene: After a long day of back-to-back meetings, Bob
arrives home to find his wife, Jane, who also has just returned from work,
starting to prepare dinner. As Bob rolls up his sleeves to begin chopping
carrots, they talk about their day.
Bob:
I am just exhausted.
Jane:
What did you do today?
Bob:
I was in meetings all day.
Jane:
Yes, but what did you do?
Bob
(exasperated): I just told you, I was in meetings all
day!
Jane:
And I asked you: What did you do?!
This actual conversation is one that a colleague shared with me.
It took him a moment to realize what his wife was getting at, but her point was
this: He was tired and frustrated from hours of meetings because he didn’t
perceive that he’d actually “done” anything. For him, work was what happened
between meetings.
At their worst, meetings are like short prison sentences that have
you counting the minutes until your release. Yet there are meetings that are
useful and productive, and even invigorating and enjoyable.
In my work, I have found three types of meetings that exemplify
variations on best practices and are worth emulating:
The breakfast club.
I once worked for someone
who gathered her direct reports each Friday for breakfast at a local greasy
spoon. We were eager to come in early and pay for our meals ourselves because
this was our chance to get her download on the senior management meeting with
her boss that was held each Thursday.
My boss was a savvy operator, which was essential at this
particular organization: She understood that her influence and success were
directly tied to the ability of her team to navigate the political shoals
around us. We needed to know who was allied with whom and what larger plans
were afoot in order to do our jobs well. We met off-site so we could ask tough
questions and offer unvarnished reactions. The meeting also added a bit of a
clandestine air to our jobs that made the information seem even more valuable:
We were getting the “inside scoop.”
It is essential for your people to know that you have their backs
— remembering, of course, that there is some information that you may not
be able to share. The breakfast club made it clear that our boss had our
interests in mind and also emphasized that she was not playing favorites with
information distribution. We also built enduring comradery that persisted even
after she left the organization.
The
editorial scrum.
The Economist recently
published an account of its Monday morning
editorial meetings in which stories are pitched, the cover is planned, and the
weekly magazine’s position on global events are debated. It’s the kind of
meeting that will get your blood running at the start of the week. I have never
attended this particular meeting (I’d jump at the chance), though I have
attended other editorial gatherings. The best of them are
freewheeling affairs with honest and intense debate.
What makes the Economist’s
meeting so productive is its egalitarian nature. Rank is put aside and everyone
is encouraged to contribute: “The whole paper meets, and anyone — from the newest intern to the most senior editor — can put forward and write a leader
[article]. What matters is not a contributor’s seniority, but the strength and
quality of his or her arguments,” Amanda Coletta wrote.
Imagine if other
organizations — perhaps yours — followed that practice. Engagement would rise
among meeting attendees because they would invest in the discussion. Biases
could be mitigated and differing opinions offered and challenged. People would hone their critical thinking
and constructive
argument skills. Decision quality would improve.
The focus session.
Every morning since
September 12, 2001, a wide array of stakeholders in safety and security at
Boston Logan International Airport meet to share information about the day’s
likely events. Rocked by the 9/11 attacks, officials decided that optimizing
collaboration and coordination among the various agencies and companies at the
airport would be critical to improving security. Unlike most such noble
initiatives, this one has persisted — seven days a week for sixteen years and
counting. The day I attended as a guest, about 70 people were there. This is
not a compulsory meeting for most. They continue to come because they find it
valuable.
The meeting centers on whatever is likely to have an impact on the
airport that day or in the immediate future: the return home of a championship
sports team, an impending storm, construction, or an intelligence alert. The
meeting is a crisp, no-nonsense round robin of reports. Anything relevant to
the group is welcome. “Nothing today” is also an acceptable contribution,
minimizing the temptation to fill airtime with pro forma statements. The
meeting lasts not one minute less or more than necessary. It can be as short as
10 minutes or as long as an hour.
It is a highly efficient way to connect, share, receive
information, and ask questions. The meeting has also been a key component of
building an enduring culture where collaboration and coordination across
organizational boundaries is the norm, eliminating back-channel networking that
can lead to information gaps and misunderstandings. Many organizations could
benefit from such a vehicle.
Although these three meeting types are all very different, at
their core, they share some essential concepts.
• Get the basics right.
Invite the right people —
and only the right people. Be clear about the purpose, format, necessary decisions to be made, and desired
outcome. Craft social
norms that align with those parameters. Start
on time and keep on track.
• Take a systems view.
Relevant information needs
to flow to the right people at the right time if smart decisions are to be
made. Worthwhile gatherings facilitate that flow, minimize filters and
speculation, and enhance group cohesion. At the Logan Airport meeting, that
involves pushing information out efficiently across the enterprise; at
the Economist, it is about drawing great ideas in.
• Make sure it’s the best
vehicle.
If it is important for
people to get the information at the same time or if you want some
back-and-forth dialog, a meeting is the right call. Don't put a dozen (or 70)
people in a room if they could more easily digest the information reading
asynchronously. At the breakfast club meeting, reactions and discussion were as
important as the senior management intel itself.
• Know the ROI.
Even on-site meetings have
costs (and I’m not talking about the bagels). Calculate the rough salary
equivalent for the hours that people are there and estimate the return on that
investment — for each participant, not just the convener. What is each person
contributing and what is he or she getting in return? What is the payback to
the organization? One way to find out if people feel a meeting is worthwhile is
to make it optional — and see who shows up.
Meetings punctuate the rhythm of our organizational lives; in some
cases, they seem to be an end in themselves. But the meetings described above
are a worthwhile investment of time, talent, and energy. Attendees both got and
gave value. That's how you craft meetings people love.
Eric J.
McNulty
https://www.strategy-business.com/blog/How-to-Craft-Meetings-People-Love-Really?gko=910be&utm_source=itw&utm_medium=20170502&utm_campaign=resp
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