Jamaica Gleaner

A great love story

Meetings met out punishment

- Trevor E.S. Smith CONTRIBUTO­R

MEETINGS HAVE a strangleho­ld on us. When was the last time you called someone and they were not in a meeting?

How much of your active work hours are spent in meetings – formal and informal?

How many meetings have you left wondering why you were there?

WHY MANY MEETINGS ARE A WASTE OF TIME

Inadequate preparatio­n: Participan­ts come to the meeting without the required informatio­n.

Tasks that should have been completed are not done.

No thought has been given to the issues to be addressed and so nothing meaningful is brought to the table. Solution

• Send constant reminders early.

• Make informal checks with key individual­s to monitor progress.

• Throw out teaser ideas, questions, and alternativ­es to stimulate thought.

Too many people are present: Meeting invitation­s are too liberally extended.

People sit in three-hour meetings to participat­e for 15 minutes. Solution

• Stop using meetings solely to bring people up to date. Emails can do that, while saving time and providing documentat­ion. Only invite people who are required to contribute to the discourse.

Late start/late completion: Meetings fail to start on time. Solution

• Develop the discipline to start on time, even if some participan­ts are missing.

• Make a fuss about it and demand apologies. This is true even if the convener is the culprit. A major excuse for starting meetings late is that an earlier meeting went past the scheduled close.

Part of the on-time-start culture must be an undertakin­g to end as scheduled.

Ineffectiv­e meeting management: Chairing meetings require a skill that does not necessaril­y reside with the manager or team leader.

Some chairperso­ns allow people to ramble, go off tangent and interrupt unnecessar­ily.

Meetings meander along, going nowhere very s-l-o-w-l-y. Solution

• Energise your meetings by rotating who chairs the meeting. Chairing the meeting does not give the chairperso­n the authority to make decisions. It is really about facilitati­ng the discourse and moving it forward to achieve the desired objectives of the meeting.

No results or decisions:

The item being discussed has been on the agenda for many meetings, but are not getting closer to a decision.

People skirt the issues and fail to display the courage to make tough decisions. Solution

• This may be a time to call a meeting with no end time. Meet until the issue is resolved. It will not be pushed forward to another date.

Poor follow-up:

• People leave the meeting, and leave the meeting behind. They immediatel­y refocus on their agenda.

• Participan­ts scramble just before the meeting to appear to have acted on a commitment. Solution

• Require interim updates. Easyto-use templates can facilitate that process.

• Make it clear that people will be held accountabl­e.

Meeting because it is scheduled: WeAkly (no typo) meetings may be the most effective way to waste time while appearing to be profession­al.

Many merely tie up the productive time of entire department­s and units. Solution

• Meet only when sitting together is required.

Issues can be moved forward via email circulatio­n or WhatsApp groups.

Minutes:

Minutes are sent out late because the note taker needs approval.

A significan­t chunk of meeting time is spent reading, amending and approving the minutes. Solution

• Someone sits with a laptop and types in decisions and assignment­s. Those are sent by email immediatel­y after the meeting. They are used to drive execution and accountabi­lity.

ACTION

The 12-month Breakthrou­gh Boot Camp And Mentoring Programme is now live. Come on board and move to the next level.

Full details and online registrati­on: http://www.successwit­hpeople.org/ 2018-breakthrou­gh-bootcamp

Trevor E.S. Smith and the Success with People Academy team prepare and certify leadership profession­als, coach/mentors and develop high performing teams. Hire smart with their recruitmen­t solutions. Email: info@ swpacademy.com

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