Cut Your Meeting Time by 90%
Managers do things right, while
leaders do the right thing(s).” -- Warren Bennis, scholar and organizational expert
Most
advice on meetings focuses on the “how.” But the effort to improve meetings
must start with the “what.” No matter how efficiently you meet about the wrong
things, they are still the wrong things to meet about.
I
have sat in hundreds of bad meetings: no goals, no agenda, no preparation, no
documents, no schedule, no minutes, no action items, no follow-up, and so on.
We all hate these meetings. We all want to improve them. That’s why
Influencers’ posts on meeting management are some of the most
popular.
But
they do not address what I consider the major problem: Most meeting time is
wasted because people aim at the wrong target.
In
this post, I will suggest a way to cut your meeting time. Not by meeting about
the same things faster, but by meeting about fewer things. This recommendation
has reduced meeting time by 90% in one of my clients.
This
does not mean that you can do the work in 10% of the time. You have to devote
significant out-of-meeting effort to resolve the issues, but working more
efficiently, enjoying a happier mood, and achieving better results.
What’s
The Secret?
The
only goal for a meeting is “to decide and commit.” No other objective is worth
meeting for.
No
meetings to “discuss.”
No meetings to “update.”
No meetings to “review.”
No meetings to “inform.”
No meetings to “report.”
No meetings to “present.”
No meetings to “check.”
No meetings to “dialogue.”
No meetings to “evaluate.”
No meetings to “connect.”
No meetings to “think.”
No meetings to “consider.”
No meetings to “educate.”
No meetings to anything but “decide and commit.”
No meetings to “update.”
No meetings to “review.”
No meetings to “inform.”
No meetings to “report.”
No meetings to “present.”
No meetings to “check.”
No meetings to “dialogue.”
No meetings to “evaluate.”
No meetings to “connect.”
No meetings to “think.”
No meetings to “consider.”
No meetings to “educate.”
No meetings to anything but “decide and commit.”
Of
course, in order to decide and commit it is necessary to share information,
monitor progress, provide updates, review materials, discuss ideas, analyze
options, and evaluate costs and benefits. These are very reasonable ways to
spend the time of a meeting.
But
those are intermediate goals; the final goal is to perform. And to perform
effectively a team needs to decide intelligently, commit resolutely, and
execute impeccably. A good meeting focuses on the first two, in order to
accomplish the third.
Swing
Through The Ball
If
you learned tennis or golf you must have heard your instructor say, “swing through
the ball.” If you swing at the ball you will cut your swing short and
will hit with significantly less power. Of course you will hit the ball as you
swing through it, but the right aim is to finish the swing, not to hit the
ball.
In
the same spirit, “Meet to decide and commit.” If you meet to discuss, you will
cut your effort short and will work with significantly less power. Of course,
you will discuss in order to decide and commit, but the right aim is to do, not
to talk.
Yet
many teams practice “voodoo management.” They believe that talking about an
issue is enough to (magically) solve it. They take pride of “working” on
something while they only express opinions about what “ought to be done.” But
as I wrote here, there is no action
without commitment. Not surprisingly, everybody feels frustrated because the
issue remains unsolved “after all the time we spent talking about it.”
The
Value of Information
Imagine
you are locked up in a cell, incommunicado, for the next 24 hours. I offer to
tell you the winning number of the lottery that will be picked this very
evening. The will-be-winning ticket, worth $100,000,000, is still available.
How much should you pay for the information?
Nothing.
This
information is worthless to you because you cannot act on it.
Information
is valuable insofar as it may allow you to produce better results that you
would have gotten without it. Unless the information may lead you to act
differently than you would have acted had you not known it, its value is zero.
Since
you can neither buy, nor ask someone else to buy the lottery ticket, the
winning number is worthless to you.
The
same thing happens with a meeting. Unless the meeting may lead people to act in
a different way they would have acted had they not had the meeting, its value
is zero—no matter how efficiently it is run.
An
Expensive Proposition
Meeting
requires that all participants be in the same (virtual) place at the same time.
This is an expensive proposition. There is only one practical reason to justify
it: the interactive design and evaluation of alternative strategies, and the
collective decision and commitment to pursue the strategy that the team
believes is most conducive to its mission.
(There
are social and emotional reasons to get together, but regular meetings pursue
tasks, rather than relationship goals.)
There
are many ways for a team to stay up to date on the status of initiatives,
receive progress reports, share information, request clarifications, ask
questions, express concerns, raise objections, make suggestions, and propose
options without having to meet. Email and shared documents seem almost prehistoric
in comparison to the many e-tools available today, but even they work quite
well.
The
single thing that can only be done interactively is to assess the global impact
of alternative courses of action on the team’s mission. This exercise requires
pooling each member’s information about her area of responsibility and her
knowledge about the opportunities and threats that it will trigger in her local
environment.
For
example, a global leadership team from one of the top three IT companies in the
world, whom I have been helping for several years, have stopped meeting (by
video-conference) four hours a week to "monitor progress" of their
different projects. They now use shared documents where each project owner
writes a review with three points: (a) what have we done last week, (b) what
are we planning to do next week, (c) any issues I need help to resolve. Only
when (c) requires the whole team's interaction there is a team meeting.
Otherwise, there are sub-team meetings on the side to deal with the specifics.
Only
people relevant to the matter are invited to this side conversations. Nobody
sits idle during the discussion, and everybody present has a valuable role to
play in deciding and committing to solve the problem.
The team now meets every four months
in person, to explore new strategies and connect at a human level. Everybody
loves these meetings, which take about 10% of the time the weekly updates used
to take.
The Acid Test
Pick a red marker and search your
agenda for terms such as “discuss,” “update,” “review,” and other non-decisive
verbs. Cross them out and see what is left.
Then put any remaining item through
the following three-question test:
- “What will we do differently if we succeed in this meeting?”
- “Why do we need to meet to accomplish this?”
- “How will this help us further the goal of the team?”
I bet that 90% of your meeting time
goes away.
FRED KOFMAN
http://www.linkedin.com/today/post/article/20130819190438-36052017-cut-your-meeting-time-by-90
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